Look What You Made Me Do: What Taylor Swift’s Fight for Her Masters Can Teach Nonprofits

Taylor Swift re-recording her albums and buying back her masters to reclaim ownership of her work didn’t just make headlines – it made a statement. It wasn’t just about songs. It was about autonomy, values, and legacy.

If you’ve caught any of my other blogs, you won’t be surprised that I am sharing some powerful insights her journey can offer to our sector.

Reclaiming Ownership, Reclaiming Power

After losing the rights to her early music catalog in a sale she didn’t authorize, Taylor chose to re-record her old albums as Taylor’s Versions.

Nonprofit takeaway: Many nonprofits operate within systems that can reduce their autonomy whether it’s reliance on third-party platforms, donor restrictions, or misaligned partnerships. Just as Taylor reclaimed ownership of her work, nonprofits can benefit from reasserting control over mission-critical assets, such as proprietary programming and program content, constituent (especially donor) data, branding and brand identity, and research and evaluation tools.

Values First, Even When It's Harder

Taylor didn’t take the easy route. She chose the path that aligned with her values - even if it meant more work, risk, and resistance.

Nonprofit takeaway: There are moments when nonprofits are tempted to compromise, whether it’s taking funding from a questionable source or changing programs to match a grant’s requirements. Taylor’s approach reminds us that staying true to your mission matters, even when it costs more in the short term. Integrity builds trust - and that’s priceless.

What Worked Then Can Work Now, With Intention

Taylor didn’t discard her past work - she reinvested in it. Her re-recordings breathe new life into old songs, preserving their emotional power while regaining control.

Nonprofit takeaway: While we are often tempted to launch new initiatives, sometimes the answer can be to return to your roots. Revisit successful legacy programs and consider how they might be refreshed or scaled with fresh energy, stronger community voice, or new tools.

Power-Sharing and Advocacy

Taylor used her visibility to speak out against exploitative music industry practices, not just for herself but for other artists coming up behind her.

Nonprofit takeaway: Nonprofits can (and should!) do the same. Whether it’s through community-centric fundraising, participatory grantmaking, or advocacy, organizations can use their platforms to challenge unjust systems and shift power to those closest to the work.

Sustainable Revenue Through Self-Owned Work

Taylor’s re-recordings have opened new revenue streams - streams she now controls and profits from fully.

Lesson for nonprofits: Owning your “master work” (training models, curriculum, digital content) opens earned income opportunities that increase sustainability and reduce reliance on restricted grants.

Final Note: “Look What You Made Me Do”

Taylor Swift’s journey isn’t just an artist reclaiming her voice and taking ownership of her work. It’s a strategic, mission-aligned reinvention - and one we can learn from.

As public trust erodes, funding priorities shift, and community needs intensify, nonprofit organizations are under pressure to do more with less, and to do it without sacrificing their values.

But Taylor’s approach offers a lesson: when the environment is uncertain, double down on what you own: your mission, your impact, your voice. Reinvest in the programs that have lasting value. Speak up. Adapt. And most of all, lead with purpose, not pressure.

Sam Wright is a Senior Advisor with Armstrong McGuire who specializes in coaching, talent acquisition, resource development, and data analysis and research. Learn more about Sam in her bio.

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