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GrantWatch Launches 12-Stage Grant Pipeline to Help Organizations Take Control of Their Funding Future

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New workflow system brings clarity, momentum, and structure to every stage of the grant process

BOYNTON BEACH, Fla., June 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Every year, organizations miss out on funding not because they lack strong ideas or meaningful programs, but because the grant process becomes overwhelming. Deadlines stack up. Opportunities get lost. Teams struggle to stay aligned.

GrantWatch is changing that.

Today, GrantWatch announced the launch of its Grant Pipeline, a structured workflow system designed to help organizations manage every phase of the grant lifecycle from discovery through post-award reporting.

Instead of managing grants across spreadsheets, emails, and disconnected tools, organizations can now bring everything into one place with a clear path forward at every step.

Bringing Order to a Complex Process

Grant seeking is not just about finding opportunities. It is about managing them effectively over time.

A grant pipeline is a structured system used to organize, track, and manage grant opportunities from initial discovery through submission, award management, and reporting.

The GrantWatch Pipeline transforms what is often a stressful and fragmented experience into a clear, guided process. It helps organizations understand where each opportunity stands and what needs to happen next.

From Effort to Results

As organizations head into the busy summer funding season, competition for grants continues to increase across nonprofits, schools, healthcare organizations, municipalities, research institutions, and small businesses. Effort alone is no longer enough. Organizations need structure and consistency.

“Too many organizations lose opportunities simply because the process becomes overwhelming,” said Libby Hikind, Founder and CEO of GrantWatch.

“Finding a grant is just the first step. What truly matters is having a system that helps you follow through. The Pipeline gives organizations clarity and control so they can turn effort into real results.”

A Complete System from Discovery to Impact

The Grant Pipeline builds on the GrantWatch Full Grant Lifecycle Platform, creating a seamless connection between finding funding and securing it.

The GrantWatch Dashboard helps users discover grants, research funders, and monitor activity

The Grant Pipeline helps users take action by organizing work, managing deadlines, and moving opportunities forward

Together, they provide a complete system that supports the entire journey from idea to funding to measurable impact.

A 12-Stage Workflow That Brings Clarity to Every Step

Grant work can feel overwhelming because many things happen at once. Research, writing, deadlines, collaboration, and reporting all compete for attention. Without structure, it becomes difficult to know what matters most.

The GrantWatch Pipeline simplifies the process by breaking it into 12 clear, actionable stages.

Each stage helps teams focus on one step at a time while keeping the full picture in view.

The 12 stages include:

Interest Identify and save promising grant opportunities that align with your mission.
Eligibility Confirm whether your organization qualifies before investing time.
Calendar Track deadlines and stay ahead of submission dates.
Schedule Writing Plan responsibilities, timelines, and next steps.
Write Develop proposals and gather supporting materials.
Review Collaborate, refine, and strengthen your application.
Final Draft Prepare complete and polished submissions.
Submitted Track what has been submitted and what is pending.
Denied Learn from outcomes and improve future applications.
Awarded Record funding wins and prepare for next steps.
Implementation Execute funded programs and manage deliverables.
Post Award Maintain reporting, compliance, and long-term funder relationships.

Instead of wondering where things stand, teams can immediately see progress and take the next step with confidence. This clarity turns a complex process into something manageable and repeatable.

Built for Teams Working Together

Grant success is a team effort. Leadership, development staff, finance teams, consultants, and program managers all contribute to the process.

The Pipeline allows MemberPlus users to bring everyone into one shared workspace.

Teams can:

Collaborate on proposals

Share notes and documents

Review and improve applications

Track progress across multiple grants

Maintain clear communication

There is no additional cost for collaboration seats, making it easy for organizations to include the entire team without financial barriers.

Powered by Human-Verified Data

Strong decisions require reliable information.

The GrantWatch platform powers the Pipeline with verified data, including:

11,663 plus active grants on the website today
1,354 New Grants Added in the Last 7 Days
1,000 plus new grants added weekly
62,000 plus monitored opportunities
Verified funder profiles and IRS 990 data
Recipient insights and funding history

Organizations can deepen their research using tools like GrantWatch.com to better understand funders and improve decision-making.

This combination of trusted data and structured workflow helps organizations focus on the opportunities that matter most.

Designed for Real-World Workflows

Consider a nonprofit managing several grant applications at once.

Without structure, deadlines slip, responsibilities blur, and momentum is lost. With the Pipeline, everything becomes visible and organized.

Teams can assign tasks, track timelines, collaborate in real time, and follow through after submission. The process becomes more efficient, less stressful, and more effective.

Teams can also stay on schedule by organizing deadlines using My Grant Calendar and streamline proposal development with integrated tools.

Part of a Broader Grant Management Ecosystem

The Grant Pipeline integrates with other GrantWatch tools, including:

GrantWatch Dashboard

My Grant Calendar

Grant Alerts

Foundation Search

Awarded Grant Search

AI Grant Writing Tool

AI Grant Finder

GrantWatch Intelligence

Together, these tools support every stage of the grant journey from discovery to reporting.

