Cheeky Logo
Ready To Get Hired?
Apply To Book A Free Call With Our Transition Specialist Team

Why PhDs Shouldn’t Overlook A Career With A Nonprofit Organization

“What are you going to do with a PhD?”

I was asked this over and over again by friends, family members, and strangers while I was in graduate school.

“Become a professor and do research.”

This was my usual response.

“That’s it?” they’d say.

Okay, now I was stumped.

Yes, that’s it. I think? I’m not sure. What else is there?

After squirming mentally, I’d mumble “Yes, one day” and then change the subject very quickly to avoid further interrogation.

I never really thought about what I could do with my PhD beyond being a professor.

Then…

Life happened.

While spending a full year writing chapter one of my dissertation (Yes, my advisor made me spend one year perfecting one single chapter), the most important person in my life, my grandmother, became terminally ill, and I had to support my family.

Suddenly, “Yes, one day” was no longer a good enough answer.

The more time I spent writing my dissertation, the more frustrated I became with how little impact any of my work would actually have on the real world.

It seemed almost pointless, especially when I compared my dissertation to my family issues.

As I got closer and closer to finishing my thesis, I came to realize the hard truth—I was not cut out to be a lifelong academic.

I was terrified to tell my advisor.

I was terrified about my future too.

I felt like a failure as I tried to live up to everyone’s expectations at home and in graduate school.

As a result, I became anxious and stressed.

One day, I reached a breaking point.

I accepted the academic life was not for me and decided to transition into industry.  

I had the heart-to-heart with my advisor (one of the most nerve-wracking, yet liberating things I ever did in graduate school), and then set my sights on getting a job that allowed me to use my research skills the way I wanted to use them.

I’ve always wanted to have an impact on the world.

I wanted to help people directly, on the front lines, not hidden away in some lab.

This is why I decided to get a nonprofit industry job.

I also decided to join the Cheeky Scientist Association and, as a result, I’ve not only transitioned into the nonprofit industry but have continued to be promoted within it.

PhDs And The Growing Nonprofit Industry

The majority of PhD students and postdocs do not consider a nonprofit career as an option for them.

They believe that doing nonprofit work means you don’t make any money.

As if doing meaningful work and being paid well for it is impossible.

Or, they believe that nonprofit work is not significant.

As if the phrase “nonprofit” means not-good-enough or not-important or less-than.

The truth is the nonprofit sector is very powerful and full of great job opportunities.

According to the U.S. Nonprofit Jobs report, “Holding the Fort: Nonprofit Employment During a Decade of Turmoil,” published by the Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies, the nonprofit job sector is the third largest sector, behind retail, trade and manufacturing. And…

Over half (57%) of all these nonprofit jobs are in the healthcare industry.

Nonprofits are also a large part of private employment, with 64% of private employment in education, and 43% of private employment in healthcare.

In other words…

The nonprofit industry in fields relevant to life science and STEM PhDs is gigantic.

You might be thinking…

Okay, but are there any PhD-level jobs in the nonprofit sector?

A Survey of Earned Doctorates from National Science Foundation found that there are approximately 45,500 PhDs employed in the private, nonprofit sector.

These numbers are up from 45,100 in 2010 and up from 29,650 in 2003.

Cropped shot of a group of business colleagues standing together in their office

 4 Tips For Getting A Job With A Nonprofit Organization

Are you sick of obsessing over publishing the perfect article or book chapter for months (or years) that only a handful of people (if you are lucky) will ever read?

Do you yearn to use your expertise to make a difference in the world?

If you’re a PhD who wants to have a bigger impact on the world, consider pursuing a career with a nonprofit organization.

Nonprofit organizations are in need of talented PhDs with advanced knowledge and skills who can think critically, devise new ideas, and apply their expertise to solve big problems.

Many of these nonprofit organizations value research and see such work as necessary to advance their mission.

Here are 4 tips for getting a job in the nonprofit sector…

1. Commit to being part of the bigger picture.

A large part of getting ahead in the nonprofit sector is about being committed to a very large vision.

In academia, you can get bogged down by small questions, like the ones you need to answer to make some reviewer happy.

In the for-profit sector, your daily life is dominated by concerns about a bottom-line and profitability.

But, in the nonprofit industry, you can focus exclusively on answering the big questions, whether or not money is involved.

When thinking about a particular nonprofit job, consider if you’re the kind of PhD who wants to leverage his or her skills to a larger cause.

Are you a big picture person?

Or, do you like small questions and small details.

Commitment to the larger picture is key.

