Hey everyone,
I’d love to get your thoughts on an idea I’m working on: a mobile app that gamifies charitable giving, encouraging users to donate $5 a day (perhaps a bit less depending on the target group) to high-impact charities. The goal is to create a daily habit of generosity, leveraging the psychological benefits of prosocial spending (as shown in Dunn’s Happy Money research) while driving significant funding to effective causes.
The Concept
Each day, users receive a push notification prompting them to donate. They can:
- Pick from three featured charities, rotating based on urgency/impact.
- Select any charity of their choice.
To reinforce the joy of giving, the app includes:
- Streak tracking & rewards (e.g., badges, milestone unlocks).
- Social proof nudges (e.g., "50 people in your city gave to this today").
- Monthly & annual impact reports (showing the collective impact of all users).
- Community discussions on generosity & effective giving.
Why Daily Giving?
Many in the EA community optimize for lump-sum giving, which makes sense for maximizing impact. But this app isn’t meant to replace that—it’s about:
- Building a stronger giving identity: Reinforcing generosity as part of our daily lives.
- Leveraging psychology: Studies show frequent giving increases happiness and generosity over time.
- Expanding the donor pool: Many people struggle to commit large sums but can easily justify $5/day.
- Providing an alternative to trivial spending: Instead of a daily coffee, you fund malaria nets, cash transfers, or climate solutions.
EA Alignment
While users could support any charity, the recommended options would prioritize high-impact, evidence-based causes, such as GiveWell recommendations, effective climate interventions, and global health initiatives.
Your Thoughts?
- Would this app be valuable to the EA movement?
- How can we optimize for real impact while keeping the habit-building benefits?
- Are there risks or unintended consequences?
I’d really appreciate your feedback—both from a behavioral economics perspective and an EA effectiveness lens. Thanks in advance!
Looking forward to your thoughts,
Joe
Hey Joe, this is a really interesting idea! I’d love to dig in more and explore how I—and the broader effective giving sector—might support it. I work as the Effective Giving Global Coordinator and Incubator at Giving What We Can, helping connect and support effective giving initiatives.
I think the best audience for this could be self-improvement enthusiasts—people who follow pop psychology and are drawn to giving as a way to boost wellbeing (e.g., Laurie Santos’ Happiness Lab listeners, Atomic Habits readers, etc.). Framing it as a daily micro-donation—“the cost of a cup of coffee” to a pre-vetted high-impact charity—could really work.
Would love to chat more. Feel free to book a time here: Calendly link or email me at lucas.moore@givingwhatwecan.org!
Thanks Lucas I've just put something into your calendly for next week. Look forward to catching up. Laurie Santos' science of wellbeing coursers course was my first exposure to Dunns research on happy money.