{"site":{"name":"Koji","description":"AI-native customer research platform that helps teams conduct, analyze, and synthesize customer interviews at scale.","url":"https://www.koji.so","contentTypes":["blog","documentation"],"lastUpdated":"2026-06-04T08:39:46.800Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"74c86ef6-a113-4b5b-be6f-c242d2d09315","slug":"ai-research-for-nonprofits","title":"AI-Powered Research for Nonprofits: Listen to Donors, Members, Volunteers, and Beneficiaries at Scale","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/ai-research-for-nonprofits","summary":"Nonprofits can run donor, member, volunteer, and beneficiary research at scale with AI interviews. Koji conducts voice or text conversations, probes answers with adaptive follow-ups, and analyzes hundreds of conversations into a report in days. Key use cases: lapsed-donor and retention research, donor-motivation and major-gift discovery, member renewal, volunteer experience, beneficiary program feedback, and campaign/message testing. Six structured question types (open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, yes_no) capture both quotes and chartable data. Credit model: text 1 credit, voice 3; free tier 10 credits; paid from EUR 29/month.","content":"Nonprofits can run donor, member, volunteer, and beneficiary research at scale with AI interviews - capturing the story behind a lapsed gift, a churned member, or a program that is not landing, without hiring a moderator or a panel agency. A platform like Koji conducts voice or text conversations with your stakeholders, probes their answers with adaptive follow-up questions, and turns hundreds of conversations into an analyzed report in days instead of months. For mission-driven teams running lean, that is the difference between guessing and knowing.\n\n## Why donor and stakeholder research is broken for most nonprofits\n\nThe economics of the sector make listening urgent. Overall donor retention sits around 43-44%, and new-donor retention is far worse - first-year retention for small gifts hovers near 18%, meaning more than four out of five first-time donors never give again. The Fundraising Effectiveness Project has repeatedly flagged converting a first gift into a second as the sector's most consequential unsolved problem.\n\nMost organizations respond with a long annual survey. The problem: a survey tells you *that* a donor lapsed or a member is unhappy, but never *why*. You get a 4 out of 5 satisfaction score and no idea what would have made it a 5. Traditional qualitative research - phone interviews, focus groups, hiring an agency - is accurate but slow and expensive, exactly the resources a nonprofit does not have.\n\nAI interviews close that gap. With tools like Koji, you can ask the structured question (\"How likely are you to give again next year?\") *and* immediately probe the why with a conversational follow-up - at the scale of a survey, for a fraction of the cost of a research agency.\n\n## High-value research use cases across the nonprofit lifecycle\n\n- **Donor retention and lapsed-donor research.** Interview donors who gave once and never returned. Koji's AI gently probes what felt transactional, whether they understood their impact, and what would bring them back - the qualitative signal behind your retention rate.\n- **Donor motivation and major-gift discovery.** Understand *why* committed donors give, in their own words, so your appeals echo their actual values instead of your assumptions.\n- **Member experience and renewal research.** For membership organizations and associations, run always-on renewal interviews that surface the friction driving non-renewals before the renewal notice goes out.\n- **Volunteer experience and retention.** Volunteers churn for the same reasons employees do - unclear impact, poor onboarding, friction. Voice interviews capture the emotion a form never will.\n- **Beneficiary and program feedback.** The people you serve are the ultimate measure of impact. AI interviews let you collect honest, candid feedback at scale, including anonymously, so you hear what is really working.\n- **Campaign and message testing.** Before a year-end campaign, test concepts and appeals with real supporters and learn which framing actually moves people to give.\n\n## Designing nonprofit interviews that surface real insight\n\nThe fastest way to get shallow answers is to ask shallow questions. Koji's research brief is built to prevent that. Instead of demographics, you describe the *problem* you are trying to understand (for example, \"donors who gave at year-end but did not renew\"), the *decision* it will inform, and your current *hypothesis*. The AI interviewer uses that context to adapt - following interesting threads instead of marching through a static script.\n\nA practical donor-retention guide might combine:\n\n- An **open-ended** opener: \"Tell me about what first moved you to give to us.\" (The AI probes for the emotional trigger.)\n- A **scale** question for NPS or likelihood-to-give-again, with an automatic anchor follow-up: \"You said 6 - what would have made it a 9?\"\n- A **single-choice** question on their primary connection to your mission, to segment results cleanly.\n- A **ranking** question to prioritize which communications they actually value.\n- A **yes/no** question to confirm whether they felt their gift made a difference.\n\nThis mix of qualitative depth and structured, chartable data is Koji's core differentiator. The six structured question types - open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, and yes_no - let one interview produce both a quotable story *and* a number you can put on a board slide. See the [structured questions guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) for how each type maps to a report visualization.