From Awareness to Funding: A study of library support in America
OCLC was awarded a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to explore attitudes and perceptions about library funding and to evaluate the potential of a large-scale marketing and advocacy campaign to increase public library funding in the U.S. The findings of this research are now available in the OCLC report, From Awareness to Funding: A study of library support in America.
Among the findings from the report:
- Library funding support is only marginally related to library visitation
- Perceptions of librarians are an important predictor of library funding support
- Voters who see the library as a 'transformational' force as opposed to an 'informational' source are more likely to increase taxes in its support
The report suggests that targeting marketing messages to the right segments of the voting public is key to driving increased support for U.S. public libraries.
Download the report
(PDF, 9447KB)
Download individual sections of the report:
- Introduction: Funding the mission (PDF, 131KB)
- From awareness to funding (PDF, 158KB)
- Who are the library’s financial supporters? (PDF, 4813KB)
- Elected officials and library funding (PDF, 230KB)
- Library funding support is an attitude, not a demographic (PDF, 1038KB)
- Motivating Probable and Super Supporters—testing the facts in the field (PDF, 521KB)
- Mobilizing Probable and Super Supporters—what makes the difference (PDF, 394KB)
- Conclusion (PDF, 83KB)
- Appendices (PDF, 157KB)


