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Learning Paths

Find the Right Nonprofit/NGO Partners

Focus your giving with strategic partners.

📍 Where you are

You have your mission statement. Now you need a nonprofit partner to bring it to life. This article helps you narrow the field, choose the right approach for your company, vet organisations quickly, and make first contact in a way that builds a real relationship, not just a transaction.

The goal here is not to find a perfect nonprofit partner. It’s to pick a good one and start. Deep relationships with 1–2 organisations create more impact than shallow relationships with many.

3 Approaches to Giving

Approach What It Means Best For
Strategic (company-led) 1–3 cause areas chosen at the company level, tied to mission and values Coherent storytelling, smaller teams, deeper impact
Employee-led Employees choose their own causes; company matches donations or hours Larger teams, broad interests, higher participation
Thought leadership Inspire customers and peers to give back — public advocacy for Pledge 1% Companies with a platform or community

🤖 AI DRAFT PROMPT

Shortlist nonprofit partners for our cause area

Use this to generate a curated shortlist of nonprofit types and vetting questions matched to your company’s mission and pledge type.

Copy this prompt into your preferred AI assistant (like Claude or Gemini), then fill in the [brackets]:

We are a [company type, e.g. B2B SaaS startup] joining Pledge 1% and looking for 1-2 nonprofit partners. Our impact mission is: [paste your mission statement]. Our cause area is: [e.g. workforce development / environmental sustainability / digital equity]. We are pledging: [e.g., employee volunteer time and pro bono services]. Our team is based in: [city / region, or 'fully remote'].

Please:
1. Describe 3-4 types of nonprofits that would be a strong match for our mission and pledge type
2. Suggest specific search terms to use on Candid, Charity Navigator, Idealist, or Global Giving
3. List 5 vetting questions tailored to our pledge type to ask in our first nonprofit conversation

Focus on organisations where our specific skills or product would create real value — not just general volunteering.

How to Find and Shortlist Partners

  • Start with your mission. That’s your filter.
  • Ask employees: run a poll with 2–3 candidate organisations.
  • Research via Charity Navigator or Candid. A 15-minute check is enough to start.
  • Schedule an informational call before committing. Ask what they actually need.
  • Do one activity before formalising. Try it before you commit.

Questions to Ask in Your First Nonprofit Conversation

  • What kinds of support from a corporate partner are most useful to you right now?
  • How do you prefer to communicate and make decisions with partners? What does a good working relationship look like on your end?
  • What would you need to see from us to feel confident this is a partnership worth your time?
  • If we could show up for you one way this year, what would be most valuable to you and what would you do with it?
  • What does a bad corporate partnership look like — what should we avoid?

🤖 AI DRAFT PROMPT

Draft our nonprofit intro / partnership email

Use this to write a warm, professional first email to a nonprofit you want to explore partnering with.

Copy this prompt into your preferred AI assistant (like Claude or Gemini), then fill in the [brackets]:

Write a professional but warm introductory email from a startup to a nonprofit organisation we want to explore a Pledge 1% partnership with.

Our company: [name, what we do, number of employees, location].
Our impact mission: [paste your mission statement].
The nonprofit: [name, their mission in one sentence].
What we're offering: [e.g. employee volunteer hours, pro bono design services, free software access].

The tone should be: genuine, respectful of their time, clear about what we're offering and what we're asking for (a 30-minute call). Do NOT make it sound like a sales pitch or like we expect them to be grateful. Frame it as an exploratory conversation where we want to understand their needs. Length: 150-200 words maximum.

💡 PRO TIP

Don’t overlook this: a nonprofit with a great website isn’t automatically the best partner. Look for organisations that actively engage the people they serve in decision-making.

📣 COMMUNICATING YOUR PLEDGE

When you name your nonprofit partners, you have a communications opportunity. Announce the partnership publicly, tag the nonprofit on social media, and ask them to amplify. A named partner makes your pledge feel concrete and accountable. Ask for a quote from the nonprofit’s leadership to include in your announcement.

3 Quick Actions

  • Decide on your approach in choosing the causes your company will support: strategic, employee-led, or a mix.
  • Research and shortlist 2–3 orgs; include employee feedback and vet the organisations with online tools like Charity Navigator or Candid.
  • Name 1–2 launch partners and share with your exec sponsor for sign-off.

You have your partner. Now it’s time to make your commitment public.

Next: Announce Your Pledge →