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How to Use AI to Turn Fundraising Data into Better Decisions

Nonprofits are awash in fundraising data—campaign results, event performance, email metrics, year-over-year trends. Yet most teams only tap a fraction of it. Modern AI tools (like ChatGPT and Copilot with their spreadsheet/CSV analysis features) can quickly surface trends, predict churn, and point you to the next best action—without touching private donor notes or sensitive PII. This article outlines where AI is most helpful, what to upload, and how to act on the insights with discipline and guardrails.


The Moment for Data-Driven Fundraising is Here

The macro picture is mixed—and that makes data-driven decision-making essential:

  • Total U.S. giving rose to $592.5B in 2024, outpacing inflation—good news overall.
  • But sector benchmarks show fewer donors and softer retention, especially among small-dollar givers. In Q3 2024, donor counts decreased by 5.3% and retention rates fell by 4.6% year-over-year; micro donors experienced a 12.4% drop.
  • The decline among micro and small donors persisted into 2025 snapshots, reinforcing the need to focus on engagement and recapturing.

When dollars are up but the donor file is thin, leaders need sharper portfolio management, targeted retention strategies, and better upgrade strategies. AI can help you get there quickly.


What to Feed the Algorithm: Clean, Ethical Fundraising Data

AI works best when you give it structured, non-sensitive inputs. Useful, privacy-safe tables include:

  • Gift transactions (date, amount, channel, campaign, appeal code)
  • Donor-level aggregates (first gift date, most recent gift date, total gifts count, total given to date)
  • Campaign/event results (solicited vs. received, response rates, average gift)
  • Channel metrics (open/click/conversion rates by segment)
  • Geography and giving categories (ZIP-level or region, restricted vs. unrestricted)

Exclude: names, emails, phone numbers, notes, birthdays, or anything personally identifying. Keep analysis at the segment or hashed-ID level and follow your data policy. (Transparent data practices are vital to trust.)


High-value questions AI can answer in minutes

  1. Retention & churn risk
  2. RFM & upgrade paths
  3. Campaign efficiency
  4. Lapsed-donor recapture
  5. Predictive forecasting

AI-enabled prospecting and prioritization are already mainstream in the sector; many nonprofits use predictive modeling to rank likely responders and long-term supporters.


A Practical Workflow Your Team Can Replicate

  1. Prep the file (10–15 columns is plenty).
  2. Upload your CSV to an AI analyst.
  3. Validate quickly.
  4. Decide on 3–5 moves.
  5. Instrument and re-run.

Governance: Use AI Confidently and Responsibly

  • Minimize data (only what’s needed) and de-identify records.
  • Document prompts, files, and outputs for auditability.
  • Access controls & MFA on any system touching donor data, and keep software patched.
  • Align to your privacy policy and applicable laws; be transparent with stakeholders about how aggregate data informs strategy.

What Success Looks Like (Leading Indicators)

  • Retention: +1–3 percentage points in first-year and multi-year segments over two quarters. (Sector context: recent reports show slippage—improvements here are meaningful.)
  • Upgrade rate: Share of mid-level donors moving up a tier.
  • Recapture rate: Lapsed donors reactivated vs. prior period.
  • Channel ROI: Net revenue after acquisition cost by appeal.

A Field-Tested Prompt You Can Use Today:

“Analyze the attached anonymized multi-year fundraising dataset”.

  1. Build RFM (recency, frequency, monetary) segments and show counts and revenue by segment.
  2. Calculate year-over-year retention for first-time vs. repeat donors; visualize trendlines.
  3. Predict which segments are most likely to lapse in the next 6 months and explain the top drivers.
  4. Recommend five actions to improve retention and upgrade rates, with estimated revenue impact.
  5. Provide a one-page brief I can share with my board.
  • AI
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I wanted to congratulate you on capturing the essence of our work. Your words were sincere, authentic, and donor-focused. I plan to use your books with several clients. There isn't a better resource to guide fundraising that I've seen in our field.

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