The Calm You're Waiting For Isn’t Coming episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 17, 2026 · 13 MIN

The Calm You're Waiting For Isn’t Coming

from Nonprofit Mastermind Podcast · host Brooke Richie-Babbage

In this episode, I talk about a pattern I see constantly among nonprofit leaders — and one I’ve caught myself falling into too. It sounds like: “After the gala.” “Once this transition is over.” “When things settle down.” The assumption behind those phrases is that calm will arrive first, and then we’ll finally have the space to build better systems.But in reality, that calm rarely shows up on its own.I share why this waiting logic is so common, why it actually makes sense in chaotic environments, and why it ultimately keeps organizations stuck in reactive mode. The real issue isn’t a lack of effort or leadership capacity — it’s what I call a design deficit, the gap between the size of your mission and the infrastructure supporting it.We’ll talk about how systems create stability, why waiting makes the problem harder, and three practical shifts that can help you start building even when things feel messy.In This Episode, You’ll LearnWhy many nonprofit leaders unconsciously wait for “calm” before improving systemsWhat a design deficit is and how it quietly drains your organization’s capacityThree practical ways to begin building systems even in the middle of chaos3 Key TakeawaysCalm doesn’t come before systems — systems are what create calm.Chaos compounds when organizations grow without infrastructure to support them.Small, imperfect systems built now are far more valuable than perfect systems that never get started.Three Shifts to Start Building Systems (Even in the Mess)1. Stop looking for the right moment — find the smallest useful one. You don’t need a perfectly clear season to start improving your organization’s infrastructure. Instead, look for a small entry point. Identify one recurring decision that always ends up on your desk, or one process your team constantly recreates from scratch. That’s often the clearest signal of where a simple system could reduce friction.2. Treat imperfect systems as real systems. Many leaders delay building systems because they imagine they need something polished or comprehensive. In reality, a rough meeting template, a basic checklist, or a quick process document can dramatically reduce cognitive load. The key is getting knowledge out of your head and into something your team can actually use.3. Reframe planning as real work. In the nonprofit sector, busyness often gets mistaken for productivity. But stepping back to design structure, clarify roles, or document a process isn’t a distraction from the work — it multiplies the impact of everything else your team does.Want to work together? Apply for the Next Level Nonprofit Mastermind, a high-touch coaching and training accelerator for established organizations with $1M+ budgets that are ready to design for impact sustained at scale.  Budget under $1M? Join Elevate and get proven step-by-step playbooks + coaching support to build each of the core elements of your nonprofit's operating system - strategic clarity, a fundraising engine, a high-performance team, and an active and engaged board!   Connect with me!LinkedInInstagramYouTube

In this episode, I talk about a pattern I see constantly among nonprofit leaders — and one I’ve caught myself falling into too. It sounds like: “After the gala.” “Once this transition is over.” “When things settle down.” The assumption behind those phrases is that calm will arrive first, and then we’ll finally have the space to build better systems. But in reality, that calm rarely shows up on its own. I share why this waiting logic is so common, why it actually makes sense in chaotic environ...

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This episode is 13 minutes long.

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This episode was published on March 17, 2026.

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In this episode, I talk about a pattern I see constantly among nonprofit leaders — and one I’ve caught myself falling into too. It sounds like: “After the gala.” “Once this transition is over.” “When things settle down.” The assumption behind those...

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