Community IT Innovators Nonprofit Technology Topics

Trends in Philanthropy for Tech with Jennifer Huftalen

Community IT Innovators Season 6 Episode 45

Technology Association of Grantmakers held their 2025 Conference in Atlanta. Jenny Huftalen and Carolyn Woodard attended and share the takeaways and trends in philanthropy for tech.

The takeaways: 

  • Technology Association of Grantmakers (TAG) convenes members bi-annually to share knowledge and experiences on technology used at foundations and funders. 
  • Four trends stood out from this year’s conference: AI, Data, Cybersecurity, and our own health.
  • Almost every session and keynote spoke to the prevalence of AI in our lives, in philanthropy, and in the nonprofit space. If you are feeling FOMO or feeling that you don’t know enough about AI, rest assured no one really knows what they are doing either. We also heard several fascinating use cases where nonprofits in partnership with funders are using AI in thoughtful and impactful ways. 
  • Data and database cleaning and organizing was also a trending topic. Several presentations stressed the need to work on your data processes and governance before throwing an AI product at your data and expecting it to clean it up for you. Again, thoughtful attention to the human side of data is necessary to make the AI work well. 
  • Several speakers stressed the need to weave cybersecurity throughout your operations and realize that IT and cybersecurity touch every staff member at your organization. Starting with anti-virus software not being built-in to your purchase, IT has constantly packaged cybersecurity as something additional and separate. But that is an inadequate viewpoint. Weave cybersecurity into everything and keep yourself and your organization better protected.
  • Finally, our health. IT in philanthropy is all about people. People need to be healthy, which can require a pause to reflect even in chaotic and stressful times. Several speakers and attendees talked about the need, as ever, to re-focus on the essentials: the communities we partner with, the deep knowledge we have about the assets we hold and the challenges we face, and that we do this work because we have hope for a better future.

It’s clear that the intersection of technology and philanthropy is evolving rapidly. These trends can feel like a lot to navigate, but remember that the strongest solutions always come from a thoughtful, human-centered approach. Community IT is here to help your nonprofit or foundation thoughtfully weave technology into your operations so you can focus on your mission.

_______________________________
Start a conversation :)

Thanks for listening.