Katie O'Donnell

PhD

Katie has always been driven to inform environmental management and improve conservation outcomes. As a decision scientist, Katie draws on her ecological research experience and her facilitation skills to help groups structure their decisions and find collaborative solutions to complex natural resource management problems—especially those characterized by limited data, scientific uncertainty, and difficult trade-offs.

Katie joined the Compass team in 2021. She holds a PhD in Biological Sciences from the University of Missouri (US) and a BS in Biology from Oakland University (Michigan, US). She also earned an Expert Certification in Decision Analysis from the USFWS National Conservation Training Center. She has a strong technical background, particularly in ecological modeling, Bayesian population analyses, and spatial ecology. Katie has also facilitated and designed collaborative processes for multi-stakeholder groups in a wide range of decision contexts, including endangered species conservation, invasive species management, and groundwater withdrawal mitigation.

How did you come to work at Compass?

On the eve of my birthday, I got an email asking if I was still interested in a position with Compass. The rest, as they say, is history.

What is the best thing a client has ever said to you?

“How did you manage to summarize the past 2 days of discussions in a way that actually made sense? I thought we had just been talking in circles!”

Describe why you do what you do.

At a fundamental level, because I believe it’s important. But personally, I love that this work engages every part of my brain – from the quantitative to the creative.

What was your first job?

Driving the golf ball picker at the practice range.

What do you know now that you wish you’d known 10 years ago?

That structured decision making exists.

What truly blows your mind?

The vastness of the universe. (Thanks, Carl Sagan.) It’s hard to grasp that some stars/planets are so far away that we quantify distances based on how many *years* it takes their light to reach us.

Describe what you do in five words or less.

Help differentiate values versus evidence.

What do you do when unplugged from work?

Reading, cooking, photography, movies.

If you were on a trans-atlantic flight, feeling chatty, and could pick anyone — alive or dead, real or fictional — to sit beside who would it be and why?

Emily Dickinson. It’d be fascinating, for one. And two, there are so many unanswered questions about her life I’d love to ask her.