Fundraising expert Lara Sepanski Pimentel, founder of OSA Philanthropy and former Peace Corps volunteer, joins me to unpack what makes a nonprofit—and any mission-driven venture—truly resilient. Drawing on field lessons from community-development work in rural Central America and a decade inside U.S. nonprofits, Lara explains why “capacity” — the people, processes, and systems behind the programs — must come before the next big grant push.
In this conversation you’ll learn:
- Peace Corps principles in practice – how asset-based thinking, local ownership, and radical resourcefulness translate into stronger donor relationships and staff culture.
- The “capacity first, cash second” framework – diagnostic steps to spot operational gaps before chasing new money.
- Fast vs. slow money – a pragmatic playbook for raising six figures quickly through warm individual donors while laying groundwork for longer-cycle institutional funding.
- Reframing the ask – shifting from “begging for help” to “offering investment” so donors see themselves as partners, not patrons.
- Running a location-independent consultancy – Lara’s approach to managing global contractors, Zoom-first client work, and family life across continents.
- Nonprofit earthquake preparedness – why diversified revenue and data-driven dashboards are the new insurance policy in a volatile funding landscape.