AI for Nonprofits - Tori Miller-Liu & Andrew Borg

EPISODE · Oct 1, 2025 · 39 MIN

AI for Nonprofits - Tori Miller-Liu & Andrew Borg

from Polaris Pathways - a Synozur podcast · host Chris McNulty

Polaris is a production of Synozur – the transformation company. Synozur reimagines business for our clients, navigating the complexities of transformation and strategy with ease. Nonprofits are moving from AI experiments to governed, human‑centered deployments. AIIM's Tori Miller‑Liu and Synozur's Andrew Borg share field lessons, from "conversational search" that cites sources to coalition‑driven ethics and the EU AI Act's impact horizon.  Takeaways AI is a force multiplier, not a headcount reducer. The biggest value today is in accelerating research, finance, content triage, and enterprise search—so your people spend more time on strategy and relationships. Governance is behind adoption. Surveys show most nonprofits use AI in some form, but comparatively few have formal policies—an exposure area leaders should close. Regulation is real—and staggered. The EU AI Act is now law (entered into force Aug 1, 2024) with phased obligations through 2026; even non‑EU orgs will feel its ripple effects via vendors and data flows. "Frontier Firm" playbook is emerging. Microsoft's 2025 Work Trend Index highlights human–agent teams and "intelligence on tap"; nonprofits can apply the same operating model to scale impact responsibly. Ethics + belonging are differentiators. Keep human connection in the loop—AI can process, route, and answer, but it shouldn't replace the sense of community members join for. Start with existing platforms. Many nonprofit tech vendors now ship AI capabilities; piloting within your current stack reduces cost, risk, and time to value. Data privacy & access control are non‑negotiable. Especially for nonprofits working in sensitive contexts—design for minimum necessary data and tight permissions from day one. Sound bites Tori Miller‑Liu "Use AI to multiply value—not replace people. Our job is advancing member outcomes, and AI helps us do more of that." "Belonging beats the bot. Let AI handle transactions; keep humans where community and trust are built." "Start where you are: pilot inside the tools you already own before building from scratch." Andrew Borg "For nonprofits, AI is a force multiplier on training wheels—powerful, but it still needs guardrails." "Keep AI at arm's length ethically. Until models have a moral core, humans must stay accountable." "Cooperate to accelerate. Sector coalitions let nonprofits share tools, data, and hard‑won lessons." "Don't buy the hype—buy outcomes. The winners align AI to real missions and measurable value." References Guest Notes Tori Miller‑Liu (LinkedIn): CEO of AIIM (Association for Intelligent Information Management) Andrew Borg (LinkedIn):Head of Ethical AI & Nonprofits at Synozur Industry Notes 82% of nonprofits are using AI;  Nonprofit Quarterly: "Sector Adopting AI, Building Reserves, and Expanding Missions European Commission: "AI Act enters into force" (Aug 1, 2024) Fast Forward's accelerator program saw six times more AI-powered nonprofit applicants than the year before: Stanford Social Innovation Review: "Mapping the Landscape of AI‑Powered Nonprofits" 300% increase since 2018 in the use of AI to address the UN Sustainable Development Goals (Google.org (Research brief)) IBM watsonx Assistant  (conversational search / RAG) ASAE: Association Coalition for AI (ACAI) Forbes Coverage of MIT "GenAI Divide" ROI findings (context for '95% fail' headline) Jared Spataro from Microsoft on defining the "frontier firm" and on 'headline hype' obscuring the real buseinss value of AI. NetHope "AI Lighthouse" for Nonprofits (responsible AI resources) Culture Notes Avett Brothers and "Swept Away" on Broadway (official) Events Experts Live | October 10, 2025 at Microsoft NYC in Times Square  CollabDays New England 2025 |  October 17, 2025 Microsoft New England in Burlington MA Vancouver AI Summit | October 20, 2025 Vancouver BC TechCon 365 Dallas - | November 3-7, 2025 (Dallas, TX). Irving Convention Center Microsoft Ignite 2025 – Nov 17-21, 2025 (San Francisco, CA). ESPC25 (European SharePoint Conference 2025) | Dec 1-4, 2025 (Convention Centre Dublin (CCD) Dublin, Ireland).  Production Polaris is produced with help from Riverside.fm. Our theme song, "Alternative Dream" is provided courtesy of Adobe.  Additional music and sound provided by IndieGuy Records. Graphic design by Josh Brantley. Polaris is available on Apple, Spotify, Amazon, YouTube or wherever you get your favorite podcasts. Thanks. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to AI and Its Impact 01:51 News and Data Points 03:42 Tori Miller-Liu and Andrew Borg 06:10 AI in Nonprofits: Opportunities and Challenges 08:04 The Dichotomy of AI Perception 10:50 Governance and Risk in Nonprofits 13:44 AI as a Force Multiplier 16:03 The Future Workforce and AI 16:38 The Role of Education in AI Utilization 19:52 Human-AI Interaction and Ethical Considerations 21:53 AI's Role in Enhancing Community Engagement 24:30 Cooperation Among Nonprofits 27:24 Advice for Nonprofits on AI Adoption 33:43 Cultural Reflections and Personal Insights 37:36 Upcoming Tech Events Overview 38:29 Closing and Acknowledgments

