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Inspiration, insight, news, and training resources for nonprofits

Nonprofit Grants For Technology And Creativity

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Scroll down to explore this week's grants. Deadlines are always approaching, so take a look and see which ones might be the right fit for your nonprofit.

Happy grant writing!

Cisco

Cisco focuses on innovative, tech-enabled solutions in four social investment areas, which include disaster relief, shelter, water, and food; education; economic empowerment; and climate resilience.

No Deadline

https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/about/csr/community/nonprofits/product-grant-program.html#~overview

 

Internet Society Foundation

The Foundation’s Community-Centered Connectivity Program supports nonprofits that expand Internet access and address the key barriers to meaningful Internet access in community, including availability, affordability, and adoption.

Deadline: May 7, 2026

https://www.isocfoundation.org/grant-programme/community-centered-connectivity/

 

McGuffin Creative Group

Applications are now open for the 2026 McGuffin Grant, created by the Chicago-based marketing and advertising agency, to help a nonprofit further its mission with $30,000 in creative services.

Deadline: April 15, 2026

https://mcguffincg.com/mcguffin-grant/

American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)

ARIN’s Community Grant Program provides grants in support of initiatives that improve the overall Internet industry and user environment.

Applications Accepted April 16 to June 14, 2026

https://www.arin.net/about/community_grants/program/

 

Hearst Foundations

A major national funder supporting well-established U.S. nonprofits in education, health, culture, and social services. Equipment or capital expenses may be eligible when aligned with the mission. Must primarily serve large geographic or demographic constituencies. 

No Deadline

https://www.hearstfdn.org/applying-reporting/how-to-apply

 

Vicek Foundation

The Foundation recognizes and celebrates immigrant contributions in the U.S. and funds programs that focus on supporting immigrant contributions in the arts, sciences, culture, and society, investing in organizations that take a creative approach to putting their mission into action. 

Deadline: April 30,2026

https://vilcek.org/grants/

 

 

How Nonprofits Can Prevent Donor Fatigue and Keep Donors Engaged

Donor fatigue can make even loyal supporters tune out, especially when nonprofits are asking for more in a tough funding climate. This post explores how stronger donor communication, meaningful appreciation, and creative fundraising strategies can help nonprofits keep supporters engaged and invested in the mission.

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Let’s talk about the phrase that strikes fear into the heart of even the most seasoned fundraiser: donor fatigue.

It is real. It is frustrating. And it can turn even your most loyal donors into inbox ghosts.

Right now, nonprofits are stuck between a rock and a budget cut. Federal funding has taken a hit, the economy feels unsteady, and organizations are being asked to do more with less while still asking donors to give again.

So yes, donor fatigue happens.

But no, it is not a death sentence for your fundraising strategy.

You can keep donors engaged and even excited with the right mix of creativity, appreciation, and strategic communication. Let’s talk about how.

1. Stop Sounding Like Everyone Else

Generic appeals and mass emails might be quick, but they are also a quick way to get ignored. If your donor communications feel flat, overly polished, or like they could have come from any nonprofit anywhere, it is time to change course.

Here is what works:

Personalize your outreach. If your emails still start with “Dear Supporter,” we need to have a talk. Use their name. Reference the last event they attended, the last gift they gave, or the campaign they supported. Use your donor database to segment by giving history, interests, and connection points. Make donors feel seen.

Tell better stories. Your organization is doing important work. Do not bury it in dry copy. Share stories of lives changed, communities strengthened, and progress made. But be careful not to focus only on hardship. Celebrate wins too, even the small ones. Donors want to know their support is making something good happen.

Let donors speak for you. Ask supporters to share why they give. Feature those stories in your newsletter or on social media. When donors see themselves reflected in your cause, it deepens their connection and gives others a reason to lean in too.

2. Celebrate Donors Like They Are the Heroes, Because They Are

Too many nonprofits send a thank-you email and call it done. But if the only time a donor hears from you is when you need money, you are not building a relationship. You are running a transaction.

Here is how to do better:

Send thank-yous that actually feel like thank-yous. “Thanks for your donation” is the bare minimum. Go further. Be specific. Be warm. Include an update, a photo, or a quote from someone impacted by their support.

