842 agencies indexed·Latest entry: 17 July 2026
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Industry · 154 agencies

Non-Profit Organisation agencies.

Non-profit marketing is the planning, creative, media and donor-engagement work that funds UK registered charities, social enterprises, foundations and NGOs. It is distinct because every supporter ask sits under the Code of Fundraising Practice, every campaigning message tests against Charity Commission CC9, and supporter data is policed by the ICO under UK GDPR and the 2025 charitable soft opt-in.

At a glance
  • 154 UK agencies with non-profit organisation experience
  • Across 28 UK locations
  • Reviewed 18 May 2026
Showing 49-72 of 154 non-profit organisation agenciesView in full archive
Goldfish logo
Goldfish
Independent·London·11-50 Employees

Goldfish is a multifaceted digital marketing firm with a strong presence in London, Bucharest, and Vancouver. Their distinctive blend of business consultation, narrative marketing, innovative design, tech proficiency, and data-backed insights set them apart from the rest in the digital marketing landscape. As a full-service digital marketing agency, Goldfish is dedicated to delivering high-impact

Accentuate Agency logo
Accentuate Agency
Independent·Birmingham·2-10 Employees

Accentuate Agency, operating from the UK, is a search marketing firm with a speciality in amplifying the online presence of enterprising businesses via Google. The distinctive edge of Accentuate Agency lies in its unparalleled concentration on Google Ads and SEO, delivering a robust dual-faceted approach to engage clients with prospective customers who are actively seeking their offerings. Their d

Tiny Spark logo
Tiny Spark
Independent·Bristol·2-10 Employees

Tiny Spark, a UK-based inventive agency, excels in designing engaging interactions for both physical and online landscapes. This agency distinguishes itself through the integration of strategic planning, user-focused design, and advanced technology to produce captivating narratives and quantifiable outcomes. Cooperating with B Corporations and clients sharing similar values, Tiny Spark crafts impa

Rant Agency logo
Rant Agency
Independent·Cardiff·11-50 Employees

Rant Agency, a celebrated UK-based mobile app development firm, excels in revolutionising businesses digitally via crafting custom-made mobile and web applications. Catering to a wide array of clientele, from emerging startups to international brands in the private, public, and non-profit sectors, our expertise shines through. Since our inception in 2003, we've forged robust alliances, providing a

Sonat Co. logo
Sonat Co.
Independent·London·2-10 Employees

Sonat Co., a London-based digital marketing agency, is renowned for its customised digital strategies and data-driven proficiency, purposefully crafted to amplify brands' online visibility and deliver extraordinary outcomes. Concentrating on digital media marketing, along with web design and development, Sonat Co. provides innovative solutions to uplift brands and propel businesses towards success

Foster & Scott logo
Foster & Scott
Independent·Sheffield·2-10 Employees

Foster & Scott, the innovative design and marketing firm in Sheffield, excels with its audacious creativity. They specialise in conjuring unparalleled experiences that enthrall and interact with audiences. Their expertise spans digital marketing, SEO, website design, and branding, regularly yielding impressive outcomes, validated by a consistent track record. This bold approach sets them apart in

The House London logo
The House London
Independent·London·2-10 Employees

The House London Ltd, a dynamic creative firm situated in Surbiton, London, prides itself in offering bespoke branding, motion, and digital solutions. Specialising in propelling growth for charities, social enterprises, and public sector bodies, alongside support for restaurants, hotels, clubs, and FMCG businesses, we stand out within the industry. Our unique approach blends customised strategies

Nebula logo
Nebula
Independent·Bristol·2-10 Employees

Nebula, a Bristol-based web agency, excels in delivering bespoke website design and continuous support. Specialising in comprehending the unique hurdles faced by businesses and charities, Nebula provides customised tech solutions, avoiding the unnecessary use of complex technical terms. Their dedication to digital innovation guarantees that their web solutions not only amplify brand uniqueness and

Tann Westlake logo
Tann Westlake
Independent·London·2-10 Employees

Tann Westlake specialises in transforming ambitious visions into tangible results for its clientele. Our expertise spans the rejuvenation of brands, enhancing website traffic and lead generation, surpassing advertising objectives, and invigorating video content. Nestled in the heart of West Sussex, Tann Westlake partners with both national and local businesses, driving forward inventive designs an

Subism logo
Subism
Independent·London·2-10 Employees

Subism is recognised as a pioneering digital design and development studio, steadfast in driving impactful transformations for our clients and the wider global community. Our specialisation lies in fostering innovation, partnering with those who are reshaping their respective sectors. These industry trailblazers depend on our professional guidance to navigate their path forward. Our strength is ro