NOW PLAYING

AI for Nonprofits - Tori Miller-Liu & Andrew Borg

0:00 39:56

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

No similar episodes found.

MG Show MG Show The MG Show, hosted by Jeffrey Pedersen and Shannon Townsend, is a leading alternative media platform dedicated to uncovering the truth behind today’s most pressing political issues. Launched in 2019, the show has grown exponentially, offering unfiltered insights, comprehensive research, and real-time analysis. With a commitment to independent journalism and factual integrity, the MG Show empowers its audience with knowledge and encourages active participation in the political discourse. Photo Breakdown Scott Wyden Kivowitz Photo Breakdown is a podcast in which we explore the world of photography with a trusted guide, host Scott Wyden Kivowitz. His expertise and passion bring the industry to life as we explore the stories, trends, and ideas shaping it today. Join us as we dissect everything from incredible photographs and creative techniques to the latest gear releases and hot topics in the photography community.In each episode, we break down what’s happening behind the scenes - whether it’s making a powerful image, a candid discussion on industry trends, or a reflection on the tools and technology changing how we make photographs. You’ll get insights, expert opinions, and a fresh perspective on what’s top of mind for photographers right now.Anticipate short, engaging episodes brimming with ideas and inspiration. Be part of the conversation by sharing your thoughts, voice notes, and comments. Your participation is what makes our community vibrant and dynamic.It’s more than just photography - everyth The Last Outlaws Impact Studios at UTS In a History Lab season like no other, we're pulling on the threads of one of Australia's great misunderstood histories, moving beyond the myths to learn what the Aboriginal brothers Jimmy and Joe Governor faced in both life and death.Australia's budding Federation is the background setting to this remarkable story, that sees the Governor brothers tied to the inauguration of a 'new' nation and Australia's dark history of frontier violence, racial injustice and the global trade and defilement of Aboriginal ancestral remains. This Impact Studios production is a collaboration with the Governor family, UTS Faculty of Law and Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research.The Last Outlaws teamKatherine Biber - UTS Law Professor and Chief InvestigatorAunty Loretta Parsley - Great-granddaughter of Jimmy Governor and the Governor Family Historian Leroy Parsons - Governor descendant, Narrator and Co-WriterKaitlyn Sawrey - Host, Writer and Senior ProducerFrank Lopez - Writer, Managing Next Generation Energy Systems Cambridge University Background Stakeholders working with energy systems have to make complex decisions formulated from risk-based assessments about the future. The move towards more renewables in our energy systems complicates matters even further, requiring the development of an integrated power grid and continuous and steady transformation of the UK power system. Network flows must be managed reliably under uncertain demands, uncertain supply, emerging network technologies and possible failures and, further, prices in related markets can be highly volatile. Mathematicians working with engineers and economists, can make significant contributions to address such issues, by helping to develop fit-for-purpose models for next generation energy systems. These interdisciplinary approaches are looking to address a range of associated problems, including modelling, prediction, simulation, control, market and mechanism design and optimisation. This knowledge exchange workshop was part of the four months Res
URL copied to clipboard!