At its core, the Profit 4 Good movement is about a simple, powerful choice: deciding that the purpose of a business should be to make the world a better place, not to enrich private shareholders.
Most Profit 4 Good businesses exist because the people behind them want to leave the world better than they found it. By structurally locking 100% of net profits to charitable purposes, these companies become sustainable, permanent engines for funding progress.
Instead of relying solely on one-off donations, a Profit 4 Good business embeds systemic giving into the global economy. Every day the business operates, it is actively empowering communities, protecting environments, and building a fairer society.
People naturally want to do the right thing. When customers realize that a business isn't pocketing the cash, but is instead directing 100% of its net margins to real-world solutions, a powerful shift happens.
Given the option, people overwhelmingly prefer to buy from a business that aligns with their values rather than one that enriches anonymous investors.
Customers are often entirely willing to participate in this model—even paying a bit more if needed—because they know their purchase serves a deeper purpose. It transforms a standard transaction into a collective act of goodwill.
Because the core motivation is purely philanthropic, something remarkable happens to the business itself. This is known as the Charitable Ownership Advantage (COA) thesis, which makes a testable claim: The exact same business is worth more and generates higher margins under charitable ownership than under private ownership.
Unlike other ethical frameworks (such as Fair Trade or organic sourcing) that alter the operations layer and introduce higher input costs, a Profit 4 Good business operates at the ownership layer. The products, pricing, and operational efficiencies stay competitive.
However, because stakeholders—customers, employees, and suppliers—naturally prefer to support a business that gives back, the company gains a series of subtle, organic advantages:
Ultimately, the COA model demonstrates a beautiful truth: by focusing entirely on making the world a better place, a business naturally becomes more resilient, allowing it to generate even more funding for the charities it supports.
A growing global movement and network of purpose-driven organizations committed to returning 100% of their profits to charitable initiatives and social good. The network is run by Newman's Own Foundation.
Explore the Charitable Ownership Advantage thesis, which explores how structurally locking 100% of net profits to charitable purposes makes a business more resilient, profitable, and culturally impactful.
A community of effective altruists. Through their "Company Pledge," businesses can officially pledge to donate a fixed percentage of their net profits (such as 10% or more) to highly effective organizations doing good in the world.