Availability

The GrantWatch Grant Pipeline is available now.

Organizations ready to bring structure and clarity to their grant efforts can get started by visiting:
👉 The GrantWatch Grant Pipeline

About GrantWatch

Trusted since 2010, GrantWatch helps organizations discover, evaluate, and secure funding opportunities with confidence.

With access to 11,661+ active grants, 374,397 funder profiles, 2.23 million recipient profiles, and 4.69 million IRS 990 records, GrantWatch helps nonprofits, businesses, schools, artists, municipalities, tribal nations, faith-based organizations, researchers, and individuals discover funding opportunities, manage grants, and maximize impact.

Media Contact

GrantWatch Media Relations
Media@GrantWatch.com
(561) 249-4129

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SOURCE GrantWatch

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IR announces Iris for Card Payments: AI-powered observability that sees transactions end-to-end

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SYDNEY, June 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Leading global observability software provider Integrated Research (“IR”) today announced Iris for Card Payments, the AI‑powered assistant designed to help payments teams detect issues earlier, understand their impact faster, and act before revenue and customer trust are at risk.

As card payments environments grow in scale and complexity, issues can cascade in minutes. Transaction volumes spike, dependencies multiply, and even highly experienced teams can struggle to correlate schemes, response codes, flows, and performance metrics in real-time. AI-powered observability can unlock faster, deeper insight for payments teams at precisely the moment when clarity matters most.

Via natural language prompts, Iris for Card Payments delivers real-time card payments insights, and is built on IR’s core observability platform Prognosis which monitors over 80 billion transactions each year for some of the world’s largest banks and financial institutions.

Iris: AI that truly understands card payments

Extra pair of Expert Eyes: Iris makes deep card payments expertise instantly accessible, reducing reliance on scarce specialists and building confidence 24/7.Purpose-built with context-aware insights: Iris understands card payments end-to-end, with built-in IR correlation logic to explain why something happened, not just what.Natural-language queries: Clear answers about transaction declines, approvals, volumes and performance – no syntax or dashboard stitching required.

Iris for Card Payments is available from May 2026 in Beta to customers globally as part of the release of Prognosis 13.3. Future releases will extend Iris to High Value Payments and Real‑Time Payments domains.

For more information or to request a demo, visit the website.

About IR
At IR, we power elite business performance. Trusted by the world’s largest organizations for more than 30 years, our market-leading observability solutions are powered by Prognosis – the real-time intelligence platform built for multi-vendor infrastructure, UC&CX and payments environments. To find out more, visit www.ir.com.

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ir-announces-iris-for-card-payments-ai-powered-observability-that-sees-transactions-end-to-end-302804079.html

SOURCE Integrated Research (IR)

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Montana-Dakota Utilities Announces Electric Service Agreement with Applied Digital for Proposed AI Factory

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BISMARCK, N.D., June 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — MDU Resources Group, Inc.’s (NYSE: MDU) subsidiary, Montana-Dakota Utilities Co., has entered into an electric service agreement (ESA) with Applied Digital Corporation (NASDAQ: APLD) to provide power to Polaris Forge 3, an AI Factory near Center, North Dakota.

At full capacity, the campus would require 430 megawatts of electricity. Under the ESA, Applied Digital would be responsible for the costs of purchasing the energy directly from the market or through other power supply arrangements. Applied Digital anticipates initial operations to commence in August 2027.

Polaris Forge 3 will expand Applied Digital’s footprint in North Dakota, where the company is developing purpose-built campuses designed to support high-density artificial intelligence workloads. Applied Digital has previously announced a 15-year lease with a U.S. based high investment-grade hyperscaler for this site.

“Polaris Forge 3 is another example of how Applied Digital is turning power into operational AI capacity through disciplined execution and long-term partnerships,” said Wes Cummins, Chairman and CEO of Applied Digital. “This campus is expected to create approximately 200 full-time jobs, generate meaningful property tax revenue and support long-term growth across Oliver County and the surrounding region. We believe AI infrastructure should create value well beyond the campus, and we’re proud to continue building in North Dakota.”

Montana-Dakota Utilities currently serves Applied Digital at Polaris Forge 1, its AI Factory near Ellendale, North Dakota, where the companies have worked together to integrate significant power demand while maintaining reliable, cost-effective service for customers, crediting $38.4 million back to North Dakota customers over the past three years.

“This proposed project reflects the growing interest in North Dakota as a location for large energy users,” said Nicole Kivisto, president and CEO of MDU Resources. “We are committed to serving these customers in a way that benefits our communities, supports the regional grid and delivers value to our customers.”

Approval of the ESA and other regulatory filings by the North Dakota Public Service Commission is required for the company to provide power under the agreement with Applied Digital.

