There is an undeniable truth in the social impact space — one that is both inspiring and deeply uncomfortable: Women are the backbone of social impact work… yet men still dominate the power and funding behind it.
This is not an opinion.
It is a pattern.
A reality we must confront if we truly care about equity, effectiveness, and the future of impact.
Walk into any community program.
Attend a grassroots initiative.
Join a development workshop.
You will see women.
Women:
From rural communities to global development spaces, women are often:
The first to show up and the last to leave.
Why?
Because women are naturally wired — socially, culturally, and emotionally — to:
They don’t just see problems.
They feel them.
And that emotional proximity drives action.
Now shift your focus.
Look at:
You will notice something else:
A disproportionate number of men.
This is the paradox.
Women are doing the work.
Men are controlling the resources.
Let’s move beyond surface-level explanations.
Women are often raised to:
Men, on the other hand, are often raised to:
So while women step into impact roles, men position themselves in power roles.
Many women in the social impact space are:
But:
Meanwhile, many men:
In many rooms, confidence is rewarded more than competence.
Funding flows through:
Men have historically had greater access to:
And access creates advantage.
Women tend to focus on:
Men are more likely to focus on:
Both are important.
But here’s the truth:
Funding follows scale, structure, and strategy — not just passion.
There is a subtle but harmful belief that:
“Women are better at caring, men are better at leading.”
This is false.
Women are not just:
Women are:
And it is time that the social impact ecosystem reflects that reality.
While systemic barriers exist — and they are real — there is also a responsibility women must embrace:
You cannot only be present in the work. You must also be present in the power.
It is not enough to:
You must also:
If we want to close this gap, women in the social impact space must evolve in three critical ways:
Stop just being involved.
Start being strategic about where you sit and how you are seen.
Visibility is not pride. It is positioning.
Impact is powerful.
But structured impact attracts funding.
Women must:
Because:
Passion moves people. Structure moves money.
Too many women are:
It’s time to shift to:
Ownership changes everything.
Your work is powerful — but if no one sees it, it limits your opportunities.
Women must:
Not for attention.
But for:
This is not just a women’s issue.
It is a systems issue.
Funders must ask:
Because:
The most effective solutions often come from those closest to the problem — and those are often women.
The future cannot look like the past.
We cannot continue in a system where:
The future must be one where:
Women do not need permission to lead.
They need:
Because the truth is:
The social impact space does not just need more women doing the work.
It needs more women controlling the future of the work.
If you are a woman in the social impact space:
This is your moment.
Because the world does not just need your compassion.
It needs your power.
If you are serious about building a sustainable and globally competitive social impact organization, I invite you to read my book:
The Social Impact Playbook: Winning Strategies for Funding, Global Opportunities, Growth, and Sustainability.
https://selar.com/TheSocialImpactPlaybook
This book was written for changemakers, nonprofit founders, and social entrepreneurs who want to move beyond good intentions and build organizations that thrive.
Inside, you will learn:
Because the future of social impact will belong to leaders who combine vision with strategy.
And strategy begins with clarity of impact.
So today, pause and ask yourself one powerful question:
What tangible changes will exist because of your work this year?
Your answer could redefine the future of your organization.
The Paradox of Power: Why Women Drive Social Impact — But Men Still Control the Funding was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


