Global conservation organization operating in 100 countries
WWF-US operates a global conservation network across 100 countries with over 1 million US members and 6 million globally. The tech stack reveals a finance and operations-heavy infrastructure (SharePoint, Workday, Blackbaud CRM, Power BI, Adaptive Planning) paired with geospatial tools (ArcGIS Pro, QGIS), now adopting ArcGIS Enterprise—indicating a shift toward centralized spatial data management at scale. Active hiring spans finance, operations, and executive roles, with documented pain points in donor compliance, accounting integration, and month-end close delays, suggesting a push to modernize backend reporting and financial controls.
Notable leadership hires: Director, International Financial Institutions Director
WWF-US is the United States branch of the world's largest conservation organization, protecting nature across 100 countries through science-based partnerships and local-to-global action. The organization focuses on three core areas: protecting natural habitats and endangered species, promoting resource efficiency and pollution reduction, and advancing sustainable renewable resource management. Operating at scale (1,001–5,000 employees), WWF-US coordinates complex international projects while managing significant donor compliance and financial reporting requirements. Headquarters in Washington, DC, with active hiring in the United States and Colombia.
WWF-US relies on Microsoft enterprise tools (SharePoint, Office, Word, Excel, Power BI, Fabric), Workday for HR, Blackbaud CRM, Adaptive Planning for budgeting, and geospatial platforms (ArcGIS Pro, QGIS). The organization is currently adopting ArcGIS Enterprise.
Washington, DC. The organization also actively hires in Colombia and operates conservation programs across 100 countries.
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