GGMR logo
GGMR
Independent·Bath·2-10 Employees

GGMR, a leading technology agency headquartered in Corsham, UK, boasts a distinct proficiency in navigating complex technical challenges. Known for innovating within and beyond existing systems, they're recognised for their managerial prowess in multi-platform, multi-partner projects. Specialising in intricate data integration, user experience (UX), and the development of cutting-edge tech platfor

CWS Agency logo
CWS Agency
Independent·Leicester·2-10 Employees

CWS is a leading digital agency nestled in the heart of Loughborough, Leicestershire. As a dynamic team of innovators, we thrive on crafting solutions and generating transformative impacts for our clientele. Choosing the perfect partner for your pivotal project can be a daunting task. However, at CWS, we possess the knowledge and skills required to assist you in bringing your project to fruition

Ledgard Jepson logo
Ledgard Jepson
Independent·Sheffield·11-50 Employees

Situated in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, Ledgard Jepson is a renowned branding agency with an impressive track record spanning over 35 years. They are recognised for their unwavering dedication to providing brand clarity, crafting brands that narrate captivating tales and make a powerful impact across all platforms. Their all-inclusive suite of services encompasses strategic branding, clever design

Up There Digital logo
Up There Digital
Independent·Reading·11-50 Employees

Positioned in Guildford, UK, UP THERE, DIGITAL is a vibrant digital agency with a global reach. As specialists in digital marketing and website strategy, the agency takes pride in its ability to uplift brands by providing performance-led solutions that reduce stress and promote success. Their distinctive approach intertwines web design and marketing services seamlessly, leading to remarkable resul

Symphony Online logo
Symphony Online
Independent·Bristol·2-10 Employees

At Symphony Online, we excel in crafting bespoke websites, spearheading web development initiatives, and offering expert advice to marketers on enhancing their digital strategies. Unlike a full-service agency, Symphony Online fosters partnerships with agencies and marketers, focusing on producing sublime online experiences. Above all, Symphony Online puts the welfare of its partners at the forefro

Behaviour Digital logo
Behaviour Digital
Independent·Glasgow·2-10 Employees

Behaviour Digital is a globally-operating, remote digital advertising agency based in the UK, specialising in boosting business growth profitably without the requirement for lengthy contracts. The unique selling proposition of Behaviour Digital lies in their commitment to personalised, data-driven campaigns, meticulously designed to meet the distinct needs of each client, with proficiency in platf

SEO & Web logo
SEO & Web
Specialist·Essex·2-10 Employees

SEO & Web, a distinguished digital marketing firm in Essex, is acclaimed for its consistent success across diverse sectors. The agency's unique selling point is its well-rounded array of digital offerings, encompassing innovative website design, focused SEO, PPC, and digital PR initiatives, all customised to boost the online visibility of clients and generate concrete outcomes. Boasting two decade

Odyssey logo
Odyssey
Independent·Cardiff·2-10 Employees

Focusing on several crucial aspects, Odyssey specialises in: - Driving a significant increase in sales via your website - Bolstering customer loyalty on your online platform - Escalating user interaction - Streamlining website functionality and navigability - Enhancing the total user experience on your site - Integrating your brand seamlessly into your digital footprint - Overseeing website

Effra Digital logo
Effra Digital
Independent·London·2-10 Employees

Effra, a London-based web design and build agency, specialises in crafting highly functional, CMS-integrated, and mobile-optimised websites customised for start-ups, charities, and SMEs. With over three decades of industry experience, Effra sets itself apart with its transparent, agile methodology and dedication to user-centric design. This ensures not only efficient but also future-ready digital

The Dux Digital logo
The Dux Digital
Independent·Essex·2-10 Employees

Dux Digital, a Brentwood, Essex-based digital strategy agency, excels in meticulously crafting bespoke digital strategies that seamlessly blend website optimisation, brand enhancement, social media handling, and online advertising. Our mission is to empower businesses by unlocking their digital potential. Our versatility is reflected in our commitment to creating robust partnerships across a diver

Digital Republic logo
Digital Republic
Independent·Brighton·2-10 Employees

Digital Republic, a bespoke software development firm in Chichester, UK, is renowned for its dedication to business transformation via advanced technology. The brand distinguishes itself by providing innovative, consistently advancing solutions that yield concrete advantages. What differentiates Digital Republic is its cooperative methodology in collaborating with clients, guaranteeing their compr

Effemey Cosby Advertising logo
Effemey Cosby Advertising
Independent·Bournemouth·2-10 Employees

