Newsletter: Introducing the Partnership Proof System š ; Partnership Sales Without the Cringe š¬ ; Corporate Purpose at a Crossroads š£ļø
In my last newsletter, I shared āThe Selfish Giving Manifestoā. It's my attempt to share two decades of writing, experimentation, case studies, and conversations into a short list of ideasā13 thesesāthat actually endure.
Not tactics. Not trends. Just the truths I keep seeing repeat.
But my Manifesto faces the same problem as most: it doesnāt fully address the day-to-day realities nonprofits face.
I may have left you thinking, āOkayā¦now what?ā (Sorry about that.)
That question is exactly what Iāve been thinking about.
Because hereās the uncomfortable truth: most nonprofits are told to build partnerships without a clear, realistic path to doing so. Theyāre given advice that assumes capacity they donāt have, audiences they havenāt built, and proof they canāt yet show.
Meanwhile, the nonprofits that do succeed with partnerships tend to follow a patternāoften without realizing it. They build credibility first. They show results. They document what worked. And they use that proof to attract the next opportunity.
In other words, partnerships donāt create momentum. They follow it.
That realization pushed me to begin developing a practical response to this gapāone grounded in how partnerships actually form, not how we wish they did.
Whatās emerging for me isnāt a program, a framework, or a funnel.
Itās a systemādesigned to help nonprofits move from readiness, to proof, to momentum without overreach or burnout.
At its core, this system recognizes a few simple truths:
Not every nonprofit is ready for partnerships today
Proof beats pitching every time
Case studies arenāt just storiesātheyāre strategic assets
Sustainable partnerships are built step by step, not all at once
In the coming weeks, Iāll start sharing more about this system and how it works in practice. Iām calling it The Partnership Proof System, and it has three parts.
It unfolds in stagesāeach one building on the lastāso nonprofits can meet partnerships where they are, not where someone else thinks they should be.
For now, consider this an invitation to think differently.
If my Manifesto sharpened your thinkingāeven a littleāitās doing its job.
If it raised questions about where partnerships actually fit in your organization, thatās a good sign.
More next time on stage one: the Partnership Proof Builder.
āļø Partnership Notes
A partnership insight that matters.
āPartnership work is salesāeven if you donāt like the wordā.
š” The author of this article makes a simple but uncomfortable point: avoiding āsalesā doesnāt make persuasion disappearāit just makes it less intentional. That lands squarely in the nonprofit partnership world, where many professionals see themselves as relationship builders, educators, or advocates, but not sellers. The reality is that partnership success depends on clearly articulating value, asking directly, and helping the other side say yes without confusion or guilt. The insight that matters: reframing sales as serviceāhelping the right partner make a good decisionāoften unlocks more honest, effective partnerships than hiding behind softer language.
š¤ Marketing Your Cause
One move nonprofits should steal.
āBoring visibility beats clever campaigns when the stakes are highā.
š” This article explains why personal-injury lawyers pour money into billboards: when people need them, itās urgent, emotional, and not the moment for clever comparison shoppingāfamiliarity wins. That same dynamic plays out at checkout when shoppers are asked to donate; they say yes to causes they already recognize and trust, not ones theyāre meeting for the first time. Superstar charities like St. Jude win because they're ubiquitousāpeople donāt need to think twice. The takeaway for you is that consistent, almost boring visibility builds mental availability, turning moments of action into real results. Again, when it comes to marketing, a workhorse beats a show horse every time.
š Cool Jobs in Cause
Find your next adventure.
1. Director, Strategic Partnerships, āPratham USAā, Remote in California ($80k-$100k)
2. Corporate Giving and Volunteer Partnerships Officer, āEmerald Necklace Conservancyā, Boston ($70k-$90k)
3. Manager, Corporate Philanthropy, āMusic Willā, Remote ($77k-$82k)
š§ š Brain Food
Whatās feeding my thinking.
āCorporate purpose is at a fork in the roadāand 2026 forces a choiceā.
š” This Fast Company piece from Carol Cone argues that corporate purpose is entering a make-or-break moment. Companies can either double down on purpose as a core operating principleāor quietly reframe it as optional messaging once pressures mount. What stuck with me is the idea that purpose canāt survive as vibes or slogans; it has to be embedded in decisions, incentives, and tradeoffs when things get uncomfortable. For nonprofits and partnership teams, itās a useful reminder: the strongest corporate partners wonāt be the ones talking loudest about purposeābut the ones willing to pay for it, protect it, and act on it when it actually costs something.