About MDU Resources Group, Inc.
MDU Resources Group, Inc., a member of the S&P SmallCap 600 index, strives to deliver safe, reliable, cost-effective and environmentally responsible electric utility and natural gas distribution services to more than 1.2 million customers across the Pacific Northwest and Midwest. In addition to its utility operations, the company’s pipeline business operates a more than 3,800-mile natural gas pipeline network and storage system, ensuring reliable energy delivery across the Northern Plains. With a legacy spanning over a century, MDU Resources remains focused on energizing lives for a better tomorrow. For more information about MDU Resources, visit www.mdu.com or contact the investor relations department at investor@mduresources.com.

About Applied Digital Corporation
Applied Digital (Nasdaq: APLD) named Best Data Center in the Americas 2025 by Datacloud — designs, builds, and operates high-performance, sustainably engineered data centers and colocation services for artificial intelligence, cloud, networking, and blockchain workloads. Headquartered in Dallas, TX, and founded in 2021, the company combines hyperscale expertise, proprietary waterless cooling, and rapid deployment capabilities to deliver secure, scalable compute at industry-leading speed and efficiency, while creating economic opportunities in underserved communities through its award-winning Polaris Forge AI Factory model. Learn more at applieddigital.com or follow @APLDdigital on X and LinkedIn.

Investor Contact: Brent Miller, treasurer, 701-530-1730

Media Contacts:

MDU Resources: Byron Pfordte, director of integrated communications, 208-377-6050

Montana-Dakota Utilities: Jamie Tescher, senior public relations representative, 701-204-8274

Applied Digital: JSA (Jaymie Scotto & Associates), jsa_applied@jsa.net, 856-264-7827

 

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/montana-dakota-utilities-announces-electric-service-agreement-with-applied-digital-for-proposed-ai-factory-302806791.html

SOURCE MDU Resources Group, Inc.

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Florida International University researchers reveal how altered images can bypass AI safeguards

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MIAMI, June 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — It may look like a picture of a panda bear to you, but to your business’s AI agent, it can act like a skeleton key, bypassing safety safeguards and potentially causing the model to generate harmful, misleading or policy-violating outputs.

That risk is the focus of new research from Hadi Amini, associate professor at Florida International University’s Knight Foundation School of Computing and Information Sciences. Together with graduate assistant Md Jueal Mia, he is studying how manipulated images can “jailbreak” certain AI systems, pushing them beyond their built-in safeguards.  

“AI models don’t see images the same way humans do,” Amini said. “They see patterns of numbers and pixels. By carefully manipulating those pixels, we can influence how the AI interprets the image and responds.” 

The team’s research demonstrated how small-language AI models – the kind frequently employed by small businesses to execute routine tasks like accounting or customer service – have become particularly susceptible to image-based hacks. As shown in research presented at the 2025 International Conference on Machine Learning and Applications (ICMLA), the team found that by introducing microscopic pixel-level changes called “perturbations” into an image, they could trick these AI systems into generating responses that they would normally block.  

“The manipulated image is like the face of a stranger,” Amini said. “The AI has to learn when a request should be treated with caution before it answers. In order to protect AI systems from attacks, we try to break them ourselves, identify potential vulnerabilities and design defense mechanisms.” 

The researchers then set out to probe the system’s defenses. The more successfully they penetrated the models’ guardrails, the more the systems could be trained to resist future threats. To do this, Amini and his team developed a method called JaiLIP (Jailbreaking with Loss-guided Image Perturbation), which uses an algorithm to determine the optimal degree of pixel-level manipulation.

In tests using BLIP-2, a multimodal AI model used by researchers and developers, Amini and his team found that images modified with JaiLIP significantly increased the likelihood that the system would generate harmful or unsafe responses. In one example, a JaiLIP-altered version of a stoplight tricked the AI model into divulging detailed instructions on how to run the light while avoiding a traffic ticket. Overall, the use of JaiLIP images nearly doubled the number of harmful responses generated by AI models. 

The risk extends beyond users simply prompting AI systems for instructions on illegal activity. As businesses increasingly adopt AI-powered customer service agents, chatbots and automated workflows, vulnerabilities in open-source or lightly protected systems could negatively impact users’ trust or create new avenues for cyberattacks.

“Small businesses and companies can benefit from AI to enhance their efficiency, but they have to be aware of the potential vulnerabilities,” Amini said. “They must make sure they’re deploying sufficient guardrails to maintain the safety and integrity of their AI tools.” 

Amini said there are some basic precautions that everyone should use before integrating AI into their business or workplace, including limiting the sensitive information they provide to AI systems (especially images), restricting who can access those systems and carefully evaluating the security measures built into AI tools before deployment.  

Because safety is paramount, Amini and his team are working to stay one step ahead of potential bad actors in the AI sphere. The more vulnerabilities he and his team can find, the quicker the AI will learn to repair them. The challenge, he said, is ensuring that AI can recognize threats hidden in plain sight — even when humans cannot. 

Photos and videos of Amini’s AI research, including interviews and b-roll, are available for media use via Dropbox

Media Contact:
Brian Zimmerman
305-348-8448
bzimmerm@fiu.edu 
news.fiu.edu
@FIU

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/florida-international-university-researchers-reveal-how-altered-images-can-bypass-ai-safeguards-302806851.html

SOURCE Florida International University

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