Full-Time

Project Director

Posted on 11/23/2025

Pew

Pew

501-1,000 employees

Nonprofit research funding and policy analysis

Compensation Overview

A$138.4k - A$154.6k/yr

Belmont, Australia + 1 more

More locations: Brisbane QLD, Australia

Hybrid

Hybrid work program with core in-office days; flexible remote days possible.

Category
Business & Strategy (2)
,
Requirements
  • Bachelor’s degree or equivalent experience is required
  • Generally, ten years of applicable experience in leading successful state and national campaigns and initiatives aimed at solving conservation needs. A strong understanding of campaign strategy and experience in applying a diversity of strategic approaches to achieve campaign outcomes
  • Demonstrated knowledge of conservation policy and current trends. Familiarity with policymaking, regulatory and legislative processes
  • Passion for nature conservation and working with First Nations people, land holders and stakeholders to achieve large scale and enduring outcomes for the environment
  • Strong understanding of the Indigenous cultural context of conservation work in Australia, with experience working alongside First Nations people to achieve conservation outcomes
  • Demonstrated experience managing staff and leading multiple campaigns, and/or partnerships, that have delivered measurable results. Aptitude to analyze budgetary information, assess organizational capacity and organize teams to meet deadlines on multiple projects, and effectively identify and report progress against milestones
  • Experience inspiring and coaching staff to achieve project outcomes and facilitate and support professional growth
  • Exceptional interpersonal skills, with demonstrated experience leading diverse teams, engaging with a wide range of stakeholders, contractors and consultants, and navigating sensitive cultural and political environments with respect and effectiveness to build support for and deliver state and national goals
  • A track record of effectively identifying potential partners, cultivating relationships, and generating ongoing support for a cause
  • Politically astute with proven aptitude to leverage political and stakeholder relationships and strategic insights to achieve positive policy and program outcomes. Experience influencing others and reading nuances of meaning accurately to advance relationships and project goals. Aptitude to understand the social and economic issues in regional Australia
  • Demonstrated track record of success in using effective marketing techniques and media to communicate conservation needs. Aptitude to quickly synthesize complex arguments to communicate the essence of issues and means to address them in compelling language. Strong oral, presentation, facilitation and written communications skills and aptitude to clearly articulate complex ideas, thoughts and concepts to a general audience. Understanding of campaign communication tactics including emerging trends
  • Seasoned judgment and comfort in making decisions, justifying recommendations, and being responsive, clear, and firm with colleagues and partners
  • Experience working with and managing donor relationships, including the aptitude to align program goals with philanthropic priorities and reporting expectations
  • Comfortable working with a high degree of independence and autonomy
  • Travel
  • Work Authorization
Responsibilities
  • Foster a work environment that inspires excellence, values impact, encourages transparency, builds mutual trust and respect, embraces and values diversity, and is collaborative, caring and compassionate
  • Manage and mentor members of the terrestrial and freshwater teams, including providing day-to-day leadership, facilitating ongoing professional development, and fostering a healthy team culture
  • Develop and implement effective campaign strategies and set achievable and measurable goals to achieve the objectives and deliverables of the Protecting Australia’s Nature program. This includes achieving the global biodiversity framework target of protecting 30% of Australia’s lands by 2030 and creating new models of river and floodplain protection for identified rivers in northern Australia
  • Establish and maintain working collaborative relationships with key decision-makers, government officials, a broad cross section of stakeholder leaders, Indigenous leaders, and national and international institutions, as well as relevant conservation NGOs
  • Monitor the progress of project implementation and provide regular reports and updates to Pew, our partners, and relevant donors
  • In collaboration with the Protecting Australia’s Nature terrestrial campaign managers, design and oversee cost effective budgets, evaluate project costs, and monitor campaign expenses and capacity needs
  • Develop and maintain knowledge of the science, policies, and politics of conservation in Australia
  • Collaborate with Pew’s institutional partnerships team to identify potential donors, cultivate relationships, and generate interest and support for efforts that result in significant funding for projects
  • Ensure a significant and effective public profile for terrestrial conservation issues for Pew’s Protecting Australia’s Nature Project including supporting Pew campaign managers and partners, responding to media enquiries about Pew’s terrestrial work in Australia, and representing Pew publicly at conferences, seminars, and official forums
  • Participate in activities that support program and Pew-wide objectives
Desired Qualifications
  • Advanced degree is strongly preferred
  • Experience co-design with Indigenous communities to support conservation initiatives would be highly regarded

