BySolopreneurs is set to launch a charity program that sends a fixed share of net revenue from sponsorships and affiliate income to causes people care about. The rollout window sits between Q1 and Q2 of next year. A soft beta will start with a short list of charities, then grow based on community input.
Transparency sits at the core. Each quarter, BySolopreneurs will publish live ledgers with clear totals, destinations, and the exact percentage each charity receives. The goal is trust and accountability, not empty promises.
Readers get a real say. They’ll help pick the charities and weigh in on how funds get split, so the program reflects shared values instead of top-down choices. The selection standard stays tight: evidence of impact, low overhead, independent evaluations, and audited reports get priority.
How donations work with BySolopreneurs from revenue to impact
A share of revenue from affiliate commissions, sponsorships, and course or product sales goes straight to charitable donations. Readers don’t pay extra. No markups, fees, or add-ons get passed along. The business funds the giving so user costs stay the same.
After actions such as joining a sponsor’s newsletter or buying educational content, users get to vote on which charity receives funds. Those votes steer allocations each quarter. The community’s preferences shape how the pool gets divided.
Smaller charities aren’t shut out when interest dips. If a cause lands below about 5% of total votes, it still gets a minimum grant, for example $500. This floor keeps support steady when attention moves elsewhere.
Every quarter or so, the site publishes impact updates. These show total revenue and the exact amount paid to each charity. Short summaries explain what the donations achieved, with links to full charity reports for deeper detail.
Top charities our community can support
The shortlist brings together charities that match the community’s real concerns and interests. The mix spans urgent global health work, poverty relief that helps families get back on their feet, and education groups that open doors for future generations.
Mental health is a core priority in this list, with organizations focused on accessible support and prevention. Climate action groups stand out as well, reflecting the need for practical, measurable environmental work. Entrepreneurship support ties it together, offering skills, tools, and capital so people can build steady incomes.
The lineup blends direct aid groups that deliver help fast and meta-charities that fund research, drive policy, or re-grant to smaller, high-potential projects. This balances short-term relief with long-term change people can see.
Every charity meets clear standards. They publish detailed budgets showing program spending versus admin. They hold strong independent ratings that signal trust. They share trackable results so impact isn’t guesswork.
Readers can nominate other charities through a quick form on the site, and new submissions go through the same review before they’re added.
About each highlighted charity and why it made the list
Against Malaria Foundation (AMF) saves lives with a simple tool: long‑lasting insecticidal nets that block malaria-carrying mosquitoes. Each net costs about $5 to $7 and goes where risk is highest. Randomized trials show strong drops in child deaths. AMF shares distribution maps, post-delivery surveys, and follow-up results so donors see how funds translate into protection.
GiveDirectly sends money straight to people living in extreme poverty, no conditions attached. Multiple randomized controlled trials show gains in assets, food security, and earnings that last. Fees are easy to see, and recipients get regular follow-ups. Donors get clear reporting that ties dollars to real outcomes.
Direct Relief moves critical medical supplies to clinics in more than 80 countries. Their logistics systems track inventory in real time, which keeps shipments fast and accurate during emergencies and ongoing shortages. Clinics receive what they request, so care reaches patients when timing matters.
Team Rubicon fields veteran-led volunteer teams for disaster response worldwide. Crews mobilize fast and work with tight coordination. Mission dashboards list operations, hours served, and services delivered, giving supporters a concrete view of results on the ground.
Room to Read advances literacy and girls’ education through deep partnerships with local governments. Programs track reading fluency and completion rates over time. Students gain core skills, and schools get support that lasts beyond a single school year.
The Trevor Project provides 24/7 crisis support for LGBTQ+ youth across text, phone, and chat. Annual mental health surveys and contact data reveal the scope of needs and where gaps remain. Services meet young people in the moments when safety and connection matter most.
GiveWell All Grants Fund channels donations to high-impact work like malaria prevention and deworming based on ongoing evidence reviews. Funding shifts as new data comes in, so resources move to the options with the strongest cost-effectiveness at that time.
Cool Earth protects rainforests by backing indigenous and local leadership. Projects report hectares preserved alongside household income gains. Communities maintain control, forests stay standing, and climate and livelihoods both benefit.
Kiva connects lenders with entrepreneurs who lack access to formal credit. Loans support small businesses, and repayment data stays public, which keeps the link between lender support and borrower progress clear. Financial inclusion grows where conventional lending falls short.
Women Who Code expands pathways into tech through mentorship and career programs aligned with employer needs. Public placement outcomes show how training translates into jobs. Participants gain skills and networks that help them move into in-demand roles.
