A New Model for Nonprofit Alliances: The Impact Collaborative
Posted by Stanford Social Innovation Review on November 11, 2025
A new nonprofit alliance model shows how previously siloed organizations can collaborate to scale services while retaining autonomy.
Nonprofits face growing pressure to do more with less: Rising demand, shrinking funding, and increasingly complex social issues often exceed the capacity—and mission—of any single organization. At the same time, because today’s most urgent challenges are interconnected and systemic, effectively addressing hunger, homelessness, education, or health equity requires a level of strategic coordination that few organizations can achieve on their own.
Most nonprofits operate in isolation from each other, for reasons that are easy to understand. Structural incentives such as funding models, branding, and board expectations often reinforce competition over collaboration. As a result, even when their missions overlap, organizations frequently compete for limited funding, volunteers, and visibility, duplicating services in some areas and while leaving needs unmet in others.
Five organizations in Contra Costa County, California, have been developing a new model to align their efforts focused on food insecurity without sacrificing their autonomy as distinct organizations.
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