Nonprofit leaders are navigating enormous pressure right now—from funding uncertainty to political headwinds. That’s why the latest Chronicle of Philanthropy article, “Stronger Together: the Benefits of Joining Nonprofit Networks,” resonated so strongly with me. It underscores what so many of us see every day:
Networks and peer connections aren’t a “nice to have”—they’re essential infrastructure for resilience, innovation, and staying in the work.
The Chronicle article highlights exactly what we’ve learned through five years of supporting the Purpose Built Network Community of Practice:
- Leaders need a place where they don’t feel alone
- Peer expertise accelerates learning far faster than going it alone
- Cross-organizational relationships spark creativity and shared solutions
- Networks become lifelines during crises—financial, political, or personal
- Diverse perspectives help leaders see beyond their own “trenches” (as one nonprofit leader put it in the article)
Our new piece, “Building Community, Driving Change: What We’ve Learned in 5 Years of the Purpose Built Community of Practice,” shows how this plays out in practice. Purpose Built’s Community of Practice has become:
- A movement home for leaders
- A space for shared problem-solving
- A catalyst for spreading innovations from one neighborhood to another
- A structure that sustains people through hard moments, preventing burnout and turnover
Taken together, these two articles point to the same conclusion:
💡 If we want stronger organizations and stronger outcomes, we need stronger connections between the people doing the work.
Communities of Practice, peer networks, and learning communities aren’t peripheral—they’re one of the most strategic investments funders and nonprofits can make.
If you’re curious about how Purpose Built built a thriving, multi-year network—or if you’re thinking about creating one in your field—I’d love to talk.
