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Episode Summary
What happens when a passion for the outdoors collides with entrepreneurial thinking? In this episode of Homegrown Hustle, host sits down with Matthew Thompson, Executive Director of Wayzata Sailing, to unpack how a grassroots sailing organization transformed into a thriving nonprofit serving thousands of participants each year.
Matt shares how he accidentally stepped into leadership just a few years out of college with little formal business training—and then proceeded to triple the organization’s size. Through iterative decision-making, calculated experimentation, and community-driven programming, he built a sustainable model that blends nonprofit mission with business discipline.
The conversation explores the realities of nonprofit leadership, including managing boards, balancing revenue streams, navigating donor expectations, and scaling seasonal teams to over 70 staff members. Matt also reveals how experimentation—from fishing camps to paddleboarding to STEM programming—has fueled growth and unlocked unexpected opportunities, including inspiring young entrepreneurs.
At its core, this episode examines how action, experimentation, and community partnerships can transform a small organization into a powerful local ecosystem.
Key Takeaways:
- Passion can evolve into a profession when individuals lean into what they love and build systems around it.
- Iterative decision-making is a powerful leadership framework—commit, test, adjust, and improve.
- Nonprofits must operate like businesses to survive, balancing mission with revenue generation.
- Community programming can create unexpected innovation pipelines, even inspiring youth entrepreneurship.
- Scaling an organization requires rethinking hiring models, focusing on complementary skill sets instead of “perfect candidates.”
- Smart experimentation means accepting small losses in pursuit of long-term learning and growth.
- Operational sustainability often relies on creative revenue streams, not just donations.
- Leadership evolves from doing everything yourself to building teams and delegating responsibility.
- Community impact grows exponentially when organizations expand access to experiences people can’t easily get elsewhere.
Chapters:
00:00 – The “Matt Party” Icebreaker
00:33 – Meet Matthew Thompson
01:30 – The Origins of Wayzata Sailing
02:47 – Mission: Accessibility in Sailing
04:25 – Becoming Executive Director (Without Business Training)
05:05 – The Power of Iterative Decision Making
06:00 – How Nonprofits Actually Work
07:24 – Rethinking Donor Value
09:26 – Scaling to 70+ Seasonal Staff
11:45 – Training the Next Generation of Instructors
13:03 – The Safest Sport That Feels Risky
14:17 – Hiring for Complementary Skill Sets
16:39 – Leadership Structure as the Organization Grew
18:52 – The Unique Revenue Model of Sailing Camps
20:23 – Running the Organization Like a Business
21:32 – Escaping the Nonprofit Marketing Trap
22:39 – Why Nonprofits Must Experiment
23:58 – Community Programming as a Growth Engine
25:45 – Testing New Ideas in Small Batches
27:18 – The Fishing Camp That Took Off
29:09 – Inspiring Youth Entrepreneurship
30:57 – Scaling to 2,000 Annual Participants
31:59 – The Future of Wayzata Sailing
33:14 – Creative Date Nights on the Lake
34:25 – Managing a Fleet of Boats
Guest Resources:
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomps-matthew-minneapolis
Website: https://www.wayzatasailing.org/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wayzatasailing/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wayzatasailing/