Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Work as flourishing in prison: The power of a ‘triple bottom line’ business
Work as flourishing in prison: The power of a ‘triple bottom line’ business
Nov 3, 2025 3:56 PM

For much of his life, Pete Ochs was a successful investment banker in Wichita, Kansas. Yet having started his own business and created significant wealth through a series of investments, he struggled to see the value and purpose of it all.

When the market took a turn for the worse, he realized that something needed to change. “After 9/11, our business dropped 50%, and I looked at God and said, ‘don’t you understand what I’ve done for you?’” he explains. “And [God] said, ‘Pete, I don’t want your money. I want your heart.’ And with that revelation, I said, ‘I’m really going to do business differently.’”

What came next can be seen in the pilot episode of Dealmakers, a new film series that highlights the challenges of faithful stewardship through the stories of individual business owners.Combining intimate interviews pelling on-site footage and storytelling, the film follows Pete as his obedience to God transforms his own ambivalence into an economic life defined by faith and flourishing.

You can watch the trailer below and rent or purchase it here.

Pursuing business with a “kingdom mindset” doesn’t necessarily mean adopting new or experimental business models, but for Pete, his calling came alive through a new approach that brought jobs and skills training to inmates in a maximum security prison.

Prior to the decision to fill jobs via the nearby prison, Pete had aligned his business and investment strategy around a “triple bottom line” mindset, focusing on the integration of economic, social, and spiritual capital. “Really, it centers around three things that we all have to have,” he explains. “One is food, clothing, and shelter; it’s called ‘economic capital’…So we needed to make money. The second thing we all need is all the stuff money can’t buy. I call that ‘social capital’; it’s the things that we do for mon good. And the last thing we need is a moral code by which to live. We need to know what’s right and wrong, and we call that ‘spiritual capital.’”

When an opportunity came to invest in Seat King, a struggling industrial pany, Pete saw the chance to apply his new, holistic approach.

Based in a small town in Kansas, Seat King was having a hard time attracting skilled labor, prompting Pete to consider a relocation to a nearby prison. “We had the theoretical model of economic, social, and spiritual capital,” he says. “But I’ll have to tell you that when we went inside the prison and saw the desert that that place was, it absolutely opened our eyes up as to what the possibilities could be.”

When operations began in the prison, Pete faced plenty of new challenges, but he also saw the transformative power of business in new and surprising ways, shifting his perspective not only toward the bottom line, but toward the employees and products under his stewardship. “Even though we had this philosophy, I think in the back of my mind I just viewed them [the prisoners] as an asset,” Pete explains. “But it didn’t take very many months until I saw them as people. They were people with the same needs, same stresses, same problems, and maybe even more.”

Although the typical wage for an inmate in Kansas is around 50 cents per day, Seat King petitive market-based wages, leading many to earn more than they would on the streets or parable positions in the marketplace. Yet as many of the prisoners testify throughout the documentary, the value and transformation they receive goes well beyond the ability to earn money or even learn new, transferable skills.

“I don’t want to leave behind a legacy of just being a murderer,” says one inmate of 22 years, imprisoned since he was 17. “I’m going to make an impact when I get out. I’m an artist, and that’s my goal in life. To not just be this.”For another, the job gave him a newfound respect and acknowledgment of his value and worth. “Here I am 37 years later, finally growing up as a man,” he says. “I can finally make my parents proud.”

The film, which runs about 35 minutes, includes a series of in-depth interviews with employees, each bringing their own personal story of redemption through work, human relationship, and value creation.Overall, it makes for a powerful portrait of the meaning that can be found in business, and showed Pete that, as a business owner, his task was higher and broader than the mere management of resources.

“At some point in time, we understood we weren’t the owners. We were the stewards,” he says. “…You can take more risk if you understand who the true owner is, but it takes a different way of looking at business.”

As Seat King continues to grow, Pete is already making plans to expand the model to other prisons. You can watch the film here.