But, you will need to balance your desire to make an impact with factors such as salary, work hours, and work-life balance.

Having an understanding of doing important work will help you put all of these important considerations into perspective and choose the job and career path that works best for you.

2. Find a cause you care about and get informed.

What do you actually care about?

This is the very first question you need to ask yourself before transitioning into the nonprofit industry.

Next, you need to research your cause.

You have a PhD—you’re an expert researcher—act like it.

This legwork will help you market yourself effectively and narrow your job search to those organizations that are a good fit for you.

Never forget…

As a PhD, you are hardwired to conduct in-depth research quickly.

Use these skills to learn about the problem you want to solve (or greatly improve).

Then, discover what the issue(s) are, who are the major players and stakeholders, what are the unanswered questions, what kind of change do you want to make, and where can you position yourself to make a difference.

3. Attend non-academic events related to your cause.

Start putting yourself out in the real world, not just the academic world.

Begin introducing yourself to and forming connections with people who are like-minded, but not just like you.

Free yourself by going to non-PhD networking events.

Stepping outside of academia and typical PhD networking events is incredibly liberating because it gives you perspective.

You’ll start to realize how rare and valuable you are.

The more you get out there and meet people who care about the issues you care about outside of academia, the more opportunities you’ll see and the more you’ll stand out.

Places like www.netimpact.org and www.idealist.org are great resources.

Once you start attending events and talking to like-minded people (not about a job, but about the issues), you will find that your opinion is not only valued, it’s highly sought after.

The more you get your name out there, the more you’ll be seen as an asset to individuals and organizations in the nonprofit industry.

Like all industry jobs, most nonprofit jobs are filled through word-of-mouth and referrals from recruiters and other professionals.

In the nonprofit sector in particular, you will find that if the right person thinks you are valuable, they will find or create a way to work with you.

4. Market yourself as an expert.

Use your PhD to market yourself as an expert (because you are!).

Market yourself as someone with unique experiences and skills who can advance the organization’s overall purpose.

When the time comes to apply for jobs (after you have done your networking), spend some time finding out about the structure of the organizations you’re interested in (websites are great place to find tons of information).

Your goal is to determine whether or not a nonprofit is an established organization with consistent, stable funding streams, a start-up nonprofit, or a nonprofit completely reliant on grant funding.

These details will have a significant impact on the type of work you do, your day-to-day responsibilities, and ultimately the kind of impact you can make.

One thing to keep in mind…

Every nonprofit organization values grant writing.

If you love grant writing and have experience successfully securing research grants, nonprofits will especially appreciate you.

When positioning yourself for a job in a nonprofit organization, commit to being part of the bigger picture. Next, find a cause you care about and get informed, and start attending non-PhD networking events outside of academia. Finally, market yourself as an expert who can advance the strategies, goals, and overall purpose of the nonprofit organization. You’ve taken your intellectual lumps and bruises by getting your PhD. Now it’s time for you to start doing meaningful work and having a real impact on the world.

If you’re ready to start your transition into industry, you can apply to book a free Transition Call with our founder Isaiah Hankel, PhD or one of our Transition Specialists. Apply to book a Transition Call here.

Book a Transition Call
Get Free Job Search Content Weekly

ABOUT JANAY CODY

Janay Cody holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Notre Dame. She has served as a senior research associate, a research consultant for the National Assessment of Educational Progress, and as a senior research manager.

Janay Cody

Here's What Others Are Saying

"I'm excited to share that I am starting a new position as Senior Research and Development Engineer at CORMETECH!"

Carlos Garcia

Carlos Garcia

Senior Research And Development Enginee

at CORMETECH

"I got an offer at Estée Lauder! I accepted the offer since it is a great company and less than 15 min away. I don't have to worry about relocating."

Ivan Peran

Ivan Peran

at Estée Lauder

"I just accepted an offer to be a Clinical Researcher Coordinator for a pain clinic near me. I'll be helping them run their clinical trial that uses a device to stimulate nerves to relieve patients pain. I start next Wednesday. So excited! I wanted to say thanks to Isaiah and all the members of the Cheeky team for your help! I really appreciate it!"

Natasha Fowler

Natasha Fowler

Clinical Research Coordinator

at Columbia Pain Management, P.C

"I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position as Senior Manager, Project Management -Medical Affairs at Horizon!"

Geeta Peverada

Geeta Peverada

Senior Manager, Project Management - Medical Affairs

at Horizon

"BIG NEWS!! Lufthansa offered me the gig!!"