\n\n## Voice or text - and why it matters for emotional topics\n\nGiving and service are emotional. A donor describing why a cause matters, or a beneficiary describing a hard experience, communicates as much in tone and hesitation as in words. Koji's voice interviews capture that; text interviews offer convenience and anonymity for sensitive topics. Many nonprofits run beneficiary feedback in text for candor and donor-motivation research in voice for richness. The trade-offs are covered in [voice vs text interviews](/docs/voice-vs-text-interviews).\n\n## Run research at scale without a panel or a moderator\n\nThe traditional blocker is logistics: scheduling, moderating, transcribing, and analyzing dozens of conversations. Koji removes all of it. You share one interview link - by email, in a newsletter, on a thank-you page, or embedded on your site - and the AI conducts every conversation in parallel, 24/7. There is no calendar to coordinate and no moderator to staff.\n\nFor qualitative discovery, 8-15 interviews per segment usually reaches theme saturation. Because interviews run concurrently, you can hit that in days, then scale to hundreds when you need statistically meaningful structured-question results. After each interview, Koji analyzes the transcript, scores its quality, codes open-ended answers into themes, and rolls everything into a real-time report you can share with your board or program team. The approach is detailed in [running customer discovery interviews at scale](/docs/customer-discovery-interviews-at-scale).\n\n## Handling sensitive stakeholder data responsibly\n\nNonprofits often handle sensitive information - especially in beneficiary research. Koji supports GDPR-aligned workflows and transcript anonymization, and you should always minimize the personal data you collect in the first place. For vulnerable populations, lean on anonymous text interviews and clear consent. See [GDPR-compliant AI user research](/docs/gdpr-compliant-ai-user-research) for the details.\n\n## What it costs\n\nKoji uses a simple credit model: a text interview costs 1 credit, a voice interview costs 3, and a report refresh costs 5. The free tier includes 10 credits so you can pilot a lapsed-donor study before committing. Paid plans start at EUR 29/month (Insights, 29 credits) and EUR 79/month (Interviews, 79 credits), with Enterprise options for large programs. A quality gate ensures only conversations scoring 3 or higher consume credits - so abandoned or low-effort responses never cost you. Compared with a single agency-run focus group, an entire AI interview program fits a nonprofit budget.\n\n## From listening to impact\n\nThe organizations that beat the sector's retention averages are the ones that actually understand their supporters. AI interviews make that understanding affordable and repeatable: run a lapsed-donor study this quarter, a volunteer-experience study next, and a beneficiary-feedback loop continuously - all from one platform, all analyzed automatically. Listening stops being an annual event and becomes how you operate.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [Structured Questions Guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) - the six question types that turn interviews into chartable data\n- [Voice of Customer Research Program](/docs/voice-of-customer-research-program) - build an always-on listening program\n- [Running Customer Discovery Interviews at Scale](/docs/customer-discovery-interviews-at-scale) - the mechanics of large-scale AI interviews\n- [NPS Survey Guide](/docs/nps-survey-guide) - measure and improve likelihood to give or renew\n- [Employee Engagement Survey Guide](/docs/employee-engagement-survey-guide) - adapt for volunteer and staff engagement\n- [GDPR-Compliant AI User Research](/docs/gdpr-compliant-ai-user-research) - handle sensitive stakeholder data responsibly","category":"Use Cases","lastModified":"2026-06-04T03:12:55.351307+00:00","metaTitle":"AI Research for Nonprofits: Donor, Member & Volunteer Interviews at Scale","metaDescription":"How nonprofits run AI-powered interviews with donors, members, volunteers, and beneficiaries to improve retention, giving, and impact - without a panel agency or moderator.","keywords":["ai research for nonprofits","nonprofit donor research","donor retention interviews","volunteer experience research","beneficiary feedback","member research nonprofit","nonprofit customer research"],"aiSummary":"Nonprofits can run donor, member, volunteer, and beneficiary research at scale with AI interviews. Koji conducts voice or text conversations, probes answers with adaptive follow-ups, and analyzes hundreds of conversations into a report in days. Key use cases: lapsed-donor and retention research, donor-motivation and major-gift discovery, member renewal, volunteer experience, beneficiary program feedback, and campaign/message testing. Six structured question types (open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, yes_no) capture both quotes and chartable data. Credit model: text 1 credit, voice 3; free tier 10 credits; paid from EUR 29/month.","aiPrerequisites":["A clear picture of your stakeholder lifecycle (acquire, steward, renew, lapse)","A Koji account (free tier includes 10 credits)","Awareness of consent and data-handling needs for sensitive research"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["Identify the highest-value research use cases across the nonprofit lifecycle","Design donor, volunteer, and beneficiary interviews that surface real motivation","Choose the right structured question types for giving and renewal research","Run stakeholder research at scale without a panel agency or moderator","Handle sensitive nonprofit research data responsibly"],"aiDifficulty":"intermediate","aiEstimatedTime":"9 minutes"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}