Where every form of contribution earns ownership, profit is pre-allocated by purpose, and the vulnerable don't stay poor for long.
A Shalom Company is a business structured around five interlocking commitments. Unlike traditional corporations where ownership concentrates in the hands of capital providers, a Shalom Company distributes ownership continuously to everyone who contributes — and covenants its profit to specific purposes before it is ever earned.
The model doesn't depend on charity, altruism, or self-sacrifice. It works because it aligns incentives: contributors earn proportional ownership, customers pay transparent prices, and the community benefits because the company's constitution mandates it.
Any business can adopt this framework. The specific percentages, thresholds, and governance rules are set by each company's founding constitution — but the five commitments are universal.
Ownership is not bought — it is earned. Every person and organization that builds, operates, or sustains the company accrues equity proportional to their contribution. Shares are not fixed at founding; they accrete continuously.
Revenue is structured around a fixed, transparent margin above cost. The company publishes its margin rate. Customers know what they pay for, and the company cannot extract beyond its declared margin.
Before profit is earned, it is pre-allocated by covenant. A portion flows to operations, a portion to contributors as dividends, a portion to the vulnerable, and a portion to future growth. These allocations are set in the constitution.
Decisions are tied to contribution, not capital. Governance is heterarchical: different stakeholder classes — builders, operators, investors, community partners — participate in decisions proportional to their stake.
Ownership carries moral responsibility. The company's constitution defines standards of conduct. Abusive, exploitative, or deceptive behavior results in ownership withdrawal. Dignity is non-negotiable.
In a traditional company, ownership is purchased. Investors buy shares, and everyone else — employees, partners, suppliers — works for wages. A Shalom Company inverts this: ownership is earned through contribution, and it accrues continuously.
Each Shalom Company defines its own contribution formula in its constitution. Common contribution types include:
Because ownership accrues continuously, no one's percentage is permanent. If a founder contributes heavily in year one but steps back in year three, their ownership share will naturally dilute as others contribute more. This is by design — it keeps ownership aligned with active contribution.
"The solution to the broken capitalist system isn't less capitalism — it's more capitalists. Converting stakeholders into shareholders." — Benjamin Sywulka
A Shalom Company does not price by "what the market will bear." It prices by formula: a declared, fixed margin above cost.
This means:
This doesn't mean the company can't be profitable. The margin is designed to sustain operations, reward contributors, fund growth, and serve the vulnerable — all at once.
This is the heart of the Shalom Company. Before profit is earned, the company's constitution pre-allocates every dollar of margin to a specific purpose.
Each Shalom Company sets its own percentages, but the categories are universal:
The exact percentages are set at founding and can only be changed by constitutional amendment (requiring supermajority approval from all stakeholder classes). This is the covenant: the company promises how it will use its profit before it earns a single dollar.
Every Shalom Company dedicates a portion of its margin to empowering the vulnerable. This is not charity — it is investment in the community's capacity to thrive. The fund may support:
"If somebody's poor among you, don't be tightfisted. Be generous. Open-handed. Help them lift the invisible barriers that prevent them from thriving." — Deuteronomy 15:7-8, paraphrased
In a traditional corporation, governance is simple: one share, one vote. Capital controls decisions. In a Shalom Company, governance is tied to contribution, not capital.
Each Shalom Company defines its stakeholder classes in its constitution. Common classes include:
| Stakeholder Class | Voice In | Earns Ownership By |
|---|---|---|
| Builders | Product, technology, operations | Time and skill contribution |
| Operators | Day-to-day management, culture | Hours worked, outcomes delivered |
| Investors | Capital allocation, financial strategy | Capital contributed (declining rate) |
| Community Partners | Social impact, vulnerable fund | Community contribution, barrier-lifting |
| Customers | Product direction, pricing review | Revenue contribution (optional) |
Decisions are made by contribution-weighted voting within each class, with cross-class approval required for constitutional changes. No single class can dominate.
The company's constitution — including margin rates, distribution percentages, and governance rules — can only be changed by supermajority vote across all stakeholder classes. This protects the covenant from being eroded by any single interest group.
Ownership in a Shalom Company is not just an economic right — it carries moral responsibility. The constitution defines standards of conduct that all owners must uphold.
If an owner engages in behavior that violates the community standards — exploitation, abuse, fraud, harassment, discrimination — their ownership can be partially or fully withdrawn through a due-process hearing by the governance body.
In traditional companies, abusive shareholders face no consequences as long as they hold shares. In a Shalom Company, dignity is non-negotiable. You cannot profit from a community you harm.
"The way of Shalom is a way in which those who are wealthy understand that they're not wealthy because they're smart or brilliant — but because someone was generous towards them." — Benjamin Sywulka, "A Theology of Capitalism"
| Dimension | Traditional Corporation | Shalom Company |
|---|---|---|
| Who owns it? | Investors who buy shares | Everyone who contributes |
| How is price set? | "What the market will bear" | Fixed margin above cost |
| Where does profit go? | Shareholders and executives | Pre-allocated by covenant |
| Who governs? | Capital (one share, one vote) | Contributors (multi-stakeholder) |
| Can you lose ownership? | Only by selling | Yes, for violating community standards |
| Who benefits from growth? | Existing shareholders | All contributors + the vulnerable |
| What happens to the vulnerable? | Charity, if anything | Constitutional allocation of profit |
Any business — new or existing — can adopt the Shalom Company framework. The process involves drafting a constitution that codifies the five commitments.
Define your stakeholder classes, margin rate, distribution percentages, governance rules, and community standards. These are your covenants.
Decide how different types of contribution (time, capital, referral, community) are weighted. This determines how ownership accrues.
Choose a transparent, sustainable margin rate. This should be high enough to fund all covenant allocations while remaining competitive.
Pre-allocate every percentage point: operations, dividends, vulnerable fund, growth reserve, R&D. Lock these in your constitution.
Create your multi-stakeholder governance body. Define voting rules, amendment thresholds, and due-process procedures for standards enforcement.
Begin tracking contribution, distributing ownership, and reporting transparently on margin allocation. Publish your constitution publicly.
The Shalom Company model draws from real-world precedents:
Twenty-five years ago, cooperatives, nonprofits, women's groups, and indigenous organizations built a bank with proportional ownership guarantees. Today, 15,000 people earn their living from its dividends, and nonprofits fund their entire operating budgets from it.
A federation of worker cooperatives employing 80,000+ people. Governance is democratic, pay ratios are capped, and surplus is reinvested in education and community development.
The Old Testament's economic system — Sabbath rest every 7 years, debt forgiveness every 7 years, land redistribution every 50 years (Jubilee) — was designed to prevent multi-generational poverty and concentration of wealth.
"The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the oppressed, to heal the heartbroken, to proclaim liberty to the captives — to be the one who makes Jubilee come true." — Isaiah 61:1-2 / Luke 4:18-19
Shalom Capital helps entrepreneurs structure businesses around the five commitments. We provide the framework, the tools, and the community.
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