How a Book Idea Became a Non-Profit. The Friendship Lab Story So Far

Friendship Lab empowers men and women with the wisdom and skills to make their friendships thrive

This one sentence has kept me busy (and largely offline) for months. Something special is brewing, a new calling that’s been years in the making, one that will take years to complete. And you’re a part of it. While I’ve mentioned the need before, and released some teaching on the topic, it’s time to tell you what Friendship Lab will be and how a book idea has grown into so much more.

Update: The Friendship Lab Site is Live!

It Started with a Question

A couple of years ago I took myself away for a prayer retreat at a lovely English manor house in the hills. My prayers this time centred on life direction and, with a major birthday approaching, what I should focus the ‘second half’ of my life on. I was old enough to know my talents, strengths and weaknesses. I reviewed long-held dreams to see which may still have currency, and wondered if I should just build further on what had been fruitful so far. More importantly, I wanted to hear God’s voice, since I’d already experienced one major change of direction I could never have anticipated by assessing dreams, talents or fruitfulness alone.

By that afternoon a question had floated gently to mind that seemed to invite reflection:

What one problem in the world would you attempt to solve if you could?

I journaled multiple answers to the question, but one seemed to carry extra weight. Like most of us, I was aware of the rising rates of loneliness in western society and beyond. In 2018 I had seen the UK become the first country in the world to have an MP for Loneliness, and watched then Prime Minister Teresa May put £18 million into programs to tackle social isolation. These were worthy outside-in activities moving society to help the individual. I’d also heard from too many readers of my books who’d struggled to connect in a world built around nuclear families. I started wondering where the inside-out tools were to help individuals reach out to others more effectively.

Yes, that was it. The itch I’d love to scratch was friendlessness. If I could, I’d help us all develop more and better friendships.

I didn’t know then the statistics on friendlessness itself – that around a quarter of us in the US, UK and Australia have no close friends, including 1-in-10 who have no friends at all, or that the number had quadrupled in the US since 1990. I didn’t know that, in general, most people struggle to make or maintain friendships after the age of 35, or that the reasons had little to do with social skills and more to do with busyness, work and family demands, and problematic individualism. All of that knowledge was still to come.

All I knew as I left my retreat that day was that I’d found a surprising answer to an unexpected question and that this shouldn’t be ignored. The next question was how to tackle such a problem like friendlessness.

A Handbrake Moment

Following that retreat, I went home and immersed myself in the research. I will write a book on how to form and deepen adult friendship, I thought. Wasn’t that what I always did? Write a book on something, speak about it at events, do some media. That’s how I’d helped people before. Ideas started filling my notebooks and tags began proliferating in Evernote. I started asking people about their friendships – probing, reflecting, learning – the power of this overlooked relationship soon becoming evident. Friendship had felt like a stranger in the street before this – their presence acknowledged but nothing too special about them to warrant enquiring further. Now I’d stopped that stranger to talk and found them to be the wisest person of all, holding answers to all mysteries.

Some months later two things happened:

The first was BBC Radio 2’s Friendship Season. Envisioned as a one-off Sunday night program for International Friendship Day 2020, I became Creative Lead of this four-day season across all of Radio 2’s shows, reaching 14 million listeners. One doesn’t just walk into the BBC and get their ideas heard. This was a small miracle, and the audience response was incredibly moving.

That same week I wrote a column for The Times which also provoked lots of conversation.

The public response to these two forays into the friendship theme seemed like confirmation I was on the right track. This book will be needed I thought. My research continued, I started to write, and by 2021 I had an outline for the book and a chapter written.

But then I couldn’t move forward.

After all that momentum, there now seemed to be a handbrake on the project. It wasn’t that publishers weren’t interested. The hesitancy I felt wasn’t external but internal – a sense that something wasn’t right. I just wasn’t sure what that was.

A Bigger Goal

Main image:  Priscilla Du Preez Above: Cynthia Magana (creative commons)

So back to that house in the hills I went (I can’t recommend retreats enough for getting clarity on your life). There are many ways to have a day retreat but the general pattern I follow is to start with unhurried reflection on a passage of scripture, asking God to speak through it so my focus is on being present with him rather than on my problems or questions. After a couple of hours of this I then either pray or journal my questions. I’ll sometimes leave a retreat without specific answers to these problems, just a deep sense of God’s presence in the midst of them – which is almost always enough. But other times specific guidance comes.

On the afternoon of that second retreat, praying through my ‘handbrake’, issue I sensed this:

You’re thinking too small.

