His work centers on helping mission-driven organizations solve business problems they often
lack the capacity, infrastructure, or technical staff to address. Warren's areas of interest include
disrupting the nonprofit starvation cycle,
applying
artificial intelligence,
machine learning,
and
mathematical modeling
to operational decision-making, and expanding access to technical fields for people from
historically underrepresented communities who want to use technology outside of traditional
technology-sector roles.
Jones sees organizations as systems connected by culture: people, processes, information flows,
limitations, incentives, and decisions. His work and point of view are shaped by a love for
mission-driven work, a fascination with how systems function, respect for the power of
data-driven
decision-making,
and the practical value of well-designed information systems. He created this site as a public
archive for selected projects, writing, research notes, and professional points of view.
Outside of his professional life, Warren values close relationships, lifelong learning, and intellectual
curiosity. He is especially drawn to experiences that help people see the world from another angle,
whether through
music,
literature,
art,
food,
travel,
or conversation with people whose lives and assumptions differ from his own. He considers music a
stabilizing force, travel a means of expanding cultural competency, and public life—including
public transportation
and
urban planning—a useful lens for understanding equity, access, and how communities function.
Following his K-12 education, Jones attended the
University of Maryland, College Park
before withdrawing to support his family and begin his career in the nonprofit sector. He later returned
to complete a
Bachelor of Science
degree at the
University of Maryland Global Campus,
where he studied management studies and developed an early appreciation for technical and quantitative
approaches to business problem-solving.
After completing his undergraduate degree, Warren continued his business education by earning a
Master of Business Administration
from the University of Maryland Global Campus. His graduate business training strengthened his
understanding of organizational structure, management frameworks, leadership, and the ways people
function inside complex organizations.
To further develop his quantitative and technical skill set, Jones pursued an interdisciplinary
Master of Science
degree in
data analytics
and visualization at
Morgan State University.
The program extended his training in applied data science,
statistics,
mathematical modeling,
data visualization,
and technical methods for analyzing organizational and business problems. For Warren, this training
connects directly to his nonprofit career: it reflects a belief that mission-driven organizations deserve
advanced analytical tools, better information systems, and stronger decision infrastructure.
Career & professional focus
Warren has spent nearly two decades working in the
nonprofit sector,
with experience across organizations that have complex funding, governance, and operational structures.
His career has included work with a foundation with a national footprint, a statewide nonprofit with a
programmatic presence in every jurisdiction, and a membership association with a national presence.
These roles gave him direct exposure to the operational realities of mission-driven organizations:
ambitious public and social goals, constrained resources, layered accountability, and the constant need
to translate strategy into executable systems.
His respect for the nonprofit field comes from that experience. Nonprofit organizations often fill
social needs that markets and governments do not fully meet, and their work can be deeply consequential
for families, communities, institutions, and public life. Warren's professional focus is shaped by the view
that these organizations deserve the same level of technical, quantitative, and operational sophistication
often reserved for larger corporate or technology-centered environments.
Over time, Jones developed a technical and quantitative skill set in response to a recurring problem he
observed inside the sector: many nonprofits collect valuable information, but lack the staff capacity,
infrastructure, or internal systems needed to turn that information into useful decisions. His current
work focuses on the use of
business intelligence,
data analytics,
information systems,
and
decision-support systems
in mission-driven organizations.
He is especially interested in how nonprofits can use data infrastructure, dashboards, workflow
documentation, and
machine learning
methods to improve operations without losing sight of mission, equity, or enterprise priorities.
Although his nonprofit career has spanned several roles, Jones' specialty is leveraging modern
technologies and effective
change management
to improve how
boards of directors
execute their
fiduciary
and
governance
responsibilities.
His technical work includes projects using
Python,
R,
SQL,
Tableau,
Excel,
and
cloud computing.
His project interests include
data wrangling,
exploratory data analysis,
machine learning, organizational dashboards,
database design,
and applied modeling for real-world decision-making. Warren is also interested in the
data engineering
work required to build reliable data infrastructure for scalable, repeatable downstream analysis.
Selected professional initiatives
Warren's professional initiatives reflect a consistent pattern: identifying an organizational problem,
translating it into a system or workflow people can actually use, and improving the way information,
decisions, and resources move through an institution. These initiatives are drawn from his work across
complex nonprofit environments, including executive operations, board governance, business intelligence,
procurement, fundraising operations, and equity-centered policy implementation.
Initiative
Problem
Response
Result
Business intelligence and organizational visibility
Organizational information was distributed across departments, spreadsheets, relationship histories,
meeting records, and separate systems, limiting leaders' ability to see patterns and track commitments.
Warren helped stand up and mature a
business intelligence
function using Salesforce and related workflows to organize board, development, attendance, and
relationship data.
Improved visibility into key organizational issues and helped move the organization toward a more
mature data culture where information could support decision-making, not just recordkeeping.
Board governance and executive systems
Governance workflows depended on accurate records, timely materials, and institutional memory that
could become fragmented as the organization grew.
Jones developed and supported systems for board portals, meeting materials, rosters, elections,
quorum and voting processes, onboarding, pledges, and governance documentation.
Strengthened the organization's ability to manage board operations with greater consistency,
accuracy, transparency, and continuity.
