About Tatiana
My nonprofit work began more than 15 years ago, when I was 16 and spent several months volunteering in Pérez Zeledón, Costa Rica. That experience gave language to something I had already felt deeply: my career needed to be rooted in community, advocacy, and work that helps people build something meaningful.
Since then, I have worked across the nonprofit sector in marketing, engagement, communications, grants, and development. Over time, development became the place where my skills came together most naturally. I learned how to listen for what matters, organize complex ideas, see the full picture, and turn strong community work into language, materials, and strategy that funders, partners, boards, and donors can understand.
Today, as a Certified Grant Professional and nonprofit development consultant, I support founders, growing organizations, and established nonprofits with grant writing, development strategy, communications, website content, strategic planning, and the behind-the-scenes structure that keeps the work moving. I have helped organizations secure millions of dollars for mission-driven work, but the part I care about most is helping leaders feel clearer, more prepared, and more confident in what they are building.
This work is personal to me. I know firsthand how nonprofits can shape a life because they helped shape mine. I grew up benefiting from local programs, caring leaders, and community spaces that helped me become who I am today. That is why I bring both strategy and care to this work. I understand that nonprofit dollars are often tight, capacity is stretched, and leaders need support that does not create more work before it creates relief.
My role is to help bring the pieces together. Whether an organization is just beginning or already carrying years of programming, I help clarify the message, strengthen the materials, organize the next steps, and build development systems that make the work easier to explain, easier to fund, and ready to grow.
How We Work
We work with nonprofits at different stages of growth, but the goal is always the same: to bring clarity, structure, and strategy to the work already in motion.
For new nonprofits and founders, that may mean shaping the mission, building a basic website, preparing for first grants or sponsorships, and creating the materials needed to look credible and ready.
For established nonprofits, that may mean strengthening grant proposals, refreshing language, organizing development systems, supporting strategic planning, or stepping in when the team needs extra capacity.