ECA South, a premier digital marketing agency located in Highcliffe, Dorset, provides comprehensive services to clients across the South of England and throughout the UK, particularly in Bournemouth, Christchurch, and Poole areas. What distinguishes ECA South is our dedication to immersing ourselves in our clients' businesses, enabling us to design customised marketing strategies that are not only

Zephi logo
Zephi
Independent·Birmingham·2-10 Employees

Established in 2010, Zephi is a leading digital marketing agency based in Rugeley, Staffordshire. Specialising in web and graphic design, marketing solutions, and managed hosting services, Zephi has carved a niche for itself in the UK's intricate digital landscape. Over the years, our partnership with diverse businesses and organisations across the UK and globally, has allowed us to craft bespoke

Sugar Rush logo
Sugar Rush
Independent·Belfast·11-50 Employees

Sugar Rush, a comprehensive digital agency located in Belfast and Shoreditch, has established itself as a frontrunner in providing result-oriented digital solutions. We work closely with our clients, ensuring fluid and eco-friendly operations while upholding stringent quality control and security measures. Sugar Rush manages all aspects of UX/UI design, programming, and quality assurance testing w

Editor's note
AgencyIndex lists 154 UK agencies positioning into non-profit and charity work. They split four ways: large-charity creative and brand shops working national household-name causes (Cancer Research UK, British Heart Foundation, RNLI, NSPCC, RSPCA), fundraising-specialist agencies running individual giving across direct mail, telephone, face-to-face, digital and DRTV, advocacy and campaigning shops that build behaviour-change and policy-pressure work for causes like climate, refugee rights and mental health, and social-enterprise and foundation brand specialists serving smaller charities, community-interest companies and grant-makers. What makes the category distinct is the rulebook on top of every ask. The Fundraising Regulator's new Code of Fundraising Practice took effect on 1 November 2025, slimmed down by around 45% and rebuilt around five values (legality, honesty, openness, respect, good governance) with strengthened protections for donors in vulnerable circumstances. The Charity Commission's CC9 guidance gates campaigning and political activity: charities can campaign in support of their charitable purposes but cannot have a political purpose, cannot give financial or in-kind support to a political party, and must tighten further during pre-election periods. The ICO enforces UK GDPR and PECR on supporter data, with the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 introducing a charitable-purposes soft opt-in that lets charities email and text supporters without prior consent if specific conditions are met. The whole sector still operates in the long shadow of the Olive Cooke case and the 2015-2016 Etherington Review that created the Fundraising Regulator and rewrote data-sharing norms; public trust is the operating constraint, not a brand metric. What is shifting in 2026 is the channel mix and the consent landscape together. CAF's UK Giving Report 2025 shows total giving at a high of £15.5bn but the proportion of people donating at its lowest level since 2019 (50%, down from 58%), with 3.9 million regular gifts cancelled in the prior year and only 36% of 16-to-24-year-olds giving anything at all. Face-to-face fundraising still costs an average of £242 to acquire a regular giver per AAW and Chartered Institute of Fundraising data, and street fundraising's role in the mix has been under pressure since 2015. Charities are pushing harder into digital regular-giving acquisition, recurring-giving asks at point of one-off donation, supporter retention programmes (donor attrition above 40% on first-year regular givers is now the headline sector problem), and AI-content scrutiny in case-for-support copy where the regulator's view is that misleading is misleading whether a human or a model wrote it.
Common briefs
Regular-giver acquisition across face-to-face, digital, social-first, DRTV and telephone, with retention plans built in from day oneChristmas and year-end appeals, the single biggest income window for most UK charities, running multichannel across direct mail, email, paid social and DRTV from mid-OctoberBrand build and case-for-support work for major capital campaigns, restructures or repositioning programmes that need trustee, major-donor and corporate-partner buy-inCampaigning and advocacy comms under CC9, including policy-pressure campaigns, public-mobilisation work and behaviour-change programmes that have to stay the right side of party-political activityMajor-donor, philanthropy and corporate-partnership materials including case-for-support documents, prospectuses, naming-rights propositions and stewardship reporting for six- and seven-figure donorsEmergency-appeal response on the DEC model, requiring 48-to-72-hour creative-and-media turnaround when a disaster, conflict or crisis triggers a coordinated sector-wide appealLegacy and in-memory giving programmes, the slowest-burn but highest-value income stream for most cause charities, requiring multi-year stewardship rather than single-campaign acquisition
Regulatory landscape
Fundraising Regulator · Charity Commission · ICO
Code 2025 + CC9 + GDPR shape every appeal

