That pressure creates a different kind of leadership, one that is anchored in usefulness rather than scale or perception, where the question comes up again and again: Does this help? Does it move the work forward? If not, it falls away.

It is easy to assume that constraint limits what an organisation can do. In practice, it tends to do something else entirely; it forces honesty. You see very quickly what matters and what does not when you are in the trenches, and over time, that sharpens how people think, how they work together, and how decisions are made.

In South Africa, we see this kind of thing in our everyday lived realities. Load shedding hits, and within minutes, there is a plan. Someone has found a gas stove, someone is running an extension lead from the neighbour who invested in solar, someone else has turned a car into a charging station.

Dinner still gets made, and work still gets done. Life carries on. It may not be polished, but it is creative and tailored to each circumstance, and it just works.

That same instinct shows up inside nonprofit teams. You build with what you have, you figure it out, you keep moving. There is very little room for waiting until conditions are perfect, so the work evolves in real time, shaped by what is available and what is needed.

Over time, that creates a kind of creativity that is difficult to replicate in more comfortable environments. When resources are easy, thinking can get loose. You try more, but you question less. You add instead of refine.

Constraint does the opposite. It demands precision.

That precision carries through into how teams operate. Under pressure, leaders tend to communicate more directly, because teams do not have the luxury of guessing.

They need context, they need to understand the trade-offs and they need clarity on what is being asked of them. When that is handled well, trust builds quickly because people understand what they are part of and how their work contributes.

Alignment works differently too. Without large financial incentives, people stay connected to the work because they believe in it. The motivation is tied to outcome, not reward and when that connection is real, it carries momentum in a way that incentives often can't replicate.

For businesses, this raises a more difficult question around what actually holds teams together when resources are not the primary driver, and what sustains alignment when there is no immediate reward attached to the outcome.

The answer is often found in how clearly the work matters.

Nonprofits have long understood that impact is not something separate from the organisation. It is the reason it exists. It is measured in outcomes that are sometimes harder to quantify, but far more grounded. Access. Improvement. Change over time.

In many businesses, impact is still treated as something adjacent. Maybe a campaign, sometimes a report, or even a side effort that works alongside core operations. The intention may be there, but the connection to everyday decision-making is not always clear.

The more meaningful shift happens when impact shows up in the day-to-day decisions, in how people are treated, what gets prioritised, where money is spent and what gets protected when things are tight.

This is where the crossover between nonprofits and business becomes most relevant. Purpose-led organisations are often doing meaningful work with limited resources, yet they are modelling ways of operating that are disciplined, focused and deeply human. They are forced to think carefully about trade-offs, to communicate with clarity and to stay close to the outcomes they exist to create.

For agencies, brands and leaders, the lesson worth paying attention to is that replicating nonprofit structures simply doesn't work. What does work is understanding what those conditions produce and what is possible when work is shaped by constraint instead of comfort.

If there is one principle worth carrying across, it is this: purpose has to live inside the work.

For organisations trying to move in that direction, the first shift is practical. Close the gap between what you say matters and what your business actually rewards, because once those two things align, the work changes.

And so does the kind of organisation you are building.

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*Image courtesy of contributor