HQ Coalition brings civic and nonprofit organizations together under one roof.
Shared space, shared resources, shared momentum. The organizations in our hubs don't just collaborate. They grow.
They move faster.
Organizations that used to plan in isolation start setting longer-term goals, running coordinated campaigns, and reaching people they couldn't reach alone. Proximity to serious partners raises everyone's game.
They do more with what they have.
When organizations share space, relationships, and resources, available capacity doubles without anyone writing a bigger check. The work gets more efficient. The impact gets harder to ignore.
They reach further.
Groups in our first hub doubled their contact lists. Not because of a tool, but because they started operating with intention. Shared momentum produces results that no single org could manufacture on its own.
The groups fighting for this community have been doing it in separate rooms.
They share the same zip codes. Often the same constituents. Sometimes the same donors. But they’ve been operating in isolation — duplicating outreach, splitting attention, rebuilding from scratch after every campaign cycle.
HQ Coalition ends that.
We build permanent civic hubs where aligned organizations share space, share knowledge, and build on each other’s work instead of starting over. What one organization learns, the others can use. What one campaign builds, the whole coalition keeps.
The organizations that walk into our hubs don’t come out the same. They come out more strategic, better resourced, and connected to partners who make their work matter more.
The organizations changing things in this country shouldn't have to do it alone
Whether you want to fund a hub or be part of one, the conversation starts here.
What happens
in the space.
One hub. Seven organizations. Results none of them could have built alone.
Contact lists doubled
as organizations moved from one-off events to coordinated, intentional campaigns.
Available resources grew
as shared infrastructure freed up capacity that used to disappear into logistics and overhead.
The thinking shifted
from reactive to strategic, from single events to longer-term goals.
Broward County, FL
Broward is the first fully structured expansion of the model. Purpose-built for a large, high-stakes metro with its own coalition, its own fights, and its own founding partners shaping what the hub becomes.
Mercer County, WV
Seven founding organizations. Dozens of coalition events. A community that went from scattered and reactive to coordinated and strategic. In one of the toughest political environments in the country.

