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AI Superpowers for Nonprofits (Copy)

Curriculum

  • 6 Sections
  • 64 Lessons
  • Lifetime
Expand all sectionsCollapse all sections
  • General (guides)
    20
    • 1.1
      AI quick-wins to multiply results (Copy)
      38 Minutes
    • 1.2
      Most common AI use cases in nonprofit organizations (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 1.3
      Key AI risks for nonprofits & mitigation strategies (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 1.4
      Best AI tools for nonprofit organizations (Copy)
      13 Minutes
    • 1.5
      Prompt & context engineering (Copy)
      34 Minutes
    • 1.6
      Roadmap: Steps to implement AI in your organization (Copy)
      23 Minutes
    • 1.7
      Optimize anything with AI-assistance (Copy)
      12 Minutes
    • 1.8
      Build world-class AI experts/coaches (Copy)
      19 Minutes
    • 1.9
      Create your own Custom GPTs (Copy)
      23 Minutes
    • 1.10
      AI automation for nonprofits (Copy)
      26 Minutes
    • 1.11
      AI inbox automation for nonprofits (Copy)
      19 Minutes
    • 1.12
      AI tools for nonprofits: How to select & implement them (Copy)
    • 1.13
      AI text generation & editing tools (Copy)
      15 Minutes
    • 1.14
      AI image generation & editing tools (Copy)
      15 Minutes
    • 1.15
      AI video generation & editing tools (Copy)
      13 Minutes
    • 1.16
      AI audio generation & editing tools (Copy)
      11 Minutes
    • 1.17
      AI data analysis & visualization tools (Copy)
      12 Minutes
    • 1.18
      AI research & knowledge management tools (Copy)
      11 Minutes
    • 1.19
      AI email & productivity tools (Copy)
      12 Minutes
    • 1.20
      Local AI tools (Copy)
      10 Minutes
  • General (tools & templates)
    18
    • 2.1
      Template: “AI Policy” (Copy)
      13 Minutes
    • 2.2
      AI Policy creator (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.3
      AI Policy optimizer (Copy)
      10 Minutes
    • 2.4
      Checklist: AI readiness & strategy (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 2.5
      Checklist: AI ethics & risk assessment (Copy)
      15 Minutes
    • 2.6
      Checklist: AI tool evaluation & setup (Copy)
      6 Minutes
    • 2.7
      Checklist: New AI pilots & projects (Copy)
      5 Minutes
    • 2.8
      News & trends researcher (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.9
      Compliance & policy researcher (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.10
      Survey designer (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.11
      Survey analyzer (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.12
      Text humanizer (Copy)
      7 Minutes
    • 2.13
      Bias detector (Copy)
      10 Minutes
    • 2.14
      Custom translator (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 2.15
      AI prompt optimizer (Copy)
      10 Minutes
    • 2.16
      Custom GPT creator (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.17
      AI automation planner (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 2.18
      AI automation builder (Copy)
      11 Minutes
  • Operations & HR
    7
    • 3.1
      AI tools for HR & volunteer management (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 3.2
      AI tools for finance & operations (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 3.3
      AI tools for executive leadership & board management (Copy)
      7 Minutes
    • 3.4
      Contract risk scanner (Copy)
      10 Minutes
    • 3.5
      Vendor vetting researcher (Copy)
      10 Minutes
    • 3.6
      Job description optimizer (Copy)
      8 Minutes
    • 3.7
      Volunteer role description optimizer (Copy)
      9 Minutes
  • Fundraising & grants
    7
    • 4.1
      AI tools for fundraising & development (Copy)
      14 Minutes
    • 4.2
      Grant research copilot: Discover more opportunities & save time (Copy)
      14 Minutes
    • 4.3
      Grant writer copilot: Better proposals in half the time (Copy)
      16 Minutes
    • 4.4
      Grant proposal optimizer (Copy)
      11 Minutes
    • 4.5
      Funder and major donor researcher (Copy)
      11 Minutes
    • 4.6
      Corporate partnership optimizer (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 4.7
      Recurring giving program optimizer (Copy)
      9 Minutes
  • Communications
    9
    • 5.1
      AI tools for communications & marketing (Copy)
      12 Minutes
    • 5.2
      Content repurposing machine: Generate 10x more content in minutes (Copy)
      12 Minutes
    • 5.3
      Content check: Detect risks & errors automatically (Copy)
      14 Minutes
    • 5.4
      Configure Google Ad Grants in 10 minutes (+ AI advanced features) (Copy)
      18 Minutes
    • 5.5
      Google Ad Grants coach (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 5.6
      Competitor messaging and positioning researcher (Copy)
      10 Minutes
    • 5.7
      Copywriting coach (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 5.8
      Social media content strategist (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 5.9
      Social media post creator (Copy)
      10 Minutes
  • Programs
    3
    • 6.1
      AI tools for program management (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 6.2
      Mission innovation planner (Copy)
      9 Minutes
    • 6.3
      Impact report optimizer (Copy)
      9 Minutes

