Problem Solver Foundation
Blog
Insights, stories, and updates from the people working to solve the world's toughest challenges.
What Does "Solving Problems" Really Mean at PSF?
Most people hear the phrase "problem solver" and picture someone in a lab coat, or a consultant with a whiteboard full of frameworks, or a tech founder pitching the next big app. Smart. Credentialed. Operating at a scale most of us will never reach.That is not what PSF means by it.
How Can I Get Involved with PSF?
There is a moment most people have at least once in their lives. You read something, watch something, or witness something — and you feel it. That quiet but insistent pull toward action. The sense that you could be doing more. That the world needs something from you specifically, and that you have been waiting too long to offer it. If you are reading this, you are probably having that moment right now. The good news is that getting involved with the Problem Solver Foundation does not require you to quit your job, move to a new city, or have a grand plan already figured out. It requires something simpler, and in many ways harder: the decision to start.
Why Join PSF? What You Actually Get
Most organizations ask you to give. Your time, your money, your energy — in exchange for a sense of purpose and, if you are lucky, a certificate and a newsletter.PSF is built differently. The logic here is not extraction. It is multiplication. When you join the Problem Solver Foundation, you enter a structure designed to make you more effective at whatever you are already trying to do — and to connect you with the people, tools, and intelligence that can take you further than you would go alone.Here is what that looks like in practice, depending on where you are in your journey.