December always does this—it makes us want to sprint toward January with fresh plans and big goals. But first, let’s take a breath and see what caught your attention in 2025.
When I look back at the blog posts that resonated most with readers this year, they weren’t the ones promising quick fixes or silver bullet solutions. They were the ones that challenged assumptions, expanded roles, and helped researchers and fundraisers think differently about the work we do.
So before we dive headfirst into the new year, let’s revisit the three posts that hit home for professionals like you—the ones that sparked conversations, shifted perspectives, and maybe even changed how you approach your work.
If you missed these the first time around, consider this your second chance. If you read them already, well, sometimes the best insights are worth revisiting.
1. Top 5 Capacity Rating Insights for Research Professionals
Let’s start with everyone’s favorite anxiety-inducing topic: capacity ratings. This post cut through the noise and named the uncomfortable reality: No matter what rating you choose, you will be wrong. And that’s okay.
Why did this post resonate? Because it gave you permission to be human while doing technical work. It acknowledged that capacity ratings are directional, not definitive. And it reminded us that our job isn’t perfection—it’s providing the best assessment possible with available data, managing expectations, and building confidence for bold asks.
If you’re still treating capacity ratings like a math problem with one correct answer, go read this post. Then have a conversation with your gift officers about methodology, limitations, and what you actually know versus what you’re estimating. You’ll all sleep better.
2. Blinker Alert: Research is Changing Lanes
This might have been the most provocative post of the year. Not because it was controversial, but because it named something many of us were feeling but couldn’t quite articulate.
Here’s why this post mattered: It gave language to the career evolution many researchers are pursuing. And it provided a roadmap for getting there, starting with five simple but powerful questions you can ask right now to signal your lane change.
The researchers who read this post and took action? They’re the ones having different conversations with their gift officers. They’re the ones being invited into strategy meetings. They’re the ones building careers, not just holding jobs.
If you’ve been feeling like your role should be more strategic but you’re not sure how to make that shift, this is your manual. Read it. Then start asking those questions.
3. Public Company Insider. So What?
Maybe nobody in your fundraising office would actually say “So what?” out loud. But let’s be honest—when you tell a gift officer their prospect is a public company insider, you can see it in their eyes. They’re thinking: And that means… what, exactly?
Why did this post land? Because it took a technical concept and translated it into fundraising relevance. It answered the “so what” question before anyone had to ask it.
For researchers working in major gifts, this post was a masterclass in communicating value. For gift officers who skimmed past SEC filings in profiles, it was a wake-up call about what they might be missing.
The Common Thread
Three very different posts. Three distinct topics. But one consistent theme: Moving beyond the transactional to become genuinely strategic.
Whether you’re wrestling with capacity ratings, considering your career trajectory, or trying to communicate the significance of insider wealth, the challenge is the same. It’s not about gathering more data. It’s about translating information into insight, insight into action, and action into results.
The researchers and fundraisers who thrive aren’t the ones with access to the best databases or the fanciest screening tools. They’re the ones asking better questions. The ones challenging their own assumptions. The ones building relationships based on trust and proven value rather than just task completion.
They’re the ones reading posts like these and thinking: How can I apply this tomorrow?
Take Action for 2026
- Bookmark the Aspire Research Links Directory free webpage for instant access to resources the Aspire team uses every day
- Register for the Back Stage Tour of the Prospect Research Institute to learn about 2026 hot topics
- Order the updated Search Tips for Fundraisers booklet for yourself or your favorite colleague