Here is a simple example:

Dear Ellen,

Thank you for your generous support. Because of your gift, we are able to provide students with the supplies and support they need to thrive this season. Your generosity is helping create opportunity, confidence, and community, and we are so grateful to have you with us.

Build a donor wall. It can be a physical display or a digital one. What matters is that it feels thoughtful and genuine. Highlight donor stories, recognize giving levels, and help supporters see the impact they are making.

Celebrate giving milestones. If someone has given for three years, say so. If they have stayed with you through a tough season, acknowledge it. Send a note. Mark the moment. Let them know they matter.

3. Mix Up Your Fundraising Approach

If your default move is yet another email asking for money, you are not alone. But you are also probably wearing people out.

Give donors a fresh way to say yes.

Try peer-to-peer fundraising. Let your supporters raise money on your behalf. When friends and family see someone they trust championing your cause, it opens the door to new donors and new energy.

Offer experiences, not just appeals. Think events, behind-the-scenes tours, volunteer opportunities, or special impact days. Invite donors into the work in ways that go beyond writing a check.

Build a recurring giving program. Monthly donors are often your most loyal supporters. Make it easy for them to give and make sure they feel appreciated. Regular updates, insider information, and genuine gratitude go a long way.

4. Make It About Community, Not Just Contributions

Donors are not ATMs. They are people who care.

If your fundraising treats them like transactions, they will tune out. But when you remind them that they are part of something meaningful, something bigger than a single gift, they stay connected.

Their dollars fuel real work. Their support creates real change. Their investment matters.

The more you can help donors feel like they are part of your mission, not just funding it from the sidelines, the stronger your relationships will be.

Final Word

Donor fatigue is not always avoidable, but it is manageable.

With better storytelling, smarter segmentation, stronger appreciation, and a little creativity, you can keep your donors engaged, valued, and willing to stick with you.

So wake them up.

Tell them a story worth reading. Invite them into something bigger. Remind them that they matter.

Because they do.

And because your mission is too important to lose momentum now.

Powerhouse Boards: Tips to Achieving Long-Term Success

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Board Members

Nonprofits Need to Be on TikTok: Here Are 4 Steps to Thrive

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Social Media
Fundraising

Getting to Know Stephanie Minor with Jeff Hocker & Alan Potash

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Podcast

Repurposing Content: 4 Strategies That Work to Gain More Visibility for Your Nonprofit

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Content Marketing

Palm Spring Life: Local Heroes Recognized for National Philanthropy Day in the Desert

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Magazine

How Nonprofits Can Prevent Donor Fatigue and Keep Donors Engaged

Book Icon Read Time - Brix Agency - Webflow Cloneable Template
Read Time
Fundraising

Let’s talk about the phrase that strikes fear into the heart of even the most seasoned fundraiser: donor fatigue.

It is real. It is frustrating. And it can turn even your most loyal donors into inbox ghosts.

Right now, nonprofits are stuck between a rock and a budget cut. Federal funding has taken a hit, the economy feels unsteady, and organizations are being asked to do more with less while still asking donors to give again.

So yes, donor fatigue happens.

But no, it is not a death sentence for your fundraising strategy.

You can keep donors engaged and even excited with the right mix of creativity, appreciation, and strategic communication. Let’s talk about how.

1. Stop Sounding Like Everyone Else

Generic appeals and mass emails might be quick, but they are also a quick way to get ignored. If your donor communications feel flat, overly polished, or like they could have come from any nonprofit anywhere, it is time to change course.

Here is what works:

Personalize your outreach. If your emails still start with “Dear Supporter,” we need to have a talk. Use their name. Reference the last event they attended, the last gift they gave, or the campaign they supported. Use your donor database to segment by giving history, interests, and connection points. Make donors feel seen.

Tell better stories. Your organization is doing important work. Do not bury it in dry copy. Share stories of lives changed, communities strengthened, and progress made. But be careful not to focus only on hardship. Celebrate wins too, even the small ones. Donors want to know their support is making something good happen.

Let donors speak for you. Ask supporters to share why they give. Feature those stories in your newsletter or on social media. When donors see themselves reflected in your cause, it deepens their connection and gives others a reason to lean in too.

2. Celebrate Donors Like They Are the Heroes, Because They Are

Too many nonprofits send a thank-you email and call it done. But if the only time a donor hears from you is when you need money, you are not building a relationship. You are running a transaction.

