“…Among those approaches, the stakeholder satisfaction approach (Tschirhart & Bielefeld, 2012), which follows stakeholder theory (Freeman, 1984) and multiple constituency theory (Connolly, Conlon, & Deutsch, 1980), is a social construction approach to evaluating nonprofit effectiveness that has become widely accepted in recent decades (Campbell & Lambright, 2016;Herman & Renz, 2008;Mitchell, 2013). From this perspective, there exist many organizational stakeholders with their own sets of interests and notions of effectiveness, thus influencing and evaluating effectiveness in different manners (Campbell & Lambright, 2016;Herman & Renz, 1997 Emerging along with the stakeholder satisfaction approach is the reputational approach to evaluating nonprofit effectiveness Liket & Maas, 2015;Willems et al, 2016). Also emphasizing the socially constructed nature of effectiveness, the reputational approach was developed by scholars who viewed effectiveness reputation as an important social construct that might profoundly shape an organization's ability to fit in an industry or community, attract and retain resources, and so on (Lange, Lee, & Dai, 2011;Mitchell & Stroup, 2017;Sharman, 2007).…”