One of the first questions people ask us is, “Why are you a 501(c)(3) nonprofit? You’re a tech company.”
The answer is simple: our legal structure is a direct reflection of our values. We chose to be a nonprofit because it legally binds us to put our mission before profit margins. It’s a promise to our community that we will always be driven by service, not by sales.
The Problem with the For-Profit Model in Community Tech
The traditional for-profit model for IT services is fundamentally misaligned with the needs of small nonprofits. It incentivizes upselling, long-term contracts, and one-size-fits-all solutions because that’s what maximizes profit. It leads to situations where a food bank is quoted $150,000 for a system they don’t need, because that’s the “enterprise package” the salesperson is pushed to sell.
As a 501(c)(3), our success isn’t measured by revenue. It’s measured by our impact:
- How many nonprofits did we help save money that could be redirected to their programs?
- How many skilled IT professionals found meaningful work supporting their neighbors?
- How many communities did we help protect from fraud through secure e-waste recycling?
Being a nonprofit isn’t just a tax status; it’s our permanent commitment to a different way of doing business. It ensures we will never have to choose between helping a community and satisfying a shareholder.
Maxsys International
Our structure allows us to focus on building trust, fostering local economies, and providing technology solutions that are right-sized, affordable, and genuinely helpful. It’s a model built on the simple, powerful idea that technology should serve people, not the other way around.
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