Here is how to do better:

Send thank-yous that actually feel like thank-yous. “Thanks for your donation” is the bare minimum. Go further. Be specific. Be warm. Include an update, a photo, or a quote from someone impacted by their support.

Here is a simple example:

Dear Ellen,

Thank you for your generous support. Because of your gift, we are able to provide students with the supplies and support they need to thrive this season. Your generosity is helping create opportunity, confidence, and community, and we are so grateful to have you with us.

Build a donor wall. It can be a physical display or a digital one. What matters is that it feels thoughtful and genuine. Highlight donor stories, recognize giving levels, and help supporters see the impact they are making.

Celebrate giving milestones. If someone has given for three years, say so. If they have stayed with you through a tough season, acknowledge it. Send a note. Mark the moment. Let them know they matter.

3. Mix Up Your Fundraising Approach

If your default move is yet another email asking for money, you are not alone. But you are also probably wearing people out.

Give donors a fresh way to say yes.

Try peer-to-peer fundraising. Let your supporters raise money on your behalf. When friends and family see someone they trust championing your cause, it opens the door to new donors and new energy.

Offer experiences, not just appeals. Think events, behind-the-scenes tours, volunteer opportunities, or special impact days. Invite donors into the work in ways that go beyond writing a check.

Build a recurring giving program. Monthly donors are often your most loyal supporters. Make it easy for them to give and make sure they feel appreciated. Regular updates, insider information, and genuine gratitude go a long way.

4. Make It About Community, Not Just Contributions

Donors are not ATMs. They are people who care.

If your fundraising treats them like transactions, they will tune out. But when you remind them that they are part of something meaningful, something bigger than a single gift, they stay connected.

Their dollars fuel real work. Their support creates real change. Their investment matters.

The more you can help donors feel like they are part of your mission, not just funding it from the sidelines, the stronger your relationships will be.

Final Word

Donor fatigue is not always avoidable, but it is manageable.

With better storytelling, smarter segmentation, stronger appreciation, and a little creativity, you can keep your donors engaged, valued, and willing to stick with you.

So wake them up.

Tell them a story worth reading. Invite them into something bigger. Remind them that they matter.

Because they do.

And because your mission is too important to lose momentum now.

Nonprofit Grants For Technology And Creativity

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Grant Writing

Scroll down to explore this week's grants. Deadlines are always approaching, so take a look and see which ones might be the right fit for your nonprofit.

Happy grant writing!

Cisco

Cisco focuses on innovative, tech-enabled solutions in four social investment areas, which include disaster relief, shelter, water, and food; education; economic empowerment; and climate resilience.

No Deadline

https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/about/csr/community/nonprofits/product-grant-program.html#~overview

 

Internet Society Foundation

The Foundation’s Community-Centered Connectivity Program supports nonprofits that expand Internet access and address the key barriers to meaningful Internet access in community, including availability, affordability, and adoption.

Deadline: May 7, 2026

https://www.isocfoundation.org/grant-programme/community-centered-connectivity/

 

McGuffin Creative Group

Applications are now open for the 2026 McGuffin Grant, created by the Chicago-based marketing and advertising agency, to help a nonprofit further its mission with $30,000 in creative services.

Deadline: April 15, 2026

https://mcguffincg.com/mcguffin-grant/

American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)

ARIN’s Community Grant Program provides grants in support of initiatives that improve the overall Internet industry and user environment.

Applications Accepted April 16 to June 14, 2026

https://www.arin.net/about/community_grants/program/

 

Hearst Foundations

A major national funder supporting well-established U.S. nonprofits in education, health, culture, and social services. Equipment or capital expenses may be eligible when aligned with the mission. Must primarily serve large geographic or demographic constituencies. 

No Deadline

https://www.hearstfdn.org/applying-reporting/how-to-apply

 

Vicek Foundation

The Foundation recognizes and celebrates immigrant contributions in the U.S. and funds programs that focus on supporting immigrant contributions in the arts, sciences, culture, and society, investing in organizations that take a creative approach to putting their mission into action. 

Deadline: April 30,2026

https://vilcek.org/grants/

 

 

How To Deliver A Nonprofit Elevator Pitch That Actually Works

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Fundraising
Marketing

Picture this. You are holding a tiny plate of appetizers, balancing a drink, and someone at a cocktail party looks at you and says, “So what do you do?”

This is your moment. And you have about the length of one shrimp skewer to make them care.

Most nonprofit leaders freeze in that moment. They ramble. They get too technical. They offer a mission statement that sounds like it was written by a committee that loves long meetings.

But you, my friend, can do better. You can offer a pitch that is human, clear, and compelling. You can offer a pitch that leaves people saying, “Tell me more.”

Here is how you build an elevator pitch that lands.

Step One. The Hook. Ten to fifteen seconds.

Start with who you are and what you do. Skip the small talk. Get right into it. Think of this like the trailer before the movie. It should pull someone in and make them want to stick around.

A single sentence about your mission is enough. Do not firehose people with program details. There is time for that later.

Step Two. The Body. Thirty to sixty seconds.

Now you get to give them something meaty. What makes your nonprofit special. Who you serve. The difference you are making. This is where specificity shines. Numbers. A short story. A human detail. Anything that helps your listener see the impact rather than guess at it.

Paint a picture. Make it vivid. Make it human.

Step Three. The Wrap Up. Twenty to thirty seconds.

Bring it home with a clear and friendly invitation. Not a hard ask. Not a corner-them-in-the-hallway moment. Just an open door.

Think of it like saying, “We would love to have you in our world if it speaks to you.”

Your invitation can be small. Share our work. Follow us on Instagram. Come to a volunteer day. People appreciate an easy on ramp.

What This Sounds Like At A Cocktail Party

Because let’s face it. That is where half of these pitches happen.

Here are three examples that sound like actual humans talking. Use them for inspiration.

Environmental Conservation Example

Hook:
“Hi. I'm Sarah. I run GreenEarth Foundation. We are all about protecting the planet for our grandkids.”

Body:
“We roll up our sleeves and get things done. Tree planting. Clean energy advocacy. Community training. Last year we planted one hundred thousand trees and brought down carbon emissions in our community by twenty percent. It feels pretty incredible to see real change.”

Wrap Up:
“If you ever want to get your hands dirty at one of our tree planting days or just check us out, I would love to loop you in.”

Youth Empowerment Example

Hook:
“I'm David. I started EmpowerYouth. We help kids discover their confidence and leadership.”

Body:
“We match young people with mentors and put on workshops that help them see what is possible for their futures. Ninety percent of the students who go through our programs say they feel more confident at school and at home. It is pretty amazing to watch them grow.”

Wrap Up:
“If you ever want to mentor a student or even host an intern for a few weeks, I would be thrilled to connect you.”

Animal Welfare Example

Hook:
“Hi, I'm Lisa. I run Paws for Compassion. We rescue animals that have had a rough start.”

Body:
“Our team pulls animals from unsafe situations, gets them medical care, and finds them loving homes. This past year, we rescued more than five hundred animals. Watching them go from terrified to tail wagging never gets old.”

Wrap Up:
“Always happy to share our adoption events or foster opportunities if you love animals as much as we do.”

Your Elevator Pitch Is More Than A Pitch

It is an invitation. It is storytelling. It is leadership.

And the more you practice, the more natural it becomes. Do yourself a favor. Write your pitch down. Practice it three times. Out loud. Maybe even in the mirror. Your confidence will rise and your impact will grow right along with it.

You want people to see the heart of your mission in under a minute. When you get this right, they will not forget you. And that is exactly the point.

And honestly, who does not need that?

Grants For Grassroots Action And Opportunities For Change

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Grant Writing

Scroll down to explore this week's grants. Deadlines are always approaching, so take a look and see which ones might be the right fit for your nonprofit.

Happy grant writing!

Sparkplug Foundation

The Foundation prioritizes grassroots organizing and innovation as the key for creating change and supports projects that engage individuals who have been excluded or marginalized. Funding supports U.S. nonprofits for community organizing projects, education initiatives, and music.

Deadline: May 1, 2026

https://www.sparkplugfoundation.org/apply/

 

Office of Postsecondary Education

Seeking applications to implement the Talent Search Program, which funds nonprofits and others in supporting disadvantaged individuals in completing secondary school and pursuing higher education.

Deadline: May 1, 2026

https://www.grants.gov/search-results-detail/361528

 

Cause Strategy Partners

The Alexandra Hallock Capacity Building Grant supports small nonprofits working to advance human rights, girls' and women’s empowerment, and LGBTQ+ causes by providing financial assistance and capacity-building resources to strengthen their long-term sustainability.

Deadline: April 10, 2026

https://causestrategypartners.com/resources/alexandra-hallock-capacity-building-grant-for-small-nonprofits

 

AJ Muste Foundation for Peace and Justice

The Foundation’s Social Justice Fund supports projects confronting institutionalized violence against racial, ethnic, gender-based, and LGBTQ communities. The Organizing Grant is designed to support grassroots activist efforts by newly founded and existing organizations working toward systemic change in the U.S.

Deadline: April 6, 2026

https://ajmuste.org/apply/organizing-grants/

 

DWF Foundation

The Foundation supports registered charities that create an impact in one or more of the following areas: homelessness, health and wellbeing, employability, education, and environment and sustainability. 

Deadline: June 30, 2026

https://dwfgroup.com/en/about-us/dwf-foundation

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Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation

The Foundation supports community-based organizations and programs for which a small amount of money can have a large impact. 

Deadline: May 11, 2026

https://www.mvdreyfusfoundation.org/

 

Should You Use AI for Grant Writing? Yes. But Let’s Talk About How.

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Artificial Intelligence
Grant Writing

Raise your hand if you’ve ever opened a blank Word doc to start a grant proposal and immediately decided to reorganize your sock drawer instead. We get it. Grant writing is one of the most necessary but mentally draining parts of nonprofit work.

Now AI is everywhere, promising to write your proposals faster than you can say “restricted funds.” So the question is not just, can you use AI for grant writing? The question is, how do you use it well without losing your message, your mission, or your mind?

Let’s dig in.

What AI Can Actually Do for Grant Writers

AI is not a miracle. It cannot understand your community’s challenges or the heart behind your programs. But it can handle the stuff that bogs you down. Here's how smart nonprofits are using AI today:

  • Writing first drafts of grant sections like mission statements, program descriptions, and community needs
  • Summarizing long grant guidelines so you know what a funder really wants
  • Brainstorming answers to repetitive application questions
  • Editing for clarity, tone, and structure
  • Rewriting content to fit a new grant with different word counts or structure

If you have ever spent 90 minutes trying to find a more impressive way to say “we help people,” AI can help with that.

What AI Cannot Do

Let’s be clear. AI does not know your organization. It does not know what keeps your clients up at night. It does not know what makes your team special. That means AI cannot:

  • Tell your impact story with any real emotion
  • Build trust with a funder
  • Strategically align your ask with a funder’s priorities
  • Replace your judgment, your voice, or your nonprofit brain

Using AI Well: A Success For Nonprofits Strategy

If you want to use AI the right way, here is your step-by-step:

  1. Start with your real content
    Feed the tool your mission, past grant language, or program summaries. AI needs raw material. Give it something to work with.
  2. Use it for structure or improvement
    Ask it to write a first draft or rewrite a section with a specific tone. For example, “Make this sound more persuasive” or “Cut this to 250 words.”
  3. Layer in your voice and heart
    Always go back and revise. Add real stories, data, and insights that only you have.
  4. Fact-check and personalize
    AI appears confident and often wrong. Review everything before you hit submit.
  5. Keep your funder in mind
    If it sounds like it could have come from anyone, it is not ready yet. Make sure it clearly speaks to that funder’s goals and values.

Our Take At Success For Nonprofits

We love tools that make nonprofit life easier. But we also know that people give to people. Funders invest in relationships, trust, and the real human work behind your mission. AI can save time. It can spark good ideas. It can make a painful writing day a little smoother.

But AI will never replace your experience or your insight. Those are your own superpowers. Use AI like a smart intern who works quickly and takes no bathroom breaks. Just don’t let it sign the grant application.

Nonprofit Social Media Policy

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Social Media

Let me guess.

Someone on your team is running your nonprofit’s Instagram.

Your board chair occasionally posts about the organization on Facebook.

Your program manager took a photo at an event and threw it on LinkedIn.

And absolutely no one has talked about the rules.

Welcome to the nonprofit social media free-for-all!

If you’re leading a nonprofit and you don’t have a social media policy, you are one accidental post away from a PR headache you did not budget time for this year.

Let’s fix that.

First: What Is a Social Media Policy?

A social media policy is simply a set of guidelines that explains how people connected to your organization should behave online when they represent your nonprofit.

It typically covers things like:

  • What staff and volunteers can and cannot post
  • Who is allowed to post on official accounts
  • What information must stay confidential
  • How the organization should respond to comments or criticism

In plain English:

It’s the rulebook for how your nonprofit shows up on the internet.

And if you don’t write the rulebook, the internet will write one for you.

Why Nonprofits Get Into Trouble Online

Social media is powerful. It builds community, raises awareness, and helps people fall in love with your mission.

But it can also blow up in your face.

Without clear guidelines, people may accidentally:

  • Share confidential client stories
  • Post donor information without permission
  • Use photos of children without consent
  • Speak on behalf of the organization when they shouldn’t
  • Engage in comment wars that damage your reputation

A social media policy exists to protect your nonprofit’s brand, legal standing, and reputation.

Because here’s the real deal...

Once something is posted online, you don’t control it anymore.

Screenshots are forever.

The Real Reason Nonprofits Avoid This

Most nonprofits skip writing policies because it feels boring.

You’re busy raising money, running programs, and putting out daily fires. Writing a policy sounds like the kind of task that lives in a dusty HR folder.

But here’s the thing.

When a social media mistake happens, suddenly everyone wishes that dusty folder existed.

A good policy prevents awkward conversations like:

“Why did you post that photo of our client?”
“Why did you argue with that donor in the comments?”
“Why did our board member announce our new program before we did?”

Policies remove ambiguity.

And ambiguity is where mistakes thrive.

What Every Nonprofit Social Media Policy Should Cover

You don’t need a 40-page legal document.

You need a clear, practical guide that people will actually read.

Here are the essentials.

1. Who Can Post on Official Accounts

This sounds obvious, but it’s amazing how many organizations skip it.

Your policy should answer:

  • Who manages each platform
  • Who has login access
  • Who approves content

If five people have the password and nobody is in charge, chaos is guaranteed.

2. What Is Off Limits

Spell this out clearly.

Examples include:

  • Client identities or sensitive stories
  • Confidential organizational information
  • Internal conflicts or board disagreements
  • Financial information not yet released publicly

If your nonprofit serves vulnerable populations, this section is critical.

3. Expectations for Staff Personal Accounts

This one makes people nervous, so let’s keep it real.

You cannot control everything staff post on their personal pages.

But you can establish expectations like:

  • Do not present personal opinions as official organizational positions
  • Do not share confidential information
  • Use disclaimers when discussing work topics

The goal is not to police people.

The goal is to protect the mission.

4. Comment and Crisis Protocols

What happens when:

  • Someone criticizes your nonprofit online?
  • A donor complains publicly?
  • A controversial issue sparks debate?

Your policy should outline:

  • Who responds
  • What tone to use
  • When to escalate internally

Because the worst time to figure this out is in the middle of a social media meltdown.

5. Brand Voice and Tone

Your nonprofit should sound like itself online.

Not like five different people arguing on the same account.

Your policy should clarify:

  • Tone (professional, friendly, mission-focused)
  • Language expectations
  • Whether humor is appropriate
  • How advocacy should be handled

Consistency builds trust.

And trust is the currency of nonprofit work.

One More Thing Nonprofits Forget

A policy sitting in a Google Drive folder helps no one.

Once you create it:

  • Train staff
  • Walk board members through it
  • Share expectations with volunteers

Your nonprofit’s reputation lives in the hands of everyone connected to it.

They deserve guidance.

The Bottom Line

Social media is one of the most powerful tools nonprofits have.

It can:

  • Grow your audience
  • Inspire donors
  • Amplify your mission

But only if it’s handled with intention.

A social media policy isn’t bureaucracy.

It’s leadership.

Because the organizations that think ahead are the ones that avoid cleaning up digital messes later.

And trust me.

That is time better spent raising money.

AI for Nonprofits: How Smart Nonprofit Leaders Can Save Time, Strengthen Fundraising, and Reduce Staff Overload

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Artificial Intelligence

A lot of nonprofits look fine on the surface. The mission is strong. The team is committed. People are doing their best.

But behind the scenes, everybody is stretched too thin.

The same few staff members are carrying an unfair amount of the load. Donor emails are getting written late at night. Board reports are being edited at the last minute. Program staff are drowning in notes, follow-up, forms, and reporting. And because everyone is working so hard just to keep up with things, almost no one has the time to step back and ask the question that actually matters:

Why are we still doing all of this the hard way?

That is why nonprofit leaders need to pay attention to AI. Not because it is trendy. Not because some board member forwarded an article and got excited. And not because your nephew told you ChatGPT can write a grant in six seconds, which, for the record, is exactly how you end up with nonsense in paragraph four.

AI is not just another new tool to toss on the pile. It is already changing the way organizations approach writing, communication, analysis, and workflow. It will not do everything, but it is absolutely changing expectations around speed and productivity.

And that is the part nonprofit leaders cannot afford to miss.

The problem is not that nonprofits are behind on technology

The real issue is that many nonprofits equate working harder with working smarter, and in the process miss opportunities to improve with better tools and systems.

I see this all the time. Smart people. Deeply committed people. Mission-driven people. And yet the actual operating system is chaos, delay, bottlenecks, and heroic last-minute effort. There is too much dependence on individual staff members, too little documentation, too much reinvention, and not nearly enough time devoted to strategy, fundraising, and relationship building.

That is where AI can help. Not by replacing people, but by helping with the work that slows people down.

So much nonprofit work comes down to this: someone has to get the first draft started. The email. The outline. The summary. The notes. The report. It is not glamorous, but it has to happen, and it usually lands on the desk of someone who is already stretched thin. AI can help with that early lift so your team can spend less time grinding through the basics and more time focused on the work that really needs human insight.

Let’s say the quiet part out loud

Many nonprofits use AI casually and sporadically.

One staff member uses it to write a social media caption. Someone else uses it to clean up notes from a meeting. A board member mentions it in passing and says, “We should probably be thinking about this.”

Fine. But let’s not confuse that with a real plan.

That is not a strategy. That is poking around.

And plenty of organizations do this. They test a few things, talk about innovation, and then go right back to business as usual. Nothing really changes. No systems improve. No time gets saved in a meaningful way. No one steps back and decides how these tools could actually support the work.

If you are a nonprofit leader, your real job right now is not figuring out which shiny AI tool to play with for fifteen minutes. Your job is to ask much harder questions:

  • Where are we wasting staff time every single week?
  • What repetitive tasks keep talented people stuck in low-value work?
  • Where are we slow because our systems are weak?
  • Where are we relying on people to remember things instead of building a process?
  • Where could a strong first draft save us hours?

That is where AI belongs, not as entertainment, not as a gimmick, but as part of how the work gets done.

Nonprofits that treat AI as a core strategy, not a side experiment, will see the biggest impact.

What AI can actually help with

Let’s cut through the hype and get practical.

AI can help nonprofits with a lot of the work that slows teams down. It can draft donor emails, help shape grant proposals, summarize meetings, turn a webinar into a blog post, and repurpose one strong piece of content into social media posts. It can take a pile of messy notes and turn them into something more organized and usable. It can help with FAQs, board communications, and internal documents that keep getting pushed aside because nobody has time to deal with them.

It can also be a useful brainstorming partner when your team is trying to come up with event names, campaign themes, workshop titles, or just a decent first draft to build from.

That does not mean you hand over your voice, your ethics, your relationships, or your strategy.

It means your staff can spend less time struggling with the first draft and more time using their expertise where it counts.

Nonprofit fundraising is where this gets very real

If you work in nonprofit fundraising, pay close attention.

Fundraising is built on communication, clarity, timing, follow-up, and trust. That means AI can be especially useful in the parts of fundraising that tend to bog teams down: drafting, segmenting, summarizing, organizing, and helping teams move from idea to action more quickly.

Fundraising teams can use AI to support donor messaging, stewardship, grant writing, and day-to-day follow-up. That support matters even more now, because people expect communication that is quicker, more customized, and more professional than ever.

That matters because donors may never say, “Your organization feels operationally clunky.”

They just feel it.

They feel it when your follow-up is inconsistent.They feel it when your thank-you email sounds generic.They feel it when your reporting is confusing.They feel it when your message is all over the place.They feel it when it takes forever to respond.

And when donors feel friction, giving gets harder.

This is not because donors are unreasonable. Everyone now expects faster, more individual, polished communication. An important mission does not excuse being disorganized.

Your mission is important. That is exactly why your systems need to improve.

No, AI should not write everything

Please do not let your organization start producing stiff, generic content and mistake that for progress.

Your nonprofit still needs people. It still needs judgment, perspective, empathy, ethics, and the kind of storytelling that comes from actually knowing your community and your mission. AI can support that work, but it cannot replace it.

Used well, AI should strengthen your team, not make your voice more generic or impersonal.

And that is exactly why leadership matters. Staff need clear direction. They need practical boundaries. They need to understand what good use looks like and where the line is. They need to know what information should never be entered into a public AI tool. And they need the reminder that a first draft is just that, a first draft. It still needs a human brain and a human voice before it goes out into the world.

Success with AI will not come from tutorials alone. It will come from leaders who are willing to build better systems, encourage learning, and keep people, not technology, in charge.

Because the biggest barrier is not the technology.

It is fear.It is inertia.It is confusion.It is perfectionism dressed up as caution.It is leadership teams pretending to be prudent while actually avoiding change.

Here is the question nonprofit leaders should be asking

Not: What AI tool is best for nonprofits?

That question is too small.

Ask this instead:

What work are we asking humans to do that should no longer take this much human time?

Now we are getting somewhere.

Because when nonprofit leaders start there, the use cases get obvious.

Maybe your team needs help creating first drafts faster.Maybe your executive director needs help turning notes into usable communications.Maybe your fundraiser needs help creating more personal donor communication.Maybe your program team needs help summarizing feedback and outcomes.Maybe your marketing person needs help turning one piece of content into five.

That is not replacing expertise.

That is clearing the runway so expertise can actually be used.

How to start using AI in your nonprofit without losing your mind

You do not need a giant AI task force. Lord help us.

You need a sane starting point.

Start here:

1. Start where the pain is obvious

Pick three tasks your team does all the time that eat up more energy than they should. First drafts. Summaries. Recaps. Outlines. Internal documents. FAQs. Do not make it overly complicated. Start with the repetitive work that slows people down and see where AI can make life easier.

2. Give people guardrails before they need them

If you want staff to use AI well, do not leave them to figure it out on their own. Be clear about what is fair game, what needs human review, and what should never go into a public AI tool. People do better when the expectations are clear.

3. Focus on editing, not just generating

Too many people think the win is getting AI to spit something out quickly. It is not. The real win is knowing how to take that rough draft and make it stronger, smarter, and more useful. That is the skill your team actually needs to build.

4. Use it when time savings are obvious

Do not force it into every corner of the organization. Use it where it helps staff move faster and think more clearly.

5. Keep your voice

Your nonprofit should still sound like your nonprofit. If the content sounds like a malfunctioning LinkedIn post, start over.

The nonprofits that gain the most will not be the ones making the most noise

They will be the ones willing to adapt.

That is what really matters.

This is not going to come down to which organizations have the biggest budgets or the fanciest tools. It is going to come down to who is willing to change how they work.

The nonprofits that move forward will be the ones that stop treating AI like a novelty and start using it in practical, thoughtful ways that actually support the work. The ones that fall behind will be the ones still circling the topic, testing a few things here and there, but never making any real operational shift.

And let’s be honest, some nonprofits are still far too attached to struggle.

They wear overwork like a badge of honor. They confuse burnout with commitment. They keep doing things the hard way and call it dedication.

But struggle is not a strategy.

Busy is not a strategy.Scrambling is not a culture.Heroic last-minute effort is not a systems plan.

AI is not going to save a poorly run organization. But it can absolutely help a thoughtful organization become faster, clearer, more consistent, and less dependent on staff running themselves into the ground.

And frankly, that is long overdue.

Final thought

If your nonprofit is still sitting around waiting to watch how this all plays out, here is how it plays out:

The organizations that learn how to use AI wisely will get more done.They will communicate faster.They will build stronger systems.They will free up more staff time for real mission work.They will look more polished.They will feel more responsive.They will be more likely to raise money and build trust.

Meanwhile, organizations that are still doing everything manually will keep telling themselves they are too busy to change.

That is not a badge of honor.That is a warning sign.

AI is not the mission. But it may be one of the clearest opportunities nonprofit leaders have right now to protect staff capacity, strengthen fundraising, and stop bleeding time on work that no longer needs to be so hard.

Honestly? It is about time.

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