INTERNAL — OAHE DATA
Oahe Data

Intelligence Brief

American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES)
Date: 2026-04-11 Entity Type: Nonprofit Audit Type: Public Index Reconnaissance

Contents

Entity Profile

PropertyValue
TypeNonprofit 501(c)(3)
Domain(s)aises.org (20 subdomains)
JurisdictionNational; HQ at 6321 Riverside Plaza Ln NW, Ste A, Albuquerque, NM 87120
Founded1977 (Oklahoma; original name "National Society of American Indian Engineers")
EIN73-1023474
UEIXUE5YPEN3UZ9
HostingWordPress.com (Automattic managed) + 5 additional providers
EmailMicrosoft 365 (Outlook)
MarketingSalesforce Pardot
Event ManagementAventri (AWS-hosted)
Donation PlatformClassy.org (Google Cloud)

Budget Signals

Revenue Trajectory

$2.9M (2015) to $19.0M (2024) — 6.6x growth in 9 years. This is a rapidly scaling organization.

Revenue Composition (2024)

SourceAmountPercentage
Contributions/grants$17,735,32793.5%
Program services$1,054,4435.6%
Investment income$224,2191.2%
MetricValue
Total assets (2024)$11,321,159
Annual grant distribution~$2.0M to ~200 students/year
Cumulative scholarships$8.7M to 4,924 students (lifetime)
Executive compensation$327,572 (CEO) + $562,891 (total exec comp)

Federal Funding Sources

AgencyAmountPrograms
NSF$4.4M+ confirmedLighting the Pathway (faculty pipeline), CS for Native Girls (with Kapor Center), CS Education
HHS/IHS~$3.0M cumulativeHealth workforce, STEM recruitment, coalition building
DOEAmount not extractedIntertribal Science & Math Bowl
NASAPart of $857K poolMUREP/MAIANSE partnerships
IHS (sole-source)~$745,000AI/AN STEM workforce (2024–2029)

Corporate Sponsors

Google, Intel, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Foundation, ARDC, Comcast NBCUniversal (Project UP)

Audit flags: Material weakness in internal controls identified FY2024 and FY2025. This means they're spending $750K+ annually in federal grants and have documented deficiencies in financial governance.

Where Oahe Could Help

The 93.5% dependency on contributions/grants is a structural vulnerability. An organization growing this fast with documented internal control weaknesses needs data infrastructure — tracking grant performance, compliance reporting, outcomes measurement. Their program data (scholarship recipients, career outcomes, chapter activity) is likely scattered across multiple platforms.

Technology Gaps

Hosting Fragmentation

6 distinct providers (Automattic, DreamHost, HostGator, AWS, Azure, Classy.org) across 20 subdomains. This means no unified security posture, no centralized analytics, higher management overhead, and year-specific conference subdomains accumulating without retirement.

Legacy DNS

Network Solutions nameservers suggest the domain registration hasn't been modernized since the early 2000s. No Cloudflare, no modern DDoS protection, no edge caching.

Minimal Security Headers

HSTS present but no CSP, X-Frame-Options, or X-Content-Type-Options. For an organization handling scholarship applications, resumes, and donations, this is a gap.

Email Sender Sprawl

SPF record includes 7 different services (Outlook, Pardot, Informz, Neon, Aventri, WPCloud, Google). Approaching the 10-lookup DNS limit. Deliverability and phishing risk.

Where Oahe Could Help

Infrastructure consolidation roadmap, security hardening, DNS modernization. This is IT consulting territory, not their core mission — but the fragmentation means they're paying for complexity they don't need.

