The best marketing technology doesn't just automate tasks. It amplifies human connection. While AI and automation tools are evolving rapidly, the organizations seeing results aren't just adopting every new feature. They're being strategic about what to automate and what to keep human.
This week, we're exploring what strategic technology adoption looks like in practice. From CRM workflows that create space for personal outreach to AI strategies that enhance rather than replace human judgment, you'll get practical approaches for making technology work harder so your team can focus on what they do best: connecting with people who care about your mission.
Donor retention is getting harder, and digital tools aren't delivering like they used to. But some organizations are using technology as infrastructure for human connections rather than replacing them. This resource breaks down three specific CRM workflows that helped a nonprofit increase donor retention from 12% to 63% in six months. The workflows automate logistics while freeing up staff to focus on relationship-building, like a 90-day welcome series that ends with personal phone calls and automated thank-you processes that involve multiple team members.
Deciding what should never be automated 📖
Most marketing teams ask, "What can we automate?" but the better question is, "What should we never automate?" AI speeds up whatever it touches, so if your strategy isn't clear, it just amplifies the confusion faster. The organizations getting AI right use it to handle execution and repetitive tasks while keeping humans in charge of strategy, brand decisions, and anything that builds long-term customer trust.
How to re-engage lapsed donors with email mapping 📖
You know those supporters who unsubscribed from your emails but probably still care about your mission? Or the ones with 12,000 unread messages sitting in their inbox? Email mapping lets you serve display ads to people on your email list as they browse the web — reaching them where they spend time, rather than hoping they'll notice your email. This works especially well for lapsed donor campaigns, event follow-ups, and annual giving drives because you can target exactly who you want to reach with messaging tailored to their relationship with your organization.
Can AI really support missions? 📖
Some nonprofits are getting creative with AI in ways that go far beyond writing emails. Stop Soldier Suicide analyzes device data to identify private suicide warning signs, while the International Rescue Committee built chatbots that handle 70% more information requests while knowing when sensitive topics need human intervention. These organizations are using technology to advance their core missions in ways that weren't possible before.
When Nathan Cook joined Special Olympics as CTO, he found 5+ million athletes across 172 countries running completely separate systems and processes. Instead of building from the top down, he followed one principle: "nothing about us without us." They went directly to athletes, volunteers, and families before writing a single line of code, asking what worked and what didn't.
This approach led to a unified digital platform that enabled 50% of athletes to self-register for the first time, plus an AI-powered healthcare assistant called Med Buddy that sits in medical visits to translate complex language and advocate for better care. It shows what happens when organizations take community input seriously from day zero rather than building technology and hoping people will adapt to it.