For some, it feels like a formality.
For others, it feels like a hurdle.
And for many leaders, it’s quietly misunderstood.
But done right, a feasibility study isn’t just a step in the process, it’s one of the most pastoral and strategic tools available to a ministry leader.
At its core, a feasibility study answers a simple question:
“Is God preparing our people to respond to this vision?”
Notice what it’s not asking.
It’s not just:
Those questions matter but they’re incomplete.
A true feasibility study is about discernment, alignment, and readiness. It’s about understanding not just capacity, but conviction.
Because in Kingdom work, capacity without conviction rarely leads to lasting impact.
Too often, feasibility studies become overly transactional:
The result? Leaders walk away with numbers but not clarity.
Even worse, they may move forward with false confidence… or hesitate unnecessarily because they misread their people.
A poorly executed feasibility study doesn’t just waste time, it can misguide vision.
From Data to Discernment
At Generis, we approach feasibility studies differently because we believe generosity is first a matter of the heart, not the wallet.
Our process is designed to uncover three critical realities:
We’re listening for more than willingness, we’re discerning spiritual alignment.
Generosity flows where vision is spiritually compelling.
Every response in a feasibility study is filtered through trust.
You can’t separate generosity from trust. And a good feasibility study tells you exactly where that trust stands.
Sometimes the greatest insight isn’t about the donors, it’s about the leaders.
Through interviews and conversations, we help organizations refine:
In many cases, the feasibility study becomes the moment where the vision itself gets stronger.
One of the keys to a proper feasibility study is this: Don’t just listen to what people say, interpret what it means.
Two people can give similar answers but communicate very different levels of engagement.
For example:
Our experience allows us to read tone, posture, and conviction not just words.
That’s the difference between gathering information and providing insight.
A feasibility study should be as much about shepherding as it is about strategy.
It’s not just evaluating a project, it’s helping leaders:
Done well, people walk away from the process feeling heard, valued, and more connected to the mission.
That’s not a byproduct that’s the goal.
At the end of a Generis feasibility study, leaders don’t just receive a report.
They gain:
Sometimes that means moving ahead with bold faith.
Sometimes it means refining the vision.
Occasionally, it means waiting.
All three outcomes are wins because they are grounded in truth.
A feasibility study isn’t about testing your people.
It’s about listening to them. And when you listen well, you don’t just discover what is possible, you discern what is wise.
That’s the kind of clarity every Christian non-profit needs.