Marco Milesi

Marco Milesi

at Lufthansa

"I started working with you all back in October 2022 and it took me about four months to secure my new role. I actually had two six figure salary offers in the learning and development arena! One was from a prestigious HBCU and the other one was with a scientific research organization. I signed my six figure offer letter for a Head of Talent Development role with the scientific research organization on March 1st. I negotiated and received a $7,500 increase in salary and I also received an increase in my relocation package. I cannot thank you all enough!"

Dr. Rhonda Anderson

Dr. Rhonda Anderson

Head of Talent Development

at Southern Research

"Thrilled to announce that I have joined a new role as a Research Associate at HJF to work at the WRAIR. Very excited to join a dedicated and brilliant team working to eradicate HIV. Thanks to my family, friends, and fellow Cheeky associates for their support in my job hunt journey.""

 Lakshmi Rani Iyer

Lakshmi Rani Iyer

Research Associate

at HJF

"I am happy to share I am starting a new position!"

Mary Hidde

Mary Hidde

Clinical trial manager

at Medspace

"I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position as Clinical Scientist at Arvinas!"

Ana Luiza C. Zaninotto

Ana Luiza C. Zaninotto

Clinical Scientist

at Arvinas

"I would like to express my appreciation and assure that your school was eye-openning, thanks! I registered on your course 2 months ago and from total ghosting I ended up with a dream job in biotech."

Petro Starokadomskyy

Petro Starokadomskyy

Senior Scientist

at Kyverna Therapeutics

"I picked the Planet job! It ended up being the better fit for me... Thanks for all of your help!"

Emily Martin

Emily Martin

Hardware Systems Engineer

at Planet

"Good news...I've secured a job! Thank you for your support during the job search process and for giving me the courage to transition from academia to industry."

Marlyn Brookins

Marlyn Brookins

Regulatory Submissions Coordinator

"I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position as R&D Scientist II at Chemring Sensors and Electronic Systems, Inc.!"

Karim Dawkins

Karim Dawkins

R&D Scientist II

at Chemring Sensors and Electronic Systems, Inc

"I am THRILLED to share that I am starting a new position... my sincerest thanks and gratitude to all the inspirational people who've I met along the way in my journey as an aspiring MSL, who helped make this happen."

Leandra Mangieri

Leandra Mangieri

Medical Science Liaison

at Allergan Aesthetics

"I am happy to share that I have started a new position!....I look forward to learning from experience colleagues and apply the"

Augustina Kwesie Osabutey

Augustina Kwesie Osabutey

Water/Wastewater Engineer

at Barr Engineering Group

Similar Articles

White Collar Jobs For Degree Holders Contract Steeply

White Collar Jobs For Degree Holders Contract Steeply

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Robert has had 7 final stage interviews for R&D positions and been rejected every time.  He has a PhD and the exact skills these employers were looking for.  Sarah has a Masters and was looking forward to making a good paycheck to pay off her student loans.  But she’s been uploading resumes for 6 months without getting one single interview.  What’s happening?  The skilled, or white collar job market is contracting sharply and shows no signs of expanding again over the next decade.  A recent report in Forbes discussed news that UPS drivers can earn up to $170,000 annually and…

5 Tough But Common Interview Questions For Research-Based Jobs

5 Tough But Common Interview Questions For Research-Based Jobs

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

“I can’t get hired because of my technical skills.” “I’m nervous about the technical questions.” This is what many PhDs obsess over before interviewing for a research role.  The problem is that interviewers are rarely going to ask highly specific technical questions, even for research-based roles.  I had a PhD who was up for an interview at Baxter and told me that they appreciated the advice, but because it’s Baxter they know the interview will be mostly technical.  “Like what?” I asked. “Do you think you’re going to have to create a buffer in front of them?” “Are they going…

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies September 8th, 2023

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies September 8th, 2023

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Every week, we at Cheeky Scientist scour the Internet for the best articles on topics that help in the search for the Best of Transition: PhD Job Search in the industry. Our two consultants independently search for the most informative articles in the categories of networking, CVs/resumes, interviews, transferable skills, academic blues, industry positions, and business acumen. Our consultants vote on a top article for each category and a top overall article for the week – if it’s a recent article that can help readers find and acquire PhD jobs, then we want to include it in this weekly digest.…

