In 2017 I started 100 Blood Donation because I’d arrived at a conclusion that changed how I thought about giving: raising money alone cannot solve a critical problem like blood scarcity. Money can fund a campaign. It cannot put blood in a bag. Only people, donating regularly, can do that.
That single realization is the entire reason the initiative exists.
Why donation, not fundraising
Donating blood is more than an act of generosity. It’s a commitment to saving lives, and a commitment is something you repeat, not something you do once and move past.
That’s where the initiative’s name comes from: the ambition for each person to donate blood 100 times in their lifetime. It’s a deliberately large number, not because it’s symbolic, but because it reframes the act. A single donation is generosity. A hundred donations, across a lifetime, is a discipline. I wanted the initiative to inspire the second thing, not just the first.
What the mission actually involves
The mission isn’t only “donate blood.” It has four distinct parts, and each one does something different:
Raise awareness. Educate the global community about why blood donation matters in a way that fundraising campaigns never fully communicate.
Build and sustain a global community. Unite donors worldwide into a network that’s active, not dormant between donation drives.
Engage ambassadors and influencers. Bring in voices, donors or not, willing to advocate for the cause and inspire others to start.
Partner with purpose-driven organizations. Collaborate with organizations that share the same commitment, so the effort compounds instead of staying isolated.
None of these four replace donation itself. They exist to make donation a sustained behavior rather than an occasional one.
How this maps to the four pillars
Intention. The initiative didn’t start from a generic desire to “help.” It started from a specific, almost uncomfortable realization: that the solution most people reach for, raising money, doesn’t actually solve this particular problem. Naming that clearly is what gave the initiative its direction.
Continuity. The 100-donation framing is continuity made literal. It isn’t a one-time act of generosity. It’s a structure built for a lifetime of repetition, which is the only way the underlying problem actually gets solved.
Mastery. Building a global community of donors, ambassadors, and partners isn’t something that happens from one campaign. It requires the same patience and craft as any system built to last: awareness work, partnerships, and engagement, sustained over years, not weeks.
Impact. The measure of impact here isn’t visibility. It’s donations that actually happen, repeatedly, because a community exists to sustain them. That’s a harder, slower form of impact than a single fundraiser, and it’s the one I chose to build toward.
In closing
100 Blood Donation exists because I refused to accept the easier, more common answer. Raising money feels like progress. It isn’t the same as solving the problem.
From Intention to Impact, this initiative is the clearest example I have of choosing the harder, slower path because it’s the one that actually works, and committing to it as a lifelong effort rather than a single campaign.



