What is the state of the nonprofit sector in 2026—and can organizations sustain rising demand while protecting their workforce, leadership pipeline, and financial strength? Dr. Akilah Watkins, President and CEO of Independent Sector, joins us for a far-reaching conversation about the business conditions shaping America’s 1.9 million charitable nonprofits.

Nonprofits continue to hold one of the strongest positions of public trust among American institutions. Dr. Watkins reports that 57% of Americans express very high or favorable trust toward nonprofits. Yet that confidence exists alongside increasing pressure: weakened public safety nets, a more difficult government relationship, rising service demand, workforce exhaustion, and a major leadership transition.

The workforce numbers require serious attention. Nearly 13.9 million Americans work for charitable nonprofits, and approximately two-thirds are women. Nationally, about 22% of full-time nonprofit employees do not earn enough to cover their bills.

As Dr. Watkins explains, nonprofit organizations compete for human capital just like every other sector. Compensation, retirement security, leadership development, and workplace culture are not side issues. They determine whether organizations can retain institutional knowledge, attract future executives, and continue meeting community needs.

“If we want leaders for the future, we have to invest in leadership today,” she says.

The conversation also examines the nonprofit sector’s role in nonpartisan voter engagement. Research cited during the episode indicates that voter participation increases by approximately 10% when nonprofits are involved. With fewer than 40% of Americans actively volunteering, civic engagement is becoming an operational concern as well as a community concern.

“The work that we do has been deeply invisible, but extremely felt personally by Americans,” Dr. Watkins explains.

This is a sector-level business conversation for nonprofit executives, board members, fundraisers, advocates, and managers responsible for building organizations that can endure.

Key Takeaways:

Public trust is a major nonprofit asset, but organizations must connect that trust to stronger advocacy and clearer public storytelling.

Workforce sustainability requires competitive compensation, retirement access, professional development, and realistic workload expectations.

Approximately 22% of full-time nonprofit employees nationally cannot earn enough to cover their basic bills.

Leadership succession must begin before senior executives retire and institutional knowledge leaves the organization.

Managing as many as five workplace generations requires updated leadership and communication practices.

Nonpartisan voter engagement can increase community participation while strengthening nonprofits’ civic role.

 

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