

Questioning Non‑Profit Investment Management in Texas
Rethinking How Texas Nonprofits Invest Many nonprofits review investments each spring and quietly realize something uncomfortable: no one can clearly explain why half the managers or funds are still there. The portfolio exists because it was inherited, not because it was chosen on purpose. Markets have shifted, donors have changed, and new rules keep coming, yet the portfolio still carries old decisions forward. We see this often with community foundations, schools, faith bas
Mar 25


Rethinking Houston Business Owner Wealth Beyond the Balance Sheet
Many Houston business owners look solid on paper. Net worth appears high, the company is growing, and local real estate has done well. But when almost everything is tied to one business and one city, that wealth can be substantial in theory and vulnerable in practice. A single cycle, a major storm, or one critical deal falling through can shift the picture quickly. This matters in the early part of the year, when New Year’s financial intentions have started to fade. Before th
Mar 19


Why Houston Foundations Need Behavioral Investment Rules
When Good Intentions Meet Volatile Markets Nonprofit boards in Houston are built on good intentions. Grants are promised, programs are planned, and everyone around the table wants the portfolio to quietly do its job in the background. Then a choppy quarter hits. Equity markets drop, oil prices swing, and the nice, steady line in the January board book suddenly looks more like a seismograph. This is the worry at the heart of most charitable organizations. Structurally, they ar
Mar 19


Fundraiser Videos That Actually Raise Funds
Why Your Next Dollar May Depend on a Six-Minute Video Fundraising leaders know the math all too well. It can take six months to plan a campaign, coordinate volunteers, secure sponsors, line up speakers, and finalize the program. Then a prospective donor spends six minutes with your main campaign video and quietly decides whether the entire effort feels “worth it.” Increasingly, that six-minute interaction is where gifts are made, reduced, or quietly abandoned. For many orga
Mar 16