And then this:

Your goal has been to write a book. What if it was to reduce the friendless rate instead?

There’s nothing so powerful as a catalytic question like that, one that launches thought experiments and teases out possibilities. What would be needed, I wondered, to reduce that 1-in-4 rate of people with no close friends and 1-in-10 with no friends at all? A book read by a few thousand people wouldn’t cut it. To move the dial on those figures would require a synergy of strategies:

  • Print, broadcast and other media engagement
  • Social media campaigns
  • Partnerships with national and local authorities
  • Arts collaborations with creatives of all kinds
  • Research projects
  • Courses, podcasts and more

There would still be a book, I sensed, but this would come later. Right now the goal was being changed – an exciting but daunting prospect. I had spent the last decade working solo from a home office, and before that in organisations large enough to have admin teams to handle fundraising and resources. This would require a massive shift in my role, work style and more. I had already felt 2022 was to be a year of collaboration, but this would take the notion a little further than expected. Assuming of course that I was hearing God correctly.

So, the next step was to take this vision to others for confirmation.

Stay Updated

To stay up to date with Friendship Lab please join my newsletter. Your first email will contain some helpful tools you can use straight away.

Wisdom Conversations

Before I left that second retreat I made a list of people I’d like to talk to about this growing project. On that list were friends and contacts in media, business, publishing and ministry, plus social entrepreneurs, researchers, thought leaders and others. There would be no pitching in these meetings – I had nothing to pitch! I would ask nothing more of these people than their wisdom and feedback. And so I called these my Wisdom Conversations. I simply presented the friendship need as I now knew it, some of my ideas on tackling it, then asked for their no-holds-barred, stream-of-consciousness response, letting them speak into any area of the idea they wished to. This was (and continues to be) the most enjoyable aspect of the whole project.

Forty generous conversations later, some convictions grew:

  • Yes, there was a need that few if any were already tackling
  • The vision would need funds, and the funds would require an official structure
  • The structure could be either for- or non-profit
  • For a number of reasons, a non-profit organisation felt right

So many other things came out of those conversations. For a start, the realities of what was needed was twinned with other contacts to talk to. “You should talk to Dave who works in Intellectual Property… to Jeff about strategy… to Sharon about how she distributed her programs…” And just like that, what began as an idea for a book was becoming an idea for a non-profit organisation. I was feeling more out of my depth by the day – and more convinced this was what I should be doing.

Opportunities Grow

At University of Leicester School of Business

And so 2022 has been spent drawing a board of trustees and a board of reference together, hammering out a constitution ahead of our application to the UK’s Charities Commission, and crafting the Friendship Lab course. My first board member, Lois Fulton, has been a gift in crafting a pathway forward and the beginnings of a strategy, while countless others (who I will one day praise by name) have helped with legal and other advice. Remarkably, despite staying quiet about the project (as there’s been little to announce), word has spread and opportunities for Friendship Lab have come before we’ve even been ready to launch.

Without a word of publicity, we’re in discussions with around ten organisations about future collaborations, including:

  • A media network on producing a high-level podcast series
  • A leading thinktank on crafting a joint report to shape public policy
  • University of Leicester School of Business, whose third-year students are tackling Friendship Lab’s strategic plans
  • An international ministry on a content collaboration
  • An Oxford-based charity on running a Friendship Lab course pilot

By next week the list will be larger. It’s all incredibly exciting. And it’s all to work towards Friendship Lab’s ultimate vision:

We envision a day when every person has at least three ‘2am friends’

People we can talk to, depend on, grow with, and enjoy – people we can call at 2am when everything has gone wrong.

Some Questions Answered

Image by Dario Valenzuela (creative commons)

If you’ve read this far you’re probably as interested in this topic as I am. Here are some of the questions people have asked about Friendship Lab and what’s ahead.

What will be the first thing Friendship Lab does?

Most likely the Friendship Lab course. This will be a 6-session evidence-based course helping us form and deepen adult friendships. It will be empowering, fun, and designed to be run in workplaces, churches, sports clubs, online, and anywhere else people gather.

When will you launch?

With Charities Commission applications and course pilots to do, we have a few months of work ahead. 2023 will be a significant year for us and you’ll hear about progress first on the newsletter!

In which countries will Friendship Lab operate?

We know there’s already great interest in the UK, US and Australia at least. We’ll craft an online offering to serve as many as possible with these countries first in mind.

How will Friendship Lab be funded?

We will seek funding primarily through grants, corporate and philanthropic donations, and public support. We aim to provide courses and other cost-intensive offerings at ‘a price point accessible to all’ hence the need for other sources to ensure everyone can benefit!

