In this episode, Host Taylor Baker sits down with Joe Genovese, President of Sleep in Heavenly Peace, to discuss how a volunteer-powered nonprofit has scaled a simple act of service building and delivering beds to meet an often-hidden need in local communities. Together, they explore what it takes to grow a mission-driven organization through clarity, community engagement, and consistent storytelling.
What You’ll Learn
- Why a clear, repeatable mission (“no kid sleeps on the floor in our town”) helps volunteers and donors instantly understand how to get involved
- How starting small and staying consistent can compound into large-scale impact over time
- The importance of fundraising fundamentals when your service model has real per-unit costs (materials, mattress, and complete bedding)
- Why word-of-mouth is still a powerful growth engine when you give supporters an easy message to share
- How social media works best when it amplifies real stories and real outcomes not just announcements
- Ways to build a strong volunteer culture by welcoming diverse supporters (community groups, retirees, families, faith communities, and more)
- How hub-and-spoke operations (central building with distributed delivery) can support growth while maintaining quality and consistency
- Why integrating volunteerism into everyday life like “paying yourself first” creates long-term commitment and stronger relationships
Joe’s story highlights how meaningful growth comes from combining operational discipline with genuine human connection. By keeping the mission simple, inviting the community into hands-on service, and consistently communicating the “why,” Sleep in Heavenly Peace turns generosity into a scalable system that restores dignity to children and families one bed at a time.
To learn more about Joe Genovese and their work, visit shpbeds.org.
