May 7, 2026 · Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Pittsburgh's Nonprofits Are Quietly Becoming AI Power Users

Through local AI cohorts and a hands-on 'Demo Day,' Pittsburgh's social-impact organizations are sharing exactly how they put AI to work — a grassroots model other cities can copy.

A nonprofit team collaborating around a laptop

Pittsburgh’s nonprofits aren’t waiting for permission to use AI — they’re learning together. The Greater Pittsburgh Nonprofit Partnership (GPNP) and local firm Skilly have been running AI cohorts for the social-impact sector, culminating in a hands-on “Demo Day” at Nova Place where organizations showed each other exactly how they’re using the tools.

What’s happening

Instead of abstract trainings, the cohort model is peer-to-peer: nonprofits walk through their real workflows — drafting communications, summarizing case notes, speeding up grant research — and learn from one another’s wins and dead-ends. That show-don’t-tell format lowers the intimidation factor that keeps many mission-driven teams on the sidelines.

It reflects a broader 2026 shift: a growing share of nonprofits now apply AI to core program work, not just back-office admin.

Why it matters

The Pittsburgh model is replicable anywhere there’s a local nonprofit network and a willingness to share. No big budget, no technical staff — just structured peer learning. It’s the same philosophy behind accessible AI literacy work nationwide: meet people where they are, and let them teach each other.

Running something similar in your city? We’d love to feature it.

Based on reporting by Axios Pittsburgh.

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About the author. Marcus Brown is the founder and editor of Future Leaders in AI, covering how everyday people use AI to strengthen their communities. Join an upcoming workshop or share a story.