A few weeks ago, BeeReady officially received its 501(c)(3) determination from the IRS.
On paper, that means we're now a federally recognized nonprofit organization. It's an important milestone that opens the door to grants, tax-deductible donations, and a stronger foundation for the work ahead.
For me, though, it represents something more personal.
I've spent most of my career building technology companies. Startups. Products. Engineering teams. Consulting businesses. Revenue models. Those are familiar problems.
A nonprofit requires an entirely different way of thinking.
Before BeeReady, my experience with nonprofits was mostly from the perspective of serving on a board. I understood governance at a high level, but I'd never helped create an organization from the ground up. I assumed many of the lessons from startups would carry over.
Some have.
Many haven't.
The Mission Is the Business
One of the first things that surprised me is that a nonprofit still has to solve nearly every operational problem a startup does.
You still need strategy.
You still need marketing.
You still need accounting.
You still need technology.
You still need operations.
You still need security, policies, documentation, websites, fundraising, volunteer management, project management, and countless hours of coordination.
The difference is that every decision starts with the mission.
Revenue isn't the goal. It's simply one of the tools that allows the mission to continue.
That subtle shift changes almost every conversation.
Governance Matters More Than I Appreciated
Coming from startups, my instinct has always been to move quickly.
Build something.
Test it.
Improve it.
Repeat.
Building BeeReady has taught me that some things deserve to be intentionally slower.
Board governance.
Conflict-of-interest policies.
Financial controls.
Volunteer protections.
Youth safety procedures.
Record retention.
These aren't the glamorous parts of building an organization, but they're the foundation that earns trust from volunteers, donors, parents, and the communities you hope to serve.
I've spent far more time reading IRS guidance, nonprofit regulations, and governance best practices than I ever expected.
That's not something I imagined I'd be doing this year.
Building Is Still Building
The encouraging part is that many of the skills I've developed over the years still apply.
Systems thinking applies.
Automation applies.
AI absolutely applies.
Process design applies.
Documentation applies.
Good software makes organizations better, regardless of whether they're generating profits or serving a public mission.
I've probably written as many internal operating documents for BeeReady as I have for startups.
The difference is that instead of improving customer acquisition funnels, we're figuring out how to make volunteer onboarding smoother, simplify AED management, and make it easier for communities to become prepared for cardiac emergencies.
It's still systems engineering.
The outcome is simply measured differently.
Always Be Willing to Become a Beginner Again
One of the best parts of this experience has been realizing how much I still have to learn.
After years of building companies, it's easy to assume you've developed a playbook that works everywhere.
You haven't.
Every new challenge exposes assumptions you didn't know you were making.
That's uncomfortable, but it's also one of the fastest ways to grow.
BeeReady has given me the opportunity to become a student again, and I've enjoyed that more than I expected.
Onward
Receiving our 501(c)(3) status isn't the finish line.
It's the starting line.
There's still fundraising to do, volunteers to recruit, partnerships to build, and technology to create.
Thankfully, I get to tackle those challenges alongside my wife, Dr. Andi Senter, our co-founder Dr. Elda Fisher, an incredible board, and a growing group of volunteers who all believe in the same mission.
I'm looking forward to sharing what I learn as we continue building BeeReady.
If nothing else, it's proving that even after decades of building businesses, there's always an entirely new discipline waiting to humble you.
Top comments (0)