Why Data Is the Foundation of Successful Behavioural Change Campaigns

February 28, 2026by Sarvis Africa0

In 2021, WildAid, an international non-profit catalysing change in wildlife conservation through behavioural change campaigns, launched a baseline survey in Nigeria that set the stage for one of the country’s largest mass media campaigns.

Commissioned by WildAid, the survey was conducted by Globescan, an insights firm adept at crafting evidence-based strategies that reduce risk and guarantee clarity.

The survey results established baseline data on the motivations, attitudes and behaviours of urban buyers of bushmeat, trade hotspots, and what interventions would inspire policy change and long-term behaviour change.

With 2000 people sampled across four major cities, the results were dire:

  • Over 70% urban Nigerians have consumed bushmeat at some point in their lives
  • 45% ate it within the last year.
  • Cited by 51% of the respondents, taste and flavour (the smoky-gamey feel of bushmeat) were the significant factors influencing consumption.
  • More than half of the respondents believe there is less bushmeat available than five years ago, signalling the reality of extinction.

I was part of the pioneering team at WildAid Nigeria at the time, and when the survey results emerged, we deployed them as our core communications and stakeholder engagement strategy. We sought to change consumers’ behaviours by educating them on the importance of the wild animals consumed as bushmeat, the risk of losing them if consumption remained unabated, and the public health implications of continued bushmeat consumption (Ebola was linked to the consumption of bats).

We recruited national TV, radio, newspapers, digital media outlets, and influencers to tell relatable stories about these issues and increase awareness. We sought visibility to catalyse impact and influence permanent behavioural change.

Five years later, we have recorded a behavioural shift, including policy change (which I will address later in this newsletter).

What I learnt from the Campaign

  • Proven data beats assumptions: In my experience, most media campaigns (digital, social, and mass media) fail when built on assumptions. Success becomes far more likely when your strategy is built on empirical data. That was what sealed the deal for us.
  • Insight is wasted if distributed through the wrong channel. Platform choice is not a tactical afterthought; it is strategic architecture.
  • The medium is the message: It’s not enough to mine data. Its insights must be amplified to the right audience, and most importantly, through the best platforms. Insight is wasted if distributed through the wrong platforms. For instance, it’s necessary to consider audience-platform fit: baby boomers congregate on traditional media (Radio, TV, Newspapers) more than on TikTok (the best place for Gen Z). We deployed the best channels that suit our strategy to reach Nigerians.
  • Education is paramount: The media is the last stop for public education, and changing attitudes requires investment in edu-tainment or general content. We partnered with radio, TV, and newspaper platforms, including producing films and documentaries to educate our target audience about the environment.

 

Why Data Matters for Behavioural Campaigns

Behavioural change is not accidental. It is engineered. And engineering requires measurement.

Too often, campaigns are built on passion, intuition, or moral conviction. While those are important, they are insufficient. Behaviour is complex. It is shaped by culture, economics, emotion, habit, and social norms. If you do not understand what truly drives behaviour, you are likely to design a campaign that speaks loudly but changes nothing.

Data matters because it answers five critical questions:

1. Who exactly are you trying to influence?

Without data, “the public” becomes a vague audience. With data, you see segmentation. In WildAid’s case, adults with disposable funds who live in urban centres were targeted. They drive demand for bushmeat. Our survey showed that urban bushmeat consumers were not a homogeneous group. There were habitual consumers, prestige buyers, and those driven primarily by taste. Each required a different message frame.

A one-size-fits-all message rarely works in behavioural campaigns. Data allows you to tailor messaging for specific motivations.

2. Why are they behaving that way?

This is where assumptions are most dangerous.

Many conservation advocates assume bushmeat consumption is purely cultural or poverty-driven. Our data showed that taste and flavour (51%) was the leading driver among urban buyers, not necessity.

That insight shifted our strategy.