Will there be volunteer opportunities?

Yes! Friendship Lab will ultimately be a movement of people committed to the vision of flourishing friendships. We’ll announce various roles in the future, but if you’re interested in offering something specific please contact me. It would be wonderful to talk.

A Movement Whose Time Has Come

“Friendship is the single most important factor influencing our health, well-being, and happiness,” says Oxford University’s Robin Dunbar. I can’t wait to see what Friendship Lab becomes as we work together to see this profoundly overlooked yet profoundly powerful relationship get the focus it deserves.


Please Share

Comments:

  • November 23, 2022
    Donna

    I am looking on ‘tenuously’ to see how this goes as a woman in my 50s who feels isolated. Deep down the idea of friendship is wonderful but after rejections and failed friendships in life a wall in me has been erected and to climb back over it seems so tiring. After investing time and giving my heart to others in the past I ended up feeling undervalued. I have become cynical about the idea of true friendship and knowing who is trustworthy. I think I have a lot to offer as a friend but so many like myself remain invisible. The world can be a dark and cruel place so my own and God’s company seem a lot safer.

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      I’m so sorry to hear that, Donna. You’re far from the first person I’ve heard that from, so please know you’re not alone. I hope the project helps. It would be sad for the untrustworthy ones to keep you from the trustworthy ones.

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Dawn Collins

    Oh I’m excited. Thank you for following through on this God idea. So excited and filled with anticipation that i couldn’t write down all the ideas, thoughts and encouragements that I have. Thank you for listening and being open.

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thanks for your excitement, Dawn!

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Sharon Cooper

    Thank you for God’s vision placed in you. This sounds wonderful! I am a “1 in 10” person, but I know God has worked massively in me during all this time on the solitary walk He has taken me on. Thanks be to God . . . I look forward to hearing more on this wonderful work! God bless

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Really looking forward to your feedback on it all in time, Dawn!

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Mike Beaumont

    I found myself getting more and more excited as I read this! It was wonderful to see how this is clearly something that God has unfolded and not something that you have created! Can’t wait to see this getting launched and transforming lives.
    Keep on dreaming big!

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      That means a lot, Mike. Thank you!

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Sarah Bailey

    Another one who thinks this sounds very exciting! Look forward to hearing and seeing how this clear God-ordained idea moves forward.

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thanks Sarah!

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Vivienne Voysey

    Wow this really is growing in all directions and has God’s Will stamped all over it! I was excited when you told me about it some months ago but reading your progress has made me super excited.
    May God continue to bless your work and everyone involved it’s birth. The world is a lonely place full of lonely people there is a very great need for this problem to be addressed. Being able to trust another with your innermost fears and problems is a big part of the trouble. One has to be very wise on that score. We often have friends but very seldom have life long friends who will listen uncritically in a time of deep need who will keep a confidence. This I think would be something to address. God bless Sheridan keep up the good work you have been entrusted with by our wonderful loving father.

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      So grateful for your prayers on this!

      reply
      • November 24, 2022
        Vivienne Voysey

        You’re very welcome!

        reply
  • November 23, 2022
    David

    I think this sounds great. Men in particular struggle with friendship and this could help.

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      It’s a huge problem effecting both men and women, but men in particular have missed out on the conversation as emotionally close friendship has sometimes been interpreted as somehow subconsciously sexual (thanks Freud). We need that emotional connection too, not just sport or work in common.

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Viktor Steiner

    Sounds very interesting and worthwhile. Bon courage!

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thanks Viktor!

      reply
  • November 23, 2022
    Phill Pickering

    Reading this update has lifted my spirit! Well done and thank you for testing and learning, and leading the idea forward, Sheridan.
    Praying through the serenity prayer for you now as I write this.

    reply
    • November 23, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thank you!

      reply
  • November 24, 2022
    Samantha Bryan

    Wow, so excited about this, Sheridan! Your speaking and writing on friendship thus far has already influenced me as I have led a session on relationships with young adults and has made me emphasise friendship more in the topics I cover with the women I mentor.
    It’s wonderful to see God’s fingerprints all over this, so I’m excited to see what ends up happening. I love the vision you have articulated.
    I will be keen to inform others who need help in the friendship area about the resources that become available.
    I also appreciate you sharing the process. Hearing the journey you’ve been on is a model to the rest of us about how we can be open to God and step into grand visions he may have for our lives that are bigger than we may have imagined. It’s a tad scary (that God might tap us on the shoulder for something so big) but your story is also an encouragement because it reveals how God provides who and what we need when the idea is truly his and not just our own scheme.
    Blessings.

