
Faith & Finance Investing in the People Behind the Profits with Dolores Bamford
Servant leadership isn’t a soft skill—it’s one of the clearest indicators of a company’s long-term health.
When investors evaluate businesses, they often focus on numbers: revenue, margins, and growth projections. But behind every enduring company is something less visible and far more powerful—a leadership team shaping culture, guiding decisions, and determining whether that business will flourish or fade.
Dolores Bamford, Co-Chief Investment Officer and Senior Portfolio Manager at Eventide Asset Management, joins the show today to share what she has learned after spending decades studying this reality. Her conclusion is clear: leadership quality is essential to lasting business success.
Why Leadership Matters More Than We Think
At its core, leadership shapes everything about a company. It influences:
- Culture and employee engagement
- Product development and innovation
- Risk management and resilience
- Long-term growth and sustainability
Strong products and strategies may carry a company for a time, but they cannot compensate for poor leadership indefinitely. Over the long run, outcomes are driven not just by numbers, but by people.
Yet, according to Dolores, this is often overlooked in traditional investment analysis—where short-term performance can overshadow deeper, more meaningful indicators of health.
A Different Lens: Faith and Investing
Dolores’s perspective is shaped not only by her extensive experience in investment management—spanning firms like Fidelity, Putnam, and Goldman Sachs—but also by her theological training.
After years in finance, she pursued a master’s degree in theology and further study in ethical leadership. That combination sharpened her conviction that faith and finance belong together.
It also re-framed how she evaluates companies. Instead of focusing solely on financial outputs, she looks at:
- Integrity and humility in leadership
- A sense of stewardship over resources
- A commitment to serving others
- Alignment between purpose and practice
This lens recognizes that businesses are not just economic engines—they are instruments that shape human flourishing.
What Servant Leadership Looks Like in Practice
Servant leadership is not abstract. It shows up in everyday decisions and behaviors. Leaders who embody it:
- Prioritize the well-being and development of employees
- Create cultures of trust, accountability, and excellence
- Serve customers with genuine care and long-term value in mind
- Use innovation responsibly, not recklessly
- Think beyond short-term gains toward enduring impact
These leaders are marked by humility, integrity, and a willingness to learn from mistakes. They pursue excellence not for personal recognition, but for the good of others.
By contrast, poor leadership often reveals itself through:
- Arrogance and self-interest
- A fixation on short-term profits
- Poor treatment of employees or customers
- Misalignment between stated values and actual practices
Over time, these traits erode trust, weaken culture, and ultimately damage the business itself.
The Risk of Ignoring Leadership Quality
Why is leadership often overlooked?
Part of the reason is pressure. Markets reward short-term results, and leaders can feel incentivized to prioritize immediate gains over long-term health. Cultural norms may also celebrate boldness and self-promotion over humility and service. But this creates real risk.
When leadership lacks integrity or vision, companies may:
- Sacrifice people for profit
- Develop harmful products or practices
- Become fragile in times of stress
On the other hand, strong leadership fosters stability, adaptability, and resilience—qualities that sustain businesses through both prosperity and adversity.
Evaluating Both What and How
At Eventide, evaluating a company goes beyond financial metrics. It includes both what a company produces and how it operates. This means asking:
- Does the company’s purpose align with its actions?
- Are its products genuinely serving people?
- Do its practices reflect care for employees, customers, and communities?
When there’s a disconnect between purpose and practice, the consequences can ripple outward, affecting not just the company but society as a whole.
Ultimately, investing isn’t just about returns—it’s about the kind of world our capital helps build.
Every investment is a vote of confidence in a company’s leadership and its vision for the future. By prioritizing servant leadership, investors can support businesses that not only succeed financially but also contribute to human flourishing.
A Better Definition of Success
The most rewarding outcome, Dolores notes, is seeing companies thrive by serving others well—employees grow, customers benefit, and communities are strengthened.
It’s a reminder that true success isn’t measured by profit alone, but by purpose lived out with excellence. Great companies don’t just start with great ideas—they start with great leaders.
And when leadership is shaped by humility, integrity, and a commitment to serve, it creates something far more valuable than short-term gains: it builds businesses that endure.
If you’re interested in aligning your investments with companies that prioritize purpose, integrity, and long-term impact, you can learn more about Eventide Asset Management and their approach to investing for human flourishing at EventideInvestments.com.
Dolores Bamford is the Co-Chief Investment Officer and Senior Portfolio Manager at Eventide Asset Management, LLC. Views expressed in this podcast are intended for information purposes and do not constitute investment advice. Eventide does not provide tax, accounting, or legal advice. Eventide's values-based approach to investing may not produce desired results and could result in underperformance compared with other investments. There is no guarantee that any investment will achieve its objectives, generate positive returns, or avoid losses.
On Today’s Program, Rob Answers Listener Questions:
- I’m about to start annuity payments. If I give directly from my annuity to charity but don’t exceed the standard deduction, is there still any tax benefit?
- I volunteer in prison ministry and drive a lot, but I’m on disability with very little income. I’ve also lost money to family and others. I want to get my taxes and credit cards paid—what’s the best path forward, and could the IRS tax expert you mentioned help?
- What exactly is an HEI? And as a follow-up, I was quoted about 10% to tap my home equity—does that seem too high, and what should I know?
Resources Mentioned:
- Faithful Steward: FaithFi’s Quarterly Magazine (Become a FaithFi Partner)
- Eventide Asset Management
- Our Ultimate Treasure: A 21-Day Journey to Faithful Stewardship by Rob West
- Wisdom Over Wealth: 12 Lessons from Ecclesiastes on Money
- Look At The Sparrows: A 21-Day Devotional on Financial Fear and Anxiety
- Rich Toward God: A Study on the Parable of the Rich Fool
- Find a Certified Kingdom Advisor (CKA)
- FaithFi App
Remember, you can call in to ask your questions every workday at (800) 525-7000. Faith & Finance is also available on Moody Radio Network and American Family Radio. You can also visit FaithFi.com to connect with our online community and partner with us as we help more people live as faithful stewards of God’s resources.
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