The Code of Fundraising Practice (new version effective 1 November 2025) is the central rulebook, set by the Fundraising Regulator and built around five values: legality, honesty, openness, respect and good governance. It governs how charities and third-party fundraising agencies solicit donations, identify themselves, treat people in vulnerable circumstances, run convenience and unstaffed giving, manage complaints and protect fundraisers from harm. The Code's data-protection content has been slimmed down and now signposts to ICO guidance rather than restating it. The Charity Commission's CC9 guidance, Speaking Out, governs campaigning and political activity: charities may campaign in furtherance of their charitable purposes but cannot have a political purpose, cannot make donations or give in-kind support to a political party, must not allow the charity to be used as a vehicle for personal or party-political views, and must tighten further during pre-election periods when Electoral Commission rules on regulated campaign spending may also bite. The ICO enforces UK GDPR, the Data Protection Act 2018 and PECR on supporter data and electronic marketing; the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 introduced a charitable-purposes soft opt-in for email and text marketing where the supporter is contacted about purposes similar to those they previously engaged with, opt-out is offered at every contact, and other conditions are met. The Fundraising Preference Service still sits behind all of this, letting any individual block contact from a named charity. The ASA enforces the CAP Code on charity advertising on the same footing as commercial work.

Specialist signals
5 signals
of real charity-sector experience
  • · Code-of-Fundraising-Practice-aware copy and creative review, with a documented sign-off path that tests every ask against the 2025 Code's vulnerable-circumstances rules, identification rules and the Charity Commission's CC9 line on campaigning versus political activity
  • · Named UK charity case studies on the case-studies page across at least one of large household-name causes, mid-size fundraising-led charities, advocacy and campaigning organisations or social-enterprise and foundation brand work, with documented outcomes against income, retention and supporter-acquisition cost (not just reach)
  • · Donor-CRM fluency, meaning working knowledge of Raiser's Edge NXT, Access Charity CRM (formerly ThankQ), Donorfy, Salesforce Nonprofit Cloud or Beacon, and the integrations charities actually use (JustGiving, Stripe, GoCardless, Mailchimp, dotdigital) rather than CRM-agnostic generalist talk
  • · Regular-giver acquisition track record across at least two of face-to-face, digital, DRTV, telephone, social-first and converting-one-off-to-regular asks, with named CPA, second-payment retention and 12-month attrition benchmarks rather than just first-payment volume
  • · Ethical-sourcing of beneficiary case studies and imagery: documented consent, dignity and safeguarding processes, awareness of the Dochas Code of Conduct on Images and Messages or equivalent, and a stated position on AI-generated imagery of beneficiaries (which most major UK charities now refuse to use)
Sector watch-outs
5 to watch
in any charity pitch
  • · Pitches that treat donors as consumer-acquisition leads with no awareness of the Code of Fundraising Practice's vulnerable-circumstances rules, the long tail of the Olive Cooke case, or the Fundraising Preference Service as a public opt-out backstop
  • · Weak ICO and PECR literacy, with proposals that conflate the new charitable-purposes soft opt-in with a free pass on consent, no separate logic for special-category data (health charities, faith-based work) and no view on supporter-data sharing with media owners or list-rental partners
  • · Campaigning and advocacy creative that ignores CC9, with no understanding of the line between campaigning for a charitable purpose and party-political activity, no plan for pre-election period freezes, and no awareness of Electoral Commission regulated-campaign-spending thresholds
  • · Ethics gaps in vulnerable-person targeting, beneficiary imagery or AI-generated case-for-support content, with no documented consent process for service-user stories, no dignity-in-imagery position, and a willingness to use synthetic beneficiaries that will not survive trustee or major-donor scrutiny
  • · No insight into trustee and governance dynamics: agencies that present to fundraising directors with no view on how the board signs off on tone-of-voice, risk appetite, named campaigning positions or the major-gift donor relationships that often sit at chair level rather than staff level
Frequently asked

What brands ask about agencies for non-profit organisation.

5 questions our editors get most often, answered honestly. No agency-marketing speak.

Curated by humans

Costs vary widely by charity scale and channel mix. Small to mid-size charities typically run focused programmes at £2,500-10,000 a month covering brand work, content, paid social and email, often with a single agency partner. Large national charities usually split spend across multiple specialist agencies (brand and creative on one retainer, individual-giving on another, advocacy on a third) at combined £20,000-150,000 a month before media and production costs. Regular-giver acquisition is the most reliable benchmark: face-to-face fundraising averages around £242 per regular giver acquired according to the AAW and Chartered Institute of Fundraising 2024 data, with digital and social-first acquisition CPAs typically £80-200 depending on cause and creative. Emergency appeals can spend £500,000-3m on paid media in a single window. Major-donor and corporate-partnership materials usually scope as projects in the £15,000-60,000 range. Media spend sits outside agency fees and dominates the budget on any acquisition-led programme.