    reply
    • November 24, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thanks so much Samantha. It is a tad scary but I guess it should be! I’m learning to wait on the right timing in all of this and not hold it too tightly. Much of this may not come to pass – or possibly all of it. One day, one conversation, one decision at a time!

      reply
  • November 24, 2022
    Scott Lee

    This is your friend Scott. I’ve read your books, followed you in ODB, and enjoyed reading your emails. This new friendship project looks like a worthy endeavor in this time in history. Thank you for your vision and sensitivity to the Holy Spirit. God Bless you, Brother, in all you do.

    reply
    • November 24, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      I appreciate that greatly, Scott. Thank you.

      reply
  • November 24, 2022
    Melly

    Praise the Lord for His guidance and your searching to reach more people! God created us for fellowship and I hope my prayers for you will join many others as you seek to create healthy and growing friendships around the world Sheridan!

    reply
    • November 24, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      I appreciate those prayers greatly, Melly. They’re needed and valued!

      reply
  • November 24, 2022
    Angela Seneviratne

    Very interesting to read all this. Am glad God has placed this burden on your heart and it has taken shape. I do hope the resources will be available in Asia as well. God’s blessings on you and all concerned, to make it a vibrant movement of growth and that it’ll help many to find meaningful friendships. I thrive on it! Am grateful to God that I was able to cultivate many close friendships! Waiting to see how I can help others by using your resources. Meanwhile ,I’ll do my thing, reach out to those God points out to me!

    reply
    • November 25, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thanks Angela. We won’t forget you!

      reply
  • November 25, 2022
    Barbara

    This sounds both interesting and exciting. We have a very relational God and He says He places the solitary in families. He embraces friendship and partnership. I pray God’s strategies and timings will open some wide doors of opportunity here and pray against the wiles of the enemy as this embryonic vision grows and comes to birth.

    reply
    • November 25, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thank you so much, Barbara.

      reply
  • November 25, 2022
    Lucy Holten

    Fantastic project, Sheridan! Would love to know how to be involved in rural, Northam, Western Australia.

    reply
    • November 28, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Wonderful!

      reply
  • November 27, 2022
    Jill Birt

    Woo! That’s a very big vision addressing a desperate issue in society. Congratulations on all that has happened so far. Looking forward to hearing more and seeing how things develop. Very timely. Praying with you as the next steps emerge from the shadows of possibilities.

    reply
    • November 28, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      I appreciate that greatly, Jill. Thank you.

      reply
  • November 28, 2022
    Andrew

    How wonderful to read your journey in this direction. No doubt a divine calling for you Sheridan and your answer is very much your way; courageous, generous, humble and yet lacking nothing by design and wonderfully fused with your unique experience. Yes!

    reply
    • November 28, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      What a poetic comment. I might just hang that on my wall! Thanks Andrew – a gift.

      reply
  • December 1, 2022
    Lyn Wake

    Beyond excited to read this Sheridan! Praying for you and cheering you on from post locked-down Melbourne where friendship is desperately needed all over the place 🙂

    reply
    • December 1, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Thank you Lynn!

      reply
  • December 3, 2022
    Rachel

    Sounds really exciting. Lockdowns have made us all more isolated, and friendships certainly for me have suffered – to the point where I wouldn’t know where to turn at 2am!
    Definitely interested in this.
    Thank you for raising the profile not just of loneliness, but proceeding to action to do something about it. Amazing.

    reply
    • December 8, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      You’re far from alone Rachel. Intentionality really is key to tackling the problem. Looking forward to your input as we go.

      reply
  • December 8, 2022
    Vara Hariharan

    I am very excited to read about this Friendship Lab, Sheridan! It’s marvellous how God grew this idea from a question to a humming collaborative project! I hope you will make the sessions available online to people in Singapore too! I am part of a core team that leads the women’s fellowship in my church called Women at the Well. It would be a lovely way to connect with the younger women in our church as an inter-generational project. Will remember the Friendship Lab in my prayers.

    reply
    • December 8, 2022
      Sheridan Voysey

      Wonderful! Yes, there will be plenty of online content for you to use with your group. We’ll try and make it as international in flavour as we can too!

      reply
  • December 26, 2022
    Michelle+Vergara

    I’m so encouraged by this project and inspired by your example of listening to God’s direction and submitting to where He wants you to move with the Friendship Lab. I can’t wait for more info and the online content. I’m with you in prayer, cheering you on every step of the way!

    reply

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