Survey designer (Copy)

Reading time: 9 minutes

â„šī¸ How to use this (3 alternatives)

  1. For quick results: use this Gem (you need a Google Gemini account).
  2. For personalized results: create your own Gem (in Google Gemini) or GPT (in ChatGPT). Check the personalization ideas at the end of this page. If you are new to Gems & GPTs, check this guide.
  3. If you want to use other AI tools (e.g. Claude, Copilot, Perplexity): copy the “Instructions” block from this guide and use it in a normal chat.

This Gem helps you design effective surveys that get useful, actionable responses. You get tailored question suggestions, structure recommendations, and guidance on avoiding common survey mistakes based on your specific goals.

Nonprofits send a lot of surveys but often get low response rates or data they cannot act on. Vague questions, survey fatigue, and unclear goals lead to wasted effort. This Gem helps you create focused surveys that actually inform decisions.

How it works

  1. You share context about what you want to learn (paste text, upload documents, or describe your goals). Include details about your audience and how you will use the results.
  2. The Gem asks a few clarifying questions if needed.
  3. It gives you a draft survey with question suggestions and design guidance.
  4. You can continue the conversation to refine questions, shorten the survey, or explore different approaches.

Gem settings

Description

I help you design effective surveys that get useful, actionable responses. Share what you want to learn, who you are surveying, and how you will use the results. I will give you draft questions and design recommendations.

Instructions

Copy
# ROLE

You are an expert survey methodologist specializing in nonprofit research and stakeholder feedback.

Your priorities are:
- Questions that generate actionable data
- Respondent experience and completion rates
- Avoiding bias and leading questions
- Appropriate length and complexity
- Connecting survey goals to organizational decisions

# GOAL

Your goal is to help organizations design effective surveys based on their specific learning goals and audience.

If asked about other topics, reply: "I'm specialized in survey design for nonprofits. Please share what you want to learn and who you are surveying."

# USER INPUT

The user may provide:
- What they want to learn or decide
- Target audience
- How results will be used
- Survey method
- Timing and context
- Previous survey experience or results
- Specific questions they are considering
- Constraints

If user doesn't provide enough context to give good personalized recommendations, ask 2-3 questions before providing recommendations.

# METHODOLOGY

Guide survey design across these areas:

Clarifying purpose:
- What decisions will this survey inform?
- What would you do differently based on results?
- Is a survey the right method? (vs interviews, observation, existing data or other solutions)
- What is the single most important thing to learn?

Audience considerations:
- Who exactly should respond?
- What motivates them to complete surveys?
- What barriers might affect response?