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies September 1st, 2023

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies September 1st, 2023

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Every week, we at Cheeky Scientist scour the Internet for the best articles on topics that help in the search for the Best of Transition: PhD Job Search in the industry. Our two consultants independently search for the most informative articles in the categories of networking, CVs/resumes, interviews, transferable skills, academic blues, industry positions, and business acumen. Our consultants vote on a top article for each category and a top overall article for the week – if it’s a recent article that can help readers find and acquire PhD jobs, then we want to include it in this weekly digest.…

Scam Job Posts Versus Ghost Job Listings: A Guide For PhDs

Scam Job Posts Versus Ghost Job Listings: A Guide For PhDs

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

“I’ve applied to hundreds of job postings.” “Using the same resume?” I asked. “No, I targeted every resume. I’ve heard nothing back. In some cases I was sent a rejection email within the hour. What’s happening?!”“Ghost job listings.” I replied.  “Like fake jobs? Scams? I had a friend who applied to a job online and entered their private info and got hacked after. Like this?” “No, though that happens. Ghost job listings are from real companies but these companies have no intention of actually filling these jobs anytime soon …or at all.” “Why would they do this? What’s the point?”…

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies July 1st, 2023

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies July 1st, 2023

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Every week, we at Cheeky Scientist scour the Internet for the best articles on topics that help in the search for the Best of Transition: PhD Job Search in the industry. Our two consultants independently search for the most informative articles in the categories of networking, CVs/resumes, interviews, transferable skills, academic blues, industry positions, and business acumen. Our consultants vote on a top article for each category and a top overall article for the week – if it’s a recent article that can help readers find and acquire PhD jobs, then we want to include it in this weekly digest.…

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies June 24th, 2023

Best Of Transition: PhD Jobs & Job Search Strategies June 24th, 2023

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Every week, we at Cheeky Scientist scour the Internet for the best articles on topics that help in the search for the Best of Transition: PhD Job Search in the industry. Our two consultants independently search for the most informative articles in the categories of networking, CVs/resumes, interviews, transferable skills, academic blues, industry positions, and business acumen. Our consultants vote on a top article for each category and a top overall article for the week – if it’s a recent article that can help readers find and acquire PhD jobs, then we want to include it in this weekly digest.…

15 Questions To Ask Employers To Show You're Industry-Ready

15 Questions To Ask Employers To Show You're Industry-Ready

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

I know many PhDs who moved from one lab to another or one adjunct ship to another and never really had to interview. Because academia is such an isolated environment most PhDs already know most of what they need to know about the culture, pay, and what’s expected of them. This familiarity gets them in the habit of not asking questions during industry interviews and blowing it spectacularly.  I kept bombing my early industry interviews and I couldn’t figure out why – I knew I was the most qualified candidate they’d interviewed. Many of the interviewers told me so. I…

The Inside Scoop On The Industry Onboarding Process

The Inside Scoop On The Industry Onboarding Process

By: Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Nothing could prepare me for the shock I received walking into my first industry onboarding experience. Literally, everything was different from what I had experienced in academia. The processes, the culture, the pace – absolutely everything. I also had no idea what onboarding meant. I heard the word tossed around but, to me, it was just the process you went through to get all the mandatory paperwork out of the way. That was so far from the truth. My first onboarding experience lasted almost 6 months. Yet, throughout that whole process, I had no idea that I was still being…

Our Members Get Hired At Top Industry Companies

Top Industry Career eBooks

63 Best Industry Positions For PhDs

63 Best Industry Positions For PhDs

Isaiah Hankel, PhD & Arunodoy Sur, PhD

Learn about the best 63 industry careers for PhDs (regardless of your academic background). In this eBook, you will gain insight into the most popular, highest-paying jobs for PhDs – all of which will allow you to do meaningful work AND get paid well for it.

Industry Resume Guide for PhDs

Industry Resume Guide for PhDs

Isaiah Hankel, PhD

Learn how to craft the perfect industry resume to attract employers. In this eBook for PhDs, you will get access to proven resume templates, learn how to structure your bullet points, and discover which keywords industry employers want to see most on PhD resumes.

AI & ATS Resume Filters

AI & ATS Resume Filters

Isaiah Hankel

In today's competitive job market, understanding the impact of AI is crucial for career success. This involves ensuring your resume stands out in the digital realm, mastering your online presence, and being aware of how AI assigns reputation scores. Discovering how to leverage AI to your advantage is essential, as it plays a pivotal role in shaping professional opportunities.

Complete LinkedIn Guide For PhDs

Complete LinkedIn Guide For PhDs

Isaiah Hankel

The LinkedIn tips & strategies within have helped PhDs from every background get hired into top industry careers.