Pew Charitable Trusts is a non-governmental research and grantmaking organization that uses its endowment to fund and conduct data-driven research on public health, environmental conservation, and state/local fiscal policy, with the aim of informing policymakers and the public. It produces reports, analyses, and policy briefs and engages in nonpartisan advocacy to influence public policy and civic life. Its product is essentially rigorous, accessible data and policy analysis, disseminated through research reports, data tools, and collaboration with donors, governments, and civil society. The organization distinguishes itself from competitors by offering nonpartisan, evidence-based analysis rather than partisan lobbying, leveraging a broad endowment and a network of partnerships to fund independent research and grantmaking. Its goal is to improve public policy and civic life by ensuring decision-makers have trustworthy information and effective tools for policy improvement.

Company Size

501-1,000

Company Stage

N/A

Total Funding

$6.6M

Headquarters

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Founded

1948

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Marine fellowship expands to seven fellows in 2026, adding Australia, Canada, Japan.
  • Network of 200+ scientists across 40+ countries boosts global conservation collaboration.
  • Diana Farrell joins board April 14, 2026, enhancing economic policy expertise.

What critics are saying

  • Endowment depletes from high grantmaking outpacing Sun Oil trust returns by 2029.
  • Congress cuts WCPP, PROTECT, Culvert AOP funding post-September 30, 2026.
  • Bloomberg Philanthropies poaches talent with $200K marine grants in 2027.

What makes Pew unique

  • Pew funds marine fellows from China, Indonesia, Philippines, South Africa, Curaçao.
  • Pew developed IIJA dashboard with ICF tracking resilience projects by district.
  • Pew advocates permanently funding WCPP at $200M annually, eliminating Tribal cost-sharing.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

Unlimited Paid Time Off

Flexible Work Hours

Remote Work Options

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

Hybrid Work Options

401(k) Retirement Plan

Company News

Pew Research Center
Nov 5th, 2025
Congress Should Strengthen Public Safety and Resilience Programs in Transportation Bill

Congress should strengthen public safety and resilience programs in transportation bill. Typically, every five years the U.S. Congress passes sweeping legislation that updates how the federal government invests in surface transportation infrastructure such as roads, bridges, rail, transit, bike lanes, sidewalks, and more. The current law, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), is set to expire Sept. 30, 2026. As Congress develops legislation that will determine which surface transportation programs are reauthorized and funded, The Pew Charitable Trusts is encouraging lawmakers to maintain and strengthen three programs that create jobs and help local economies thrive while making America's infrastructure safer, more resilient to disasters, and better connected for people and wildlife. Those programs are the Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program (WCPP); the Promoting Resilient Operations for Transformative, Efficient, and Cost-Saving Transportation (PROTECT) Program; and the National Culvert Removal, Replacement, and Restoration Grant (Culvert AOP) Program. Further, to help federal and state officials, communities, Tribes, and the public assess the scope and scale of the IIJA, Pew partnered with ICF, a technology and data analysis firm, to develop an interactive dashboard that provides information - such as location, congressional district, and grant amount - for each project funded by the IIJA under these three programs, as well as other projects involving resilience and connectivity. Here's why each of these programs is important. Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program. According to the Federal Highway Administration, wildlife-vehicle collisions cost Americans more than $10 billion annually. In 2024, State Farm reported nearly 2 million insurance claims due to animal-related crashes, causing approximately 200 human fatalities and 26,000 injuries. The WCPP provides states, localities, Tribes, and others with resources to reduce these incidents, including by granting funds to build wildlife overpasses and underpasses - which, when combined with added fencing, have been shown to reduce crashes by up to 90%. Pew is urging Congress to make the program permanent, raise funding to $200 million annually from the cumulative $350 million made available by the current transportation law, and eliminate cost-sharing requirements for Tribes. Doing this would establish reliable resources, address unmet demand, and ensure the federal government considers all worthy projects. Americans bear the brunt of impacts from disasters on the nation's transportation infrastructure. For example, in 2024, hurricane helene shut down thousands of roads throughout the southeast, leaving residents cut off from critical facilities and services such as hospitals and evacuation routes. The PROTECT Program helps communities proactively upgrade roads, bridges, and more to better withstand floods, fires, severe storms, and other disasters. Pew recommends maintaining the program at funding levels no less than the $8.7 billion provided by the current surface transportation law so that communities can better prepare for costly disasters. Pew also recommends reauthorizing and maintaining, at a minimum, current funding levels of $1 billion for the Culvert AOP Program, which provides local and state governments and Tribes with the resources necessary to improve outdated culverts that can worsen flooding and block fish migration. Upgrading these structures is not only more cost-effective than maintaining undersized culverts but has also been shown to improve motorist safety and enhance habitat for commercially important species, such as salmon, that are vital to local economies from coast to coast. To date, the program has awarded funding for nearly 170 projects nationwide. Addressing the nation's outdated and deteriorating infrastructure is essential to the livelihoods of all Americans. By prioritizing the WCPP, PROTECT, and Culvert AOP programs as part of the next surface transportation reauthorization bill, Congress can help ensure that states, communities, Tribes, and others strengthen the country's infrastructure in ways that enhance public safety, create jobs, and support local economies. Forbes Tompkins works on The Pew Charitable Trusts' U.S. conservation project. News, photos, and expert insights on conservation and climate protections in the U.S.