Enterprise procurement and operational discipline
Procurement activity was vulnerable to decentralized purchasing, inconsistent vendor practices,
and limited visibility into organization-wide spending.
Warren helped shift procurement from a department-level purchasing mindset toward a coordinated
enterprise approach to vendors, contracts, spending decisions, and operational planning.
Supported stronger cost awareness, better consistency, and a more strategic approach to stewardship,
efficiency, and organizational capacity.
Equity-centered policy and operations implementation
Organizational commitments to
diversity, equity, and inclusion
needed to move beyond statements into policies, procedures, budgets, workflows, and daily practice.
Warren contributed to work that embedded DE&I and anti-racism/anti-oppression principles into
organizational policy, planning, participation, and accountability structures.
Helped make equity more operationally durable by connecting values to the systems that shape how
people experience and move through an organization.
Development, finance, and reconciliation workflows
Fundraising and finance functions relied on shared information but often needed stronger alignment
around timing, records, pledges, donations, reporting, and reconciliation.
Jones helped improve workflows between development and finance, connecting process improvement
with the information systems needed to track and verify revenue activity.
Supported more accurate reporting, better fundraising visibility, and stronger cross-functional
coordination between departments.
Applied analytics and technical portfolio
Mission-driven organizations often face business problems that would benefit from stronger data
infrastructure, analytics, and modeling capacity.
Warren's technical portfolio extends his operations background into Python, R, SQL, Tableau, Excel,
machine learning, dashboards, data cleaning, relational databases, and exploratory analysis.
Demonstrates how technical tools can clarify problems, improve visibility, and support more informed
decisions in real organizational contexts.
Practitioner-scholar orientation
Warren describes his work as having a practitioner-scholar orientation: grounded first in practical
experience, then sharpened through research, analytics, and structured inquiry. Rather than treating
practice and scholarship as separate worlds, he uses real organizational problems as starting points
for analysis, modeling, documentation, and learning.
This orientation is especially important in nonprofit work, where complex problems are often
experienced operationally before they are studied formally. For Jones, the point is not to make
organizations sound more academic; it is to help them use better evidence, clearer systems, and
stronger tools to do the work they already care about.
In this context, dashboards, databases, process maps, machine learning models, and written analysis
are not just technical outputs. They are ways of making complexity more visible so people can ask
better questions, make better decisions, and build systems that hold up under pressure.
Writing, research, & commentary
Warren’s writing sits at the intersection of nonprofit operations, applied analytics, governance,
public systems, and the future of work. His essays and working papers translate practical problems
from the nonprofit sector into researchable questions, applied frameworks, and plain-language analysis.
The writing is less about commentary for its own sake and more about making visible the operational
patterns that shape how organizations make decisions, spend money, govern themselves, and use information.
His current writing agenda focuses on the nonprofit starvation cycle, artificial intelligence and
machine learning in mission-driven organizations, board governance as an information system, procurement
as an enterprise-level discipline, and sports analytics as an accessible pathway into technical learning.
Selected writing and works
Jones, W. A. (2026). Disrupting the nonprofit starvation cycle: Operational capacity,
data infrastructure, and the hidden cost of underinvestment. White paper.
Jones, W. A. (2026). Applied AI and ML for nonprofit operations: Practical use cases for classification, forecasting, workflow improvement, and decision
support. White paper.
Jones, W. A. (2024). Board governance as an information system: How nonprofits can
improve oversight through better data, documentation, and decision workflows. Working paper.
Jones, W. A. (2023). From departmental purchasing to enterprise stewardship:
Rethinking procurement in mission-driven organizations. Essay.
Jones, W. A. (in development). Sports analytics as a gateway to technical learning:
Using familiar data to broaden access to data science and machine learning. Essay.
Commentary areas
In addition to formal writing, Warren uses this space for shorter commentary on nonprofit management,
organizational systems, AI and work, public transportation, urban life, music, culture, academic training,
and the ways institutions shape everyday experience. These notes are written in a more exploratory style
and often serve as starting points for longer essays or applied research.
Core themes & focus areas
Several recurring themes organize Warren's work and writing. These themes are not meant to
be rigid categories. They are the topics he returns to while thinking about organizations,
data, institutions, and the way people experience systems in everyday life.
Organizational systems: Understanding organizations through workflows,
information flows, incentives, constraints, culture, and decision points.
Data and decision-making: Using analytics to improve clarity, accountability,
and judgment without reducing organizational life to metrics alone.
AI and machine learning: Exploring how artificial intelligence and machine learning
can support exploratory data analysis, classification, forecasting, operational decision support,
and better use of organizational knowledge.
Public and nonprofit infrastructure: Examining how institutions, funding models,
public systems, and operational capacity shape mission delivery.
Governance and executive systems: Improving the structures that help boards,
executives, and leadership teams make decisions, track commitments, and manage accountability.
Access to technical fields: Expanding pathways for people from historically
underrepresented communities to learn technical skills and apply them in fields beyond traditional
technology companies.
Sports analytics as an access point: Using sports data and modeling as a practical,
familiar way to introduce technical concepts to broader audiences.
Contact & engagement
Warren can be contacted for professional inquiries, collaboration, writing, portfolio-related questions,
or conversations about nonprofit operations, data analytics, board governance, AI and machine learning,
and applied research. This site will continue to develop as a public archive for selected work,
commentary, research notes, and projects.