About the Program:

Now is the time to move from commitments to action on climate change—WRI is at the forefront of this urgent transition. WRI has the knowledge, convening power and tools to drive change and its Individual Philanthropy Sector builds relationships with Individuals and Family Foundations to help the Institute deliver results and bring about a more equitable and sustainable world. The Individual Philanthropy Sector is part of WRI’s broader Global Development Program, which coordinates all fundraising for WRI, including gifts from foundations, corporations, governments, and individuals. The Individual Philanthropy Team is a growing and evolving program organized around principal gifts ($500,000+), major gifts ($10,000+), mid-level gifts ($1,000-$9,999), and annual fund gifts (<$1,000).

This position is hybrid and will require a few days per week in our Washington DC office.

What you will do:

This internship is ideal for a person interested in learning more about communications or development within the nonprofit space. The Impact Philanthropy Communications Intern will directly support the Senior Manager of Communications as they develop the communication materials and resource library for Campaign for People, Nature and Climate, and the Principal Gifts program. You will be supported by the Individual Philanthropy team. You will report to the Senior Manager of Communications for Individual Giving.

Internship Learning Outcomes:

Your daily work will include working with the Senior Manager of Communications and their counterparts across the Global Development and Communications departments to help to build out a communications assets and resource library that will contain compelling photos, stories, PPT templates and report/proposal templates to support the Campaign for People, Nature, and Climate.

Job Responsibilities:

Develop a campaign photo library (40%)

  • Identify and organize the best photos from across the organization into a campaign photo library.
  • Work with development and communications staff to determine the best location and organization method for the photo library, adhering to existing photo naming and tagging protocols.
  • Search through existing WRI photo databases to pull out the most compelling photos and organize them based on topic.
  • Reach out to global priority and country programs for access to their photo files.

    Developing a campaign story library (30%)

    • Convert existing videos into inspiring written stories that can be used for a broad set of donor audiences.
    • Search through recently published stories on the WRI website or intranet to identify potential stories.
    • Work with country programs to access their best stories/people-centered publications.
    • Pull out and organize stories in current campaign materials to add to the story library.
    • Identify existing story and photography gaps to guide future communications investments.

      Design (30%)

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