Decision Makers

NameRoleBackgroundRelevance
Sarah EchoHawk (Pawnee)CEO/President since 2013Former EVP at First Nations Development Institute; MNM Regis University; $327K compPrimary decision maker. Possible transition signal: launched Black Streak Consulting LLC Jan 2025, but still listed as AISES President mid-2025.
Michael Laverdure (Turtle Mountain Chippewa)Board Chair Emeritus; Board 2024–2027Registered Architect, Partner at DSGW, President of First American Design Studio; Sequoyah FellowReturning board leader. Previous board president 2016–2022.
Lillian Sparks Robinson (Rosebud Sioux)Board Member 2025–2028Former Obama appointee (Commissioner, Administration for Native Americans); CEO/Founder Wopila ConsultingFederal government experience; policy and advocacy lens.
Fawn Sanchez (Shoshone-Bannock)Board Member 2025–2028Former Amazon Indigenous Peoples ERG lead (6 years); Project Manager at Tribal Tech LLC; Indigi-Genius BoardMost aligned with Oahe's domain. Tech industry + tribal tech + AI/ML for Native youth.
Taylor KnifeChiefExhibitor RelationsHandles 300+ exhibitors at national conferenceOperational contact for conference engagement.

Pain Points

#Pain PointEvidenceOahe Opportunity
1Internal control weaknessMaterial weakness flagged in FY2024 & FY2025 auditsData infrastructure for grant tracking, compliance reporting, outcomes measurement
2Infrastructure fragmentation20 subdomains, 6 hosting providers, 69 employeesConsolidation roadmap, security hardening
3Grant dependency93.5% of $19M revenue from contributions/grantsImpact measurement data to justify continued funding
4DEI political exposureAdjacent programs shut down (NAU CARE); core mission frameable as "DEI"Data to reframe narrative from "diversity" to "workforce pipeline outcomes"
5BBB accountability gapsFails 4/20 Wise Giving Alliance standardsGovernance data and reporting to close gaps
6Conference data operations3,500+ attendees, 300+ exhibitors, $50K sponsorship tiersEvent data pipeline (likely running on spreadsheets and Aventri exports)

Competitive Landscape

Federal Positioning

AISES holds a sole-source IHS cooperative agreement — no competition for that specific award. NSF grants are competitive but AISES has a strong multi-year track record.

Peer Organizations

OrganizationOverlapDifferentiation
SACNASIndigenous STEM pipelinePrimarily Chicano/Hispanic constituency
NIEAIndigenous educationBroader education focus, less STEM-specific
AIHECIndigenous higher educationTribal colleges focus
First Nations Development InstituteIndigenous capacity buildingEconomic development (Sarah EchoHawk's former employer)

Technology Vendors Currently In Use

VendorFunction
Automattic (WordPress.com)Main website hosting
AventriEvent management
Classy.orgDonation platform
Salesforce (Pardot)Marketing automation
Microsoft 365Email/productivity
InformzEmail marketing (possibly legacy)
No data/analytics vendor visible. This is the whitespace.

Timing Opportunities

#WindowTimingNotes
1Post-audit windowNOWConsecutive years of material weakness findings. Leadership seeking solutions for financial controls and compliance.
2Regional eventJuly 9–11, 2026Ft. Lewis College, Durango, CO. Smaller, more accessible entry point.
3National conferenceOctober 15–17, 2026Oregon Convention Center, Portland, OR. 3,500+ attendees, 300+ exhibitors. Sponsorship from $5K–$50K.
4Board refresh2025Three new board members including Fawn Sanchez (tribal tech, AI/ML). Fresh strategic priorities.
5Possible CEO transitionUncertainSarah EchoHawk consulting LLC signal. New CEO = new vendor relationships.
6DEI funding pressureOngoingFederal funding under political pressure. AISES needs hard outcome data to justify investment.
7Firekeepers Fund endowmentActiveEndowment campaigns require donor engagement data and sophisticated impact reporting.

AISES is a $19M national nonprofit with strong federal relationships, a 48-year track record, and a clear need for data infrastructure. Their audit flagged internal control weaknesses, their technology stack is fragmented across 6 providers, and 93.5% of their revenue depends on demonstrating impact to grantors.

The pitch is data infrastructure for impact measurement and grant compliance — helping AISES tell the story of its $8.7M in scholarships and 4,924 students with the data rigor that federal grantors demand, especially in a political environment hostile to "DEI" framing.

Entry point: National conference (Portland, October 2026) or direct approach to Fawn Sanchez (board member with tribal tech and AI/ML background).

Lead with the audit report to establish credibility, then offer the data infrastructure conversation.