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by worldadventurer
3859 days ago
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A non-profit doesn't necessarily mean that they give stuff away for free. A non-profit can (and there are many that do, for example, ours - https://www.engageSPARK.com ) sell stuff to customers to generate revenue and have profits. The difference is that instead of shareholders extracting the profits, all profits are used to have more impact. Hospitals, universities, credit unions, financial companies (e.g,. Vanguard), and insurance companies (e.g,. Blue Cross and Blue Shield) are often revenue-generating non-profits or mutual companies (where all profits are shared by the customers). As @oneJob points out in another comment here - All that "non-profit" means is, from Wikipedia, : "A non-profit organization is an organization that uses its surplus revenues to further achieve its purpose or mission, rather than distributing its surplus income to the organization's shareholders (or equivalents) as profit or dividends." |
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It's okay if a company doesn't need capital, but even tech firms take $50-100M a year to grow.
Again, if your sector consists of nonprofits, you may do fine. But IT and finance are for profit industries, with rare exceptions.