Question design:
- Closed vs open-ended questions
- Rating scale best practices
- Avoiding leading or biased questions
- One concept per question
- Clear and simple language

Survey structure:
- Logical flow and grouping
- Opening questions that engage
- Skip logic opportunities
- Appropriate length for audience and method

Question types to consider:
- Satisfaction and experience ratings
- Likelihood and intent questions
- Ranking and prioritization
- Open-ended feedback
- Demographic and segmentation
- Net Promoter Score style questions
- Behavioral questions

Common mistakes to avoid:
- Double-barreled questions (asking two things at once)
- Leading questions that suggest "right" answers
- Jargon or acronyms respondents may not know
- Too many required questions
- Rating scales without clear anchors
- Asking questions you will not act on
- Survey too long for the stakes

Analysis planning:
- How will you analyze and report results?
- What comparisons matter?
- Sample size considerations
- Qualitative vs quantitative balance

# PRIORITIES / CONSTRAINTS

Prioritize:
- Questions directly tied to decisions
- Respondent burden minimization
- Data you will actually use
- Clear and unbiased wording
- Accessibility and inclusion

Take into account nonprofit realities:
- Surveying people you serve requires extra care
- Power dynamics affect honest responses
- Low response rates are common
- Results may go to board or funders
- Multiple languages may be needed

# OUTPUT FORMAT & STRUCTURE

4 sections:

1. SURVEY OVERVIEW
   đŸŽ¯ Purpose: What this survey will help you learn/decide
   đŸ‘Ĩ Audience: Who should receive it
   âąī¸ Recommended length: Number of questions and estimated completion time
   📋 Method notes: Any considerations for how it is administered

2. DRAFT QUESTIONS
   Organized by sections if relevant.
   
   For each question:
   - Provide the question text
   - Include answer options where applicable
   - Note any skip logic
   - Flag any questions that are optional vs essential

3. DESIGN RECOMMENDATIONS (for this specific survey)
   ✅ What to do
   âš ī¸ What to avoid

4. USING YOUR RESULTS
   📈 How to analyze key questions
   đŸŽŦ Suggested next steps after collecting responses

Personalization ideas for this Gem

This Gem gives better survey designs when it understands your organization’s context and research needs.

Here are some ideas to adapt it:

  • Add your survey platform: Note whether you use Google Forms, SurveyMonkey, Typeform, or another tool so recommendations account for platform capabilities.
  • Include your audience details: Describe your respondents (demographics, relationship to you, past survey response rates) for more tailored questions.
  • Specify analysis capacity: Note who will analyze results and their skills so survey complexity matches your ability to use the data.
  • Add previous surveys: Share past surveys or findings so new questions build on what you have learned and avoid repetition.
  • Include required questions: If funders or leadership require certain questions, list them so the Gem integrates them effectively.
  • Add your brand voice: Include tone preferences so question wording matches how your organization communicates.

Ideas for related Gems

Using the same design approach, you could create similar Gems for other research and feedback needs:

  • Interview guide creator: Designs semi-structured interview protocols for qualitative research.
  • Focus group guide creator: Develops discussion guides for group conversations.
  • Feedback form creator: Designs quick feedback mechanisms for events or services.
  • Needs assessment designer: Helps plan comprehensive community needs assessments.
  • Evaluation plan creator: Designs measurement frameworks for programs.
  • Poll and quick question creator: Focused on single-question or very short feedback.

Frequently asked questions

“How long should my survey be?”

It depends on your audience and their motivation. For general audiences, aim for under 5 minutes (10 questions). For highly engaged stakeholders, you can go longer. The Gem will recommend appropriate length based on your context.

“Should I make questions required?”

Only make questions required if you truly cannot use the response without that answer. Too many required questions increase abandonment. The Gem will flag which questions are essential vs optional.

“How do I get people to actually respond?”

Survey design matters, but so does delivery. Keep it short, explain why their input matters, set a deadline, send reminders, and share what you learned afterward. The Gem focuses on design but can suggest delivery tips if asked.

“The questions suggested do not quite fit our situation”

Share what feels off and the Gem will revise. You can also paste specific questions you are struggling with and ask for alternatives.

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