
For investors.
Infrastructure for a $4.5 trillion sector that has never had it.
Everest Effect® is building the shared data and identity infrastructure for social care in the United States. It is a large market, underserved by technology, with strong network effects and multiple revenue streams that compound as the network grows.
The opportunity
The U.S. social care sector spends $4.5 trillion annually and is served by more than 300,000 independent organizations. It has no shared identity standard, no consent framework that works across providers, no common data layer, and no dominant infrastructure provider. Every other major economic sector, banking, healthcare, retail , built this infrastructure decades ago. Social care is building it now, and the window for a foundational platform position is open.

What makes Everest Effect® different
01
A data moat that compounds
Every verified interaction builds the first longitudinal, identity-linked, first-party record in social care. The architecture is deliberately designed: PII is tokenized and held separately from behavioral and outcome data; consent is granular and individual-controlled; and the data is human-verified through face-to-face professional interactions , not inferred from clicks or surveys. This dataset cannot be replicated by a competitor starting from scratch. It grows in value with every new provider and every new ID issued.
02
Network effects
The platform becomes more valuable as more organizations adopt it. More providers means more data, more referral connectivity, and more intelligence for every participant in the network. Unlike competitors who operate as closed, geographically-bounded networks, Everest is open, its network effects scale without limit.
03
Bottom-up adoption model
Everest targets the 235,000 small and mid-size nonprofits, organizations that make up 75% of the sector and have historically been left out of top-down technology mandates. Direct adoption at accessible pricing means the network grows without requiring institutional gatekeepers.
04
Multiple revenue streams
Platform SaaS subscriptions from service providers. Data and intelligence subscriptions for government and foundation partners. Project contracts for community deployments. API integration fees for larger organizations connecting their existing systems to the Everest network.