PR Newswire
May 22nd, 2025
Utah And Indiana Address Energy Demand With Laws To Modernize Grid

Advanced transmission technologies will boost grid capacity, improve reliability, and reduce costs WASHINGTON, May 22, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Carter Harms is an officer on The Pew Charitable Trusts' energy modernization project.To meet rising electricity demand—which is surging throughout the U.S. because of factors such as population growth, more data centers, and expanding manufacturing—states need near-term solutions. One is to unlock additional capacity from their existing grid infrastructures. A growing number of states are doing this by encouraging the deployment of advanced transmission technologies (ATTs)—software and hardware that allow transmission lines to carry more electricity

The Root
May 7th, 2025
Diddy Plays the Race Card, But Black Folks Have Bigger Fish To Fry

A few years ago, The Pew Charitable Trusts teamed up with the Jail Data Initiative to examine racial disparities in jails across the country.

The Pew Charitable Trusts
Apr 14th, 2025
Pew's Board Gains New Member

PHILADELPHIA - The Pew Charitable Trusts today announced the appointment of Diana Farrell to its board of directors, effective April 14.

Technical.ly
Apr 13th, 2025
Economic Development Already Has Crms. What Would An Ecosystem Approach Look Like?

Ecosystem building, which prioritizes collaboration and growth among local entrepreneurs and organizations, is increasingly being recognized as a key regional economic development strategy.To serve that industry, EcoMap is launching a tool that’s similar to a traditional CRM in that it facilitates data sharing and collaborative tracking — but in this case, to track entrepreneurial support efforts across multiple organizations.EcoMap’s ERM may help formalize regional ecosystem building as a measurable discipline, potentially expanding the economic development software market beyond traditional boundaries. → Read on for details and join Chris Wink’s weekly newsletter for moreModern client relationship management software emerged because of technology changes. In the early 2000s, cloud services, mobile computing and the recurring monthly payment model defined CRM as a business category, and made Salesforce its original standard-bearer.Baltimore-founded EcoMap is launching in June its ERM, or Ecosystem Relationship Management — not because of a technology change, but an industry one.“It’s meant to facilitate collaboration, data sharing, and ultimately track and measure the impact of ecosystems at large — and of specific elements within that ecosystem as it relates to supporting entrepreneurs,” said Sherrod Davis, the CEO of the startup founded in 2018 by Johns Hopkins University graduate Pava LaPere.The $100 billion CRM category thrived because technical capacity finally met a long-standing need for sales and marketing teams to better track deals. EcoMap’s ERM is a bet on “ecosystem building” continuing its journey from business metaphor to established discipline. That discipline encompasses what its industry calls place-based, tech- and entrepreneurship-led economic development.Economic development is no trivial target market. US states and local governments spend at least $90 billion on business and talent attraction annually, according to a McKinsey analysis

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