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The Funding Era That Built Most Nonprofits Is Over

Nonprofits are entering their own version of a market correction. After years of pandemic-era emergency funding, major donors are pulling back. Endowments are under pressure. Government contracts are tightening. And at the same time, scrutiny around measurable impact has intensified. Large foundations and public agencies are asking harder questions about returns, scalability and long-term sustainability. 

Accelerated by recent funding trends, among them the Gates Foundation’s increased focus on milestone-based grants and the rise of pay-for-success models in public-private partnerships, this is philanthropy’s venture capital moment. 

The shift isn’t subtle. Funders are increasingly structuring grants around milestones, staged capital and quantifiable outcomes, approaches long familiar to early-stage startups. Some are experimenting with pay-for-success models. Others are consolidating grantees, concentrating capital in organizations that can demonstrate data maturity and performance infrastructure. 

For nonprofits built in a different funding era—one driven by narrative persuasion, relationships and incremental program growth—this is a jolt, but it is also an opportunity. 

The measurement reckoning 

 For decades, many nonprofits have operated in what might be called a “proof of effort” environment. Reports focused on activities delivered: meals served, workshops held, individuals reached. Impact was described, often movingly, but rarely engineered with the precision now expected in the private sector. Today, that model is under serious strain.  

Organizations such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Ford Foundation have long invested in evaluation capacity, but what’s different now is the broader normalization of performance discipline across the funding ecosystem. Mid-sized funders are adopting dashboard-style reporting. Public agencies are tying contracts to outcomes. Corporate philanthropy arms are aligning grants with ESG metrics and enterprise KPIs. 

For example, Salesforce’s corporate philanthropy arm now ties its grants to measurable ESG outcomes, while New York City’s Department of Homeless Services has restructured contracts to reward providers who meet specific housing placement targets. And the federal landscape has made this reckoning impossible to defer. The Trump administration’s 2025 funding freezes and dismantling of USAID have sent shockwaves through the nonprofit sector, forcing organizations that relied on federal contracts to confront structural vulnerabilities almost overnight. 

 Meanwhile, advances in analytics have raised the baseline expectation for what “good measurement” looks like. If companies can track customer behavior in real time, why, funders ask, can’t social impact be measured with similar rigor? 

The uncomfortable answer is structural. Most nonprofits weren’t capitalized to build robust data infrastructure. Overhead restrictions, short-term grants and pilot-based funding have left organizations underinvested in technology and talent evaluation.  

The pilot problem 

This tension surfaces most clearly in what many sector leaders quietly call the pilot trap. An organization launches an innovative program with restricted funding. It demonstrates promising early results. But when the initial grant ends, there’s no follow-on capital to build systems, hire experienced operators or invest in data architecture. The initiative stalls. A new pilot begins elsewhere. 

In venture-backed companies, pilots are experiments designed to generate learning quickly and inform scaling decisions. They are not endpoints. Capital is explicitly staged to move from prototype to product-market fit to growth. 

Nonprofit pilots, by contrast, often become perpetual proofs of concept—compelling but fragile. Take, for example, a children’s nonprofit that relied heavily on AmeriCorps funding. When federal grants were slashed, the organization had to cut staff, scale back operations and rethink its model to survive. The lack of follow-on funding exposed the fragility of its infrastructure and forced a dramatic shift in strategy. That organization’s experience is not exceptional. In 2025, AmeriCorps faced significant proposed cuts and operational restructuring, leaving hundreds of organizations that had built programs around its funding in a similar position: forced to make urgent strategic decisions without the infrastructure to support them. The fragility was not unique to any single organization. It was systemic. 

Recent funding pullbacks have exposed this vulnerability at scale. As donors consolidate portfolios, they are asking which initiatives have real pathways to scale. That question lands hardest on organizations whose infrastructure has never been adequately funded. 

Impact as infrastructure 

Perhaps the deeper inflection point is a conceptual one: impact measurement is shifting. In the private sector, companies treat finance, legal and technology as foundational systems. They aren’t add-ons, but rather the machinery that enables execution of the strategy. 

Patagonia’s Footprint Chronicles platform tracks environmental and social impacts across its entire supply chain, embedding analytics directly into supplier data systems to drive production decisions. Stripe, meanwhile, uses financial infrastructure to facilitate and track investments in climate removal through its Stripe Climate program. Social impact measurement is moving in that same direction. 

This shift will create winners and losers. Organizations that treat data as strategic—investing in interoperable systems, defining a small number of meaningful outcome metrics and building internal capacity to analyze performance—will attract capital. They will be positioned for multi-year, milestone-based funding. Those that continue to treat evaluation as a reporting afterthought will find themselves edged out as funders narrow their bets. That dynamic carries a real equity risk that the sector’s most thoughtful funders are beginning to grapple with directly. Smaller, community-based organizations and those serving the most marginalized populations are often the least capitalized for data infrastructure, which means a purely performance-driven funding model can systematically disadvantage the organizations doing the hardest work in the least resourced environments. Acknowledging this tension is not an argument against rigor. It is an argument for funders to pair their performance expectations with the capacity-building investments that make meeting those expectations possible.  

There is a risk that a venture-style approach could create “all or nothing” pressure, where success is only possible if it is at enormous scale. Social outcomes are not quarterly earnings, after all, and communities are not markets. But rejecting rigor is not a viable response. The question moves from whether nonprofits should adopt a startup mindset to which elements to adopt, and on whose terms. 

What a startup mindset really means 

Adopting a startup mindset for nonprofits means aligning mission with measurable impact, and building the operational infrastructure to pursue that mission at progressively larger scale. It starts with outcomes over activities: defining the change your organization exists to create, not just the work it delivers. It means treating data systems and skilled talent as essential investments rather than reportable overhead. It means embracing experimentation, testing ideas with clear goals and refining based on evidence rather than instinct. And when communicating with funders, it means pairing compelling stories with data-backed insights on scalability and impact. 

But the mindset shift cannot be one-sided. The structural problems that have left nonprofits underprepared for this moment—overhead restrictions, short-term grants, pilot-based funding with no pathways to scale—are largely funder-created constraints. The most forward-thinking funders already understand this. They are moving toward multi-year general operating support, capacity-building grants and longer evaluation horizons that give organizations the runway to build what performance-based funding rewards. The startup mindset, applied well, requires movement on both sides of the table. 

This isn’t about trading mission for metrics. It’s about pairing purpose with operational rigor to thrive in a more demanding funding landscape. This is philanthropy’s venture capital moment. The organizations that treat it as such—with rigor, adaptability and strategic clarity—will define what comes next. 

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