Marginal funding for strategic priority research for Animal Advocacy organisations

By Animal Ask @ 2025-11-18T15:03 (+16)

As part of Marginal funding week, we are releasing our 2025 Evaluation: A retrospective after 5 years and sharing other ongoing projects and those we are currently scoping for the first half of 2026. There is a great deal of overlap between this post and our review, engagement on our evaluation would be most useful on the other post. 

I. Overview

Animal Ask is a research organisation that offers consultation and dedicated research to stakeholders in the animal advocacy movement to help those organisations make strategic decisions to bring about the highest possible impact for animals. Animal Ask also offers other custom research, such as written documents to help animal advocacy organisations communicate as effectively as possible with policymakers.

Since being launched in 2020, Animal Ask has completed 57 major research projects around the world, covering all major exploited animal groups (insects, shrimp, fish, chickens, pigs, and ruminants). Early stage indicators of the impact of these projects' work has shown promising signs, but the data is currently inconclusive. 

Since its launch in 2020, Animal Ask's team of 3–5 staff members has:

II. Animal Ask's theory of change

Animal Ask attempts to deliver impact by following three theories of change. Our direct contribution is up to stage C of each of these theories of change:

  1. Strategic priorities and consultation.
    1. Animal Ask finds animal advocacy organisations at the early, decision-making stage of a campaign →
    2. Animal Ask performs research to help advise the organisation's decision-making →
    3. the organisation selects more impactful asks for their campaigns and/or develop a more evidence-based and nuanced strategy for achieving those asks, than they otherwise would have done →
    4. some of those campaigns eventually succeed →
    5. the laws or corporate policies that are achieved have a higher impact than they otherwise would →
    6. there is a net, counterfactual reduction in animal suffering or the scale of animal exploitation, compared to if Animal Ask had not acted.
  2. Information lobbying.
    1. For an upcoming campaign with a given ask, Animal Ask prepares persuasive written documents supporting the value or the feasibility of that ask (e.g. white papers, economic reports, scientific publications) →
    2. the campaign has a higher probability of success →
    3. over time, more campaigns succeed than would otherwise be the case →
    4. more pro-animal laws or corporate policies are achieved →
    5. there is a net, counterfactual reduction in animal suffering or the scale of animal exploitation, compared to if Animal Ask had not acted.
  3. Foundational research.
    1. Animal Ask identifies key uncertainties facing the movement →
    2. Animal Ask performs dedicated research into those foundational questions and publishes recommendations for the movement as a whole →
    3. decision-makers inside the animal advocacy movement read that research and keep it in mind while making decisions that involve those key uncertainties →
    4. [the same latter steps as in "Strategic priorities and consultation"]

Over the past five years, our division of research effort has been approximately 50% on strategic priorities and consultation, 15% on information lobbying, and 35% on foundational research. However, foundational research has been less common during 2024 and 2025. The need for foundational research was higher as Animal Ask was in its early years and we rapidly identified many key uncertainties that required foundational research. We also spent most of 2023 on foundational research, as we had a specific grant to do so. Currently, our division of research is probably something like 75% on strategic priorities and consultation, 20% on information lobbying, and 5% on foundational research.

III. Summary of our 5 Year Review 

We have tracked the outcomes of 57 of Animal Ask's research projects over the past five years. The collected evidence offers tentative support for Animal Ask's impact but remains ultimately inconclusive. A definitive conclusion is anticipated within the coming years as more ongoing campaigns resolve positively or negatively

As an end-line metric, Animal Ask's projects can be classified into five categories:

Between 2021 and 2025, we have completed 57 major projects. The graph below shows the outcome by category.

A bar graph summarising campaigns by impact category

Positive impact: 2 campaigns
No impact: 17 campaigns
Campaign is still ongoing: 14 campaigns
Averted a suboptimal decision: 2 campaigns
Not measured and difficult to tell: 22 campaigns

For some examples of case-studies for projects in each category outside of “positive impact” which is covered more below.

IV. Upcoming projects and Room for more funding

Animal Asks 2026 budget is $240,000. We have a funding gap for 2026 of approximately $185,000, as we will have a runway of around $45,000 at the start of the year. This will cover numerous projects potentially including:

  1. Economics and implementation for corporate Fish Welfare ask in Europe and North America. Working alongside many stakeholders in the region.
  2. Strategic priorities for Animal Advocacy in India: prioritisation research for approaches to advocacy and the main issues that could be addressed for animals in India. Working alongside many stakeholders in the country.
  3. Strategic priorities for Animal Advocacy in Indonesia: prioritisation research for approaches to advocacy and the main issues that could be addressed for animals in Indonesia. Working alongside many stakeholders in the country.
  4. Exploration of EU policy asks to explore pragmatic second tier asks that are politically tractable
  5. Boiler Welfare asks in Asia: research into the most tractable high impact aks that can be made for broilers across different contexts in Asia. In partnership with several organisations across Asia. 

The exact projects we execute on may change as we gain more clarity on the relative importance, urgency and probability of providing value for research projects. 

Additional funding outside of this budget would allow us to expand our research and engagement capacity to increase the number of projects we take on each year. On average previous projects have been completed for $13,000. Although we expect this figure will be higher for future projects because of investments in improved vetting and the potential to take on broader multi-stakeholder projects.

Donations to Animal Ask are through our fiscal sponsorship with Players Philanthropy Fund, Inc. Thank you for your consideration! 

For additional questions or comments please refer to our broader 2025 Evaluation: A retrospective after 5 years post or email george.bridgwater@animalask.org. We would love to speak to anyone who has worked to evaluate research in other spaces and could help us improve our work. 


SummaryBot @ 2025-11-18T20:04 (+2)

Executive summary: Animal Ask, a research organization supporting strategic decision-making in animal advocacy, presents a five-year retrospective showing tentative but inconclusive evidence of impact and seeks $185,000 in additional funding for 2026 to continue projects in Asia, Europe, and global advocacy strategy.

Key points:

  1. Since 2020, Animal Ask has completed 57 major research projects across all major exploited animal groups and spent approximately $820,000, averaging $13,000 per project.
  2. Its work spans three theories of change—strategic consultation, information lobbying, and foundational research—currently focused about 75% on strategic priorities.
  3. Of 57 evaluated projects, outcomes were classified as: 2 with positive impact, 17 with no impact, 14 ongoing, 2 averting suboptimal decisions, and 22 difficult to measure.
  4. Early evidence suggests potential influence on campaigns such as Sentience’s “Invisible Animals” and AWeCCA’s anti-industrial farming efforts, though most impacts remain unverified.
  5. The organization’s 2026 budget is $240,000 with a $185,000 funding gap; average project cost is expected to rise with broader, multi-stakeholder work.
  6. Planned research includes fish welfare economics, advocacy prioritization in India and Indonesia, EU policy exploration, and broiler welfare strategies in Asia.

 

 


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