Wildlife and habitat conservation across India's ecosystems
WWF-India operates a conservation network focused on flagship species (snow leopards, tigers) and landscape-scale programs (rivers, wetlands, agriculture). The hiring mix reveals dual scaling: sales roles (13 active) signal expansion in corporate partnerships and fundraising, while research (9) and program (3) staff sustain field operations. Stack is nonprofit-standard (Office, ArcGIS, SAP, WordPress) with no emerging tech adoption—operational constraints around data analysis and knowledge management are addressed through people, not platform.
WWF-India is a nonprofit conservation organization headquartered in New Delhi, operating across India's ecosystems from the Himalayas to central Indian forests. The organization works on three interconnected fronts: protecting key species and habitats (snow leopards, tigers, raptors), transforming business practices toward sustainability (clean technologies, sustainable cotton), and building community resilience through alternative livelihoods and water management. Current projects span wildlife corridors (Terai, Kanha Pench, Sutlej Basin), river and wetland restoration, and agricultural transformation. The 201–500 person team includes field researchers, program coordinators, and an expanding corporate engagement division.
Active projects include snow leopard and tiger tracking, raptor conservation, rivers and wetlands restoration, sustainable cotton impact assessment, agricultural water efficiency, clean technology adoption in industry, and a Sutlej Basin program focused on water management.
Microsoft Office, Excel, PowerPoint, WordPress, ArcGIS, QGIS, SAP, Canva, and Adobe Creative Suite (Illustrator, Photoshop). No emerging tech adoption currently in use.
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