LLC builds and sells WanderVerse products
Subscriptions, Founding Member campaign, hardware pre-orders, and eventually Reg CF equity — all flow through Eisinger Holdings LLC. This is where commercial revenue lives.
Mission Commitment
WanderVerse isn't a startup that added a nonprofit for optics. The nonprofit came first. The commercial arm exists to fund it — permanently, structurally, and without any way to undo it.
"Wandering With Pride exists to fund LGBTQ+ travel — through scholarships, grants, and safety tools. WanderVerse exists to fund Wandering With Pride. It's one circular system."
How it works
The LLC↔nonprofit relationship is live and operational — not a future roadmap item.
Subscriptions, Founding Member campaign, hardware pre-orders, and eventually Reg CF equity — all flow through Eisinger Holdings LLC. This is where commercial revenue lives.
What the LLC can afford, it donates — tools, devices, platform access — to Wandering With Pride, Inc. Charitable contribution. Already happening. Tax-documented.
Primary: travel scholarships and grants for LGBTQ+ people who can't afford to travel safely — funded by commercial revenue and external grants.
Sub-programs: WanderSafe (destination research), WanderHaven (crisis mesh), Ambassador Program (workforce), WanderThrive™ (career support). All grant-eligible, 501(c)(3)-backed. Not LLC products.
Wandering With Pride, Inc. — 501(c)(3)
WanderSafe gets the attention, but it's one sub-program. Here's the full picture.
Many LGBTQ+ people — especially trans people, people of color, and disabled community members — want to travel but face compounding barriers: cost, safety uncertainty, and lack of affirming resources. WWP's primary program funds travel directly through scholarships and grants, and builds the safety tools that make that travel viable. Commercial revenue from WanderVerse is the engine that makes this sustainable without depending entirely on annual grant cycles.
LGBTQ+ travel safety intelligence. 152 destinations. Deterministic scoring. The tool that answers "is it safe for me to go there?" — and makes the scholarships actionable by giving recipients the information they need to travel safely. MIT licensed.
Off-grid crisis safety mesh. Meshtastic-based, offline-capable. Deployed in DV shelters, rural LGBTQ+ communities, community centers. Works when cell networks are down, compromised, or monitored.
Workforce development for LGBTQ+ people hired from the communities WanderVerse serves. W-2 employment through WWP. WIOA + SSA Employment Network funding (~$32K/hire). PSLF-eligible roles for workers carrying student debt.
Workplace tools and career support for LGBTQ+ and disabled workers. Accommodation navigation, discrimination documentation, career development. Designed for people mainstream career tools were not built for.
Why this structure
This isn't the obvious way to build a tech company. Here's the reasoning.
Mozilla RISE25, Google.org, USAID, and most LGBTQ+-focused foundations only fund nonprofits. WanderSafe and WanderHaven can only access that funding because WWP holds 501(c)(3) status — not because a startup put a checkbox on an application.
WIOA workforce grants and SSA Employment Network contracts (~$32,344 per hire) require a nonprofit employer. Ambassador wages — earned by LGBTQ+ people hired from communities we serve — can be partially funded by the government only because WWP is the employer.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness forgives federal student loans after 10 years of employment with a 501(c)(3). For LGBTQ+ workers who disproportionately carry education debt, that benefit is worth tens of thousands of dollars. It only applies because WWP is the employer.
An operational nonprofit with an active commercial arm supporting it looks fundamentally different from a nonprofit asking for seed money to survive. The LLC proving the model commercially makes WWP more fundable — not less.
The long game
Patagonia's owner gave the company to a nonprofit so it could never be sold for profit. That's the plan here. It's not a talking point — it's structured into the roadmap.
Already operational. Michael owns the LLC, Michael runs WWP as Executive Director. The charitable contribution relationship is live and documented.
Live nowPBC status legally locks the mission statement into the corporate charter. Changing it requires a supermajority vote plus a state filing — it can't be quietly removed by a board in a back room.
In planningReg CF investors receive Class B shares (economic rights, limited voting). Class A shares (voting control) transfer from Michael to WWP as a charitable contribution. WWP's board — not any single person — holds the controlling vote.
Planned post-Reg CF · verify timing with counselThe nonprofit holds controlling interest in the commercial arm. Profits fund the mission. No acquisition is possible without a WWP board vote plus a community vote. Michael runs it as Executive Director — not as an owner.
The Patagonia modelHard stops
Promises are not enough. These constraints are built into architecture, licensing, and operating agreements.
Written into the operating agreement AND the system architecture. No data broker pipeline exists. No ad targeting layer. Revenue comes from subscriptions and grants — not surveillance.
Once Class A transfers to WWP, any acquisition requires the WWP board plus a community stakeholder vote. No venture fund can quietly buy control. The PBC mission statement must be preserved by any acquirer — contractually.
WanderHaven's crisis network logic and WanderSafe's scoring algorithm are MIT licensed. If the company ever disappeared, the community could fork, run, and maintain the safety tools independently. The mission doesn't die with the org.
Contractual cap on individual investor ownership. Class B has minimal voting rights regardless. No single outside investor can accumulate a blocking position or force a direction change on the mission.
Wandering With Pride, Inc.
Apply for a travel scholarship, donate to fund one, or get involved. Your WanderVerse subscription directly funds what's on that page.
LGBTQ+ travelers — especially trans people, people of color, and disabled community members — can apply for travel scholarships and safety grants. This is the primary thing WWP does.
Apply for a scholarshipDonations directly fund travel scholarships and grants — plus WanderHaven crisis response, WanderSafe research, and Ambassador wages. Tax-deductible. Wandering With Pride, Inc. 501(c)(3) EIN 99-3467744.
DonateAmbassador applications, volunteer opportunities, board recruitment, community research — there are ways to contribute beyond dollars. Learn how the sub-programs work and who they serve.
Get involved