Image: Dealmakers

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Oh, Give Me Something To Remember You By
The Acton Institute’s film “The Birth of Freedom” is a treat to watch again and again. But there is a rather dramatic effect towards the end of the film when the relationship of The Cathedral at Notre Dame and the cubist Grand Arche, located in the Parisienne arrondissementLa Defense but dedicated to humanitarian “ideals” rather than military victories, are contrasted with musical and cinematic styling that borders on being overdone. That is until you enter the world of National Public...
Psychologists confirm: Power corrupts
The Economist reports on a new study by psychologists that looks into the problem of abuse of power. The researchers attempt to “answer the question of whether power tends to corrupt, as Lord Acton’s dictum has it, or whether it merely attracts the corruptible.” These results, then, suggest that the powerful do indeed behave hypocritically, condemning the transgressions of others more than they condemn their own. es as no great surprise, although it is always nice to have everyday observation...
Bernanke bad for limited government and the little guy
This week’s reappointment vote for Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has created some strange bedfellows in Washington. A muddled middle of Republicans and Democrats supports the Keynesian’s reappointment, but the real odd couples are among the opposition. For different if overlapping reasons, free market proponents and far-left figures such as democratic-socialist Bernie Sanders of Vermont are both convinced that Bernanke has done much to hurt our economy, particularly those in the bottom half of our economy. Desmond Lachman of The Enterprise...
Gain by Honest Industry
Daren Fonda at Smart Money has a great primer on faith-based mutual funds, “Faith & Finance: A Boom in Religious Funds.” These kinds of funds can be understood as a slice of the broader sector of “socially responsible investing.” As Gregory R. Beabout and Kevin E. Schmeising wrote in 2003 (PDF), Over the last thirty years the phenomenon of socially responsible investing (SRI) has been changing the face of investment and corporate life, and carries with it the potential to...
Ineffective Compassion?
Writers on this blog have pointed to a lot of examples of passion when es to charity and public policy. But what can passion, or maybe just a passion, look like? The Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina Andre Bauer made ment saying government assistance programs for the poor was akin to “feeding stray animals.” I’m not highlighting ment just to bash Bauer and you can watch the clip where he clarifies ments. He continues in a follow up interview by...
Recall Aristide to Haiti? No way.
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the ex-president of Haiti who has lived lavishly in exile as a guest of the South African government for the past six years, recently announced he was ready to go back and help Haiti rebuild from its catastrophic earthquake. Allowing the former despot Aristide — a long time proponent of liberation theology — back into the country would be the worst thing we could do to Haiti right now. The American government must resist any move by Aristide...
A ‘reckless’ Green Patriarch?
Over at the American Orthodox Institute’s Observer blog, Fr. Hans Jacobse takes Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew to task for jumping on the global warming bandwagon: We warned the Ecumenical Patriarch that endorsing the global warming agenda was reckless. Anyone with eyes to see saw clearly that global warming (since renamed “climate change” — a harbinger that the effort might freeze over) was a political, not scientific, enterprise calculated to centralize the control of the economies of nation-states under bureaucracies. New evidence...
The Audacity of the Savior State
The current issue of Touchstone magazine features an impressive cover essay by Douglas Farrow, Professor of Christian Thought at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. In “The Audacity of the State,” Farrow uses the biblical Ichabod motif to examine the crumbling pillars of the family and church, which when properly respected form critical foundations for a flourishing society. In their place, writes Farrow, is the “savior state,” which “presents itself as the people’s guardian, as the guarantor of the citizen’s well-being....
Forgive us our deficits
This week’s mentary: As 2010 unfolds, many countries are confronting a public deficit crisis of disturbing proportions. Since 2008, countless politicians have underscored that a cavalier attitude to debt on the part of Main St. and Wall St. contributed significantly to the recent financial crisis. It’s therefore ironic to observe these contemporary preachers of thrift plunging developed economies into an abyss of public liabilities. In 2009, for example, the Obama Administration spent more money on new programs in nine months...
Fear the Boom and Bust — rappin’ with Hayek and Keynes
From Econstories.tv: In Fear the Boom and Bust, John Maynard Keynes and F. A. Hayek, two of the great economists of the 20th e back to life to attend an economics conference on the economic crisis. Before the conference begins, and at the insistence of Lord Keynes, they go out for a night on the town and sing about why there’s a “boom and bust” cycle in modern economies and good reason to fear it. Lyrics sample (written by John...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved