In Brief
4 essential strategies for fundraising teams
- Fundraisers face mounting pressure to build donor pipelines amid limited staff capacity, fragmented data, and the need for personalized engagement at scale.
- Artificial intelligence (AI) frees fundraisers to focus on relationships, improves lead targeting, and enhances pipeline efficiency through smarter, data-driven decisions.
- To prepare for successful AI integration, organizations must understand AI tools, define and track KPIs, expand adoption strategically, and apply change management.
Building a strong donor pipeline is one of fundraising’s most complex challenges. It requires deep insight into donor behavior and the ability to use data to drive engagement. That’s why many advancement and fundraising leaders are turning to AI to enhance pipeline development.
From predictive analytics to chatbots and lead scoring, AI offers innovative ways to support gift officers and streamline operations. With thoughtful adoption, awareness of your ethical responsibility, and sound change management, AI can become an indispensable tool for advancement and fundraising teams.
Below are four essential strategies to help your team prepare for AI integration and identify the most impactful applications.
1. Understand the capabilities of AI tools
Advancement and fundraising teams are already putting AI to work in donor strategy. Examples include:
- Predictive analytics for discovery: AI-driven predictive analytics can revolutionize your institution’s ability to identify potential supporters. Sophisticated algorithms can analyze historical giving data, demographics, and other factors to pinpoint individuals or groups likely to align with your mission. Tools allowing advancement divisions to run these models are becoming increasingly democratic. Organizations that do not have a data scientist available may benefit from designating someone on staff as an in-house resource on AI and machine learning, especially if they have a staff member whose interests and skills align with this field.
- Tailored engagement strategies: AI-powered CRMs can segment your database based on various attributes, such as giving history, interests, constituent types, and engagement levels. The newer, more robust CRMs allow you to create highly personalized communication and engagement strategies, sharing content with audiences on a schedule tailored to each recipient. AI can suggest relevant content, recommend suitable engagement levels, and even determine the best times to connect with constituents.
- Virtual assistants for immediate interaction: Engaging with supporters is an integral part of the process, and AI-driven virtual assistants can provide immediate interaction with your audience. Some solutions offer chatbots that can answer common questions, provide information about your organization, and initiate discussions, making it convenient for potential supporters to get involved.
- Prospective donor insights: Because analytics tools can employ AI to quickly analyze publicly available data and determine a person’s potential to support your cause, it can significantly reduce the time and effort required for prospect research. This data can also assist with prioritizing potential supporters and developing balanced gift officer portfolios.
- Donor behavior analysis: An understanding of constituent behavior informs effective pipeline development strategies. AI can help analyze behavior by tracking online interactions, responses to communications, and social media engagement. Social listening tools can provide deep insights into advocate behavior to guide your outreach, enabling you to adapt and refine your approach for better results.
- Predictive lead scoring: Lead scoring, a technique borrowed from the world of sales and marketing, can be a game-changer in pipeline development. AI can assign scores to potential advocates based on their behavior and attributes. Modern CRMs designed with marketing in mind offer lead scoring features to help you focus your efforts on leads with the highest potential for conversion.
- Continuous learning and adaptation: AI systems continually learn and adapt from new data. This means that as you collect more supporter information and engagement data, AI algorithms become more accurate and effective. It’s an investment that pays off over time.
While these AI capabilities will never replace humans when it comes to the full scope of work required for discovery, qualification, and stewardship involved in prospect development, they can reduce the time and effort needed for certain tasks. And they can free up fundraisers to focus on the interpersonal and relational dimensions of donor acquisition, engagement, and retention, while possibly alleviating a need for additional staff.
AI is not a futuristic concept; it’s practical, innovative technology that can transform your fundraising enterprise."
2. Apply change management strategies for increased buy-in
Technology adoption requires a combination of technical know-how and strategic change management. Teams often underestimate the cultural and behavioral shift necessary to adopt AI effectively.
To drive buy-in:
- Create urgency: Introduce AI to solving specific and timely pipeline and prospecting challenges.
- Start small: Begin with low-risk pilot projects to test and refine approaches.
- Quantify impact: Track metrics like time saved, improved conversion rates, or increased donor engagement.
- Celebrate wins: Elevate champions who successfully use AI in their work.
Be clear in your communication to teams: AI is not here to replace you. It’s here to empower you. Frame AI as a partner that augments fundraisers' judgment, intuition, and relationship-building skills.
Additionally, leaders should promote AI adoption as a development opportunity. This technology will continue to permeate the day-to-day operations across virtually every organization. Providing fundraisers the chance to experiment with AI tools is an investment in their personal skills growth.
3. Define and track KPIs to measure AI’s impact
To evaluate AI’s effectiveness:
- Identify key performance indicators (KPIs) relevant to your goals: conversion rates, portfolio coverage, donor retention, or time saved on manual processes.
- Benchmark performance before and after implementation.
- Gather qualitative feedback from users on ease of use, relevance of insights, and effect on decision making.
Wherever possible, translate efficiency into value. For example, suppose AI-enabled segmentation cuts 10 hours of work each month from your annual giving team. How can that time be redirected toward creative content or major donor qualification?
In situations where it’s harder to measure output, such as AI-generated content, consider consistency, speed, and scalability improvements. These efficiencies often unlock capacity for more strategic work that previously fell off the radar.
You can also monitor AI-driven tools using real-time dashboards to understand usage rates, user engagement, and the effectiveness of recommendations. The more your team learns about how these tools are used (or underused), the better your strategy for scaling them.
4. Build your AI road map and prepare for scale
Once you’ve identified successful pilots, it’s time to expand adoption strategically. Build a road map that includes:
- Use case prioritization (which functions will benefit most?)
- Training resources and user guides
- CRM or tech vendor engagement for deeper integration
- Cross-team collaboration with IT, advancement services, and analytics teams
Map out a phased implementation timeline. Start with functions that support core fundraising outcomes, like qualification and segmentation, before moving into emerging areas like generative AI or content creation.
Establish a governance model for AI use. Define who approves new tools, who manages data hygiene, and how teams are held accountable for responsible usage. As AI tools proliferate, governance will help prevent tool fatigue and ensure ethical adoption.
Finally, stay informed. Create opportunities for your team to learn about new capabilities, share vendor demos, or attend sector-specific innovation events.
AI supports people, it doesn’t replace them
In the realm of donor engagement and pipeline development, AI is not a futuristic concept; it’s practical, innovative technology that can transform your fundraising enterprise.
By incorporating AI into your strategies, you can identify potential advocates more effectively, engage them on a personal level, automate tasks, and make data-driven decisions. With AI’s assistance, fundraisers can enhance pipeline development efforts — ultimately leading to increased support for your mission.