Charities and nonprofits are some of the most spreadsheet-dependent organisations in the country. There are good reasons for this: budgets are tight, staff are stretched, and the priority — rightly — is the mission, not the technology. A spreadsheet costs nothing, everyone knows how to use one, and it gets the job done.
Until it doesn't. There's a point where the operational complexity of running a charity outgrows what spreadsheets can handle reliably. Volunteer coordination, donor management, grant reporting, impact measurement, and event registration all start as simple lists and evolve into interconnected systems that spreadsheets were never designed to support.
This article is for charity managers and nonprofit operations staff who are starting to feel that friction. Not to sell you something, but to help you recognise when a custom tool would genuinely save time and reduce risk.
Most charities start tracking volunteers in a spreadsheet. Name, phone number, availability, skills, Garda vetting status. It works when you have fifteen volunteers who show up regularly. When you have fifty or eighty, the spreadsheet becomes unmanageable.
Volunteers change their availability. New people join. Existing volunteers lapse. Someone needs to be matched to a specific role that requires specific training. All of this information needs to be current, and in a spreadsheet, "current" depends entirely on whether someone remembered to update it.
A proper volunteer management tool lets volunteers update their own availability, tracks training and vetting expiry dates, and helps you fill rosters without spending half a day on the phone. It doesn't have to be complicated — it just has to be more reliable than a shared Google Sheet.
Donations come in through multiple channels: online, bank transfer, cheque, cash at events, payroll giving, and regular standing orders. Tracking all of this in a spreadsheet means manual entry, manual reconciliation, and a high risk of errors. When it comes time to thank donors, generate tax receipts, or report to the board on fundraising performance, the data has to be pulled together from multiple sources.
The problem isn't just accuracy — it's relationships. Knowing that a donor gave EUR 500 last year and EUR 200 this year tells you something important. Knowing they attended your last two events, volunteered twice, and haven't been contacted in six months tells you more. A spreadsheet can hold data. It's not good at surfacing the patterns that help you build and maintain donor relationships.
If your charity receives funding from bodies like Pobal, the HSE, or government departments, you know the reporting requirements. How did you spend the money? What outcomes were achieved? How many people were served? These reports require specific data in specific formats, and the deadlines are non-negotiable.
When the data needed for these reports lives in spreadsheets, generating the report is a manual assembly job. Someone spends a day pulling figures from the finance spreadsheet, cross-referencing with the activity spreadsheet, and formatting everything to meet the funder's requirements. Do this for three or four different funders with different reporting periods and formats, and you've lost a significant amount of operational time.
A system that captures activity data and financial data in a structured way can generate grant reports in minutes instead of days. The data is already categorised, already linked to the right funding stream, and already in a format that can be exported to match the funder's requirements.
Every funder and every board wants to know: what difference are you making? How many people did you reach? What changed for them? These are important questions, and charities that can answer them clearly are the ones that secure continued funding.
But measuring impact requires data collection at the point of service delivery, not retrospective assembly from memory. If your frontline staff or volunteers are filling in spreadsheets at the end of the week from memory, the data is approximate at best. A simple tool that captures basic data at the time of interaction — even just a form on a phone — produces dramatically more reliable impact data than any spreadsheet filled in days later.
Charity events — fundraising dinners, volunteer days, training sessions, community activities — need registration, communication, and follow-up. A spreadsheet of attendees works for a small event. When you're running multiple events throughout the year, tracking registrations, sending reminders, managing waitlists, and recording attendance becomes its own administrative burden.
A registration system that handles sign-ups, sends automatic confirmations and reminders, tracks attendance, and feeds data back into your donor and volunteer records saves a remarkable amount of time. It also gives you data you can use: who attends your events, who doesn't show up after registering, and what types of events generate the most engagement.
Custom software is not always the right answer. If your charity has five volunteers and twenty donors, a spreadsheet is fine. The investment in a custom tool only makes sense when the cost of not having one — in staff time, missed deadlines, reporting errors, or lost donor relationships — exceeds the cost of building it.
Here are the signs that you've reached that point:
Budget is the obvious concern. Charities don't have spare money for technology projects. But there are funding pathways that can help.
The LEO Grow Digital Voucher provides up to EUR 5,000 in co-funding (50% of the project cost) for eligible organisations. This is designed specifically for digital transformation — replacing manual processes with proper tools.
Depending on your charity's activities and location, funding may also be available through Pobal, the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth (DCEDIY), or specific programme grants that include a technology or capacity-building component. It's worth checking with your funder whether operational technology falls within your grant's eligible expenditure.
A custom tool from our Starter tier begins at EUR 3,000. With the LEO voucher, that's EUR 1,500 out of pocket. For a tool that saves a day of admin per month, that investment pays for itself within a few months.
We have 9 production apps live and build fixed-price tools for organisations across Ireland. If you want to talk through whether a custom tool would make sense for your charity, get in touch. No obligation, no jargon, and we'll be honest if a spreadsheet is still the right answer.