Instead of framing the campaign around poverty or tradition, we focused on:

  • Emotional attachment to wildlife
  • Scarcity (extinction risk)
  • Health consequences (Ebola and zoonotic spillover)
  • Social perception and future loss

3. What belief barriers must be dismantled?

Behaviour is sustained by belief systems.

More than half of the respondents already believed that bushmeat was less available than it was five years ago. That insight signalled something powerful: people were aware of scarcity.

This meant we didn’t need to create awareness of decline from scratch — we needed to amplify urgency.

Data helps you identify:

  • Existing awareness
  • Denial gaps
  • Risk perception levels
  • Cognitive dissonance points

You cannot dismantle a barrier you cannot see.

4. What makes the audience emotional? 

People rarely change because of facts, according to Behavioural science. They are emotional beings, and they change because of that. So it’s important to see data as an entrypoint to test emotional triggers:

  • Fear (public health risks)
  • Pride (protecting Nigeria’s wildlife heritage)
  • Shame (social responsibility)
  • Loss aversion (future generations losing iconic species)

In our case, linking bushmeat consumption to public health risks and potential extinction created a stronger behavioural nudge than simply saying “Don’t eat bushmeat.”

Conclusion

WildAid’s bushmeat campaign succeeded not because of visibility or endorsements, but because data gave us clarity about our audience, their motivations and beliefs, the right channels to reach them, and the emotional triggers needed to drive real behavioural change, proving that in behavioural campaigns, evidence is the foundation, not an option

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Connect with us

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest insight on visibility and influence.

    sarvis africa icon
    sarvis africa map

    Connect with us

    Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest insight on visibility and influence.

      Copyright © Sarvis Africa. All rights reserved.

      Copyright © Sarvis Africa. All rights reserved.

      The Impact & Venture Growth Survey
      The Impact & Venture Growth Audit
      Section 1: Organizational Identity & Pathway
      Please select the category below that best defines your organization's core operating model. Your selection will customize the rest of this audit to ensure the questions match your specific industry and funding landscape.

      Which option best describes your current organizational structure?*

      Clear selection
      Section 2A: For Non-Profits & NGOs
      Answer the following questions based on your most recent grant cycles and interactions with institutional donors. Please select the single biggest challenge your organization is currently facing for each question.

      What is your primary bottleneck when applying for or renewing institutional grants?

      Clear selection

      If a major donor asked for your comprehensive Impact Portfolio in the next 2 hours, what happens?

      Clear selection

      Which internal system is currently the biggest barrier to your institutional growth and donor trust?

      Clear selection
      Section 3: For Startups & Social Enterprises
      Answer these questions with your upcoming capital-raising and market expansion goals in mind. Choose the single option that represents your most urgent friction point when speaking to investors or partners.

      What is your current strategy for securing equity-free (non-dilutive) impact grants?

      Clear selection

      When pitching to investors or high-value enterprise partners, where does your narrative fail?

      Clear selection

      What is your primary focus for market expansion over the next 12 months?

      Clear selection
      Section 4: Universal Strategic Bottlenecks (Operations & Scale)
      This final diagnostic section maps your current operational capacity. Please evaluate your digital presence honestly and select the current financial stage of your organizational growth.

      On a scale of 1 to 10, how well does your current website and digital presence communicate your actual enterprise value?*

      Clear selection

      How are you currently managing your pitch decks, impact reporting, PR, and high-level marketing assets?*

      Clear selection

      What is the current financial scale/stage of your organization?*

      Clear selection

      If you had the capital to solve one major institutional bottleneck today, which would you invest in immediately?*

      Clear selection
      Section 5: Report Generation
      You have successfully completed the audit. Please provide your professional contact details below so our system can generate and send your customized Impact & Growth Gap Analysis Report directly to your inbox.

      First Name*

      Clear selection

      Last Name*

      Clear selection

      Work Email Address*

      Clear selection

      Job Title / Designation*

      Clear selection

      Organization Name*

      Clear selection

      Organization Website URL

      Clear selection

      LinkedIn Profile URL

      Clear selection

      Your customized analysis is ready. How would you prefer to receive your results?*

      Clear selection