The Mom Kind

Business Size: 1-4
Phone: 636-300-7442

Address:
94 Huck Finn Dr.
St. Charles, MO 63303

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About The Mom KindThe Mom Kind is a speaking and education platform where I share practical, neurodiversity‑affirming information for families, schools, and organizations about autism and neurodivergent kids, drawing on both lived experience and real‑life strategies that people can actually use.
What differentiates you from the competition?I am an autistic mom of four, three autistic, combining lived experience with practical, real‑life tools. I focus on neurodiversity‑affirming support for the whole family, not quick fixes or shame‑based parenting advice.
What are your top selling services or products that your company offers?My speaking and educational content are rooted in lived autistic experience and real family life, offering practical, neurodiversity‑affirming insights for families, schools, and organizations.
If you had one message to get across to future customers, what would it be?When you understand how your autistic or neurodivergent child experiences the world, you can make better decisions, lower stress at home and school, and support them in ways that actually fit their needs.
What is the biggest marketing challenge that you will face in the upcoming year?Reaching the families and educators who need support most without huge ad budgets, and standing out in a crowded autism “advice” space while maintaining neurodiversity‑affirming, evidence‑informed content.

What is the core mission of your organization? The Mom Kind’s mission is to provide practical, neurodiversity‑affirming education and support so autistic and other neurodivergent kids, and their families, can navigate everyday life with more understanding, clarity, and confidence.

How do you measure impact and success in your programs? I look at messages and stories from families and educators who say my work changed how they understand their autistic or neurodivergent kids, reduced stress at home or school, or helped them make a specific decision that improved their child’s day‑to‑day life.

What are your biggest fundraising or outreach challenges? One of the biggest challenges is sustaining funding for education and advocacy work that doesn’t use fear‑based messaging, and reaching the families who need support most without the kind of large marketing budgets many big organizations have.

How do you build long-term relationships with donors and supporters? I focus on being transparent about what their support makes possible, sharing concrete stories and examples of impact, and staying in regular, authentic contact through email and social content so donors and supporters feel connected to real families, not just to a logo.

What trends are influencing the nonprofit world today? Nonprofits are navigating tighter funding, more competition for grants, and donors who expect clear, measurable impact. At the same time, there is growing demand for lived‑experience‑led, neurodiversity‑affirming autism work that moves away from scare tactics and toward practical support.

Can you share a story that shows your mission in action? When I first started The Mom Kind, there were very few autistic parents publicly sharing what daily life actually looked like with multiple autistic kids. As I began telling our story and sharing what we were learning, families started reaching out to say they finally saw their own homes reflected in someone else’s experience. Hearing from parents who went from feeling isolated and overwhelmed to feeling like they had language for what was happening and ideas to try at home is a clear example of how this work turns one family’s story into something that supports many others.

What keeps you motivated in this work? I stay motivated by my own experience as an autistic mom of four and by the constant messages from families who finally feel seen and have language for what they’re going through. Knowing that a single piece of accurate, practical information can change how a child is treated at home or at school keeps me going.

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