Beyond the Event: How Unite Dallas Turns COPE into Collaboration
From Transaction to Connection
When Bill Beamon first stepped into a COPE training in 2016, he carried with him nearly two decades of corporate leadership experience — and his own lived experience of economic hardship.
He thought he understood poverty.
But that day shifted something.
“My experiences were valid,” Bill reflects, “but they were just mine. Poverty is far more diverse and complex than I ever thought.”
That moment began a new chapter — both in Bill’s personal journey and in the way Unite Dallas partners with communities across the metroplex.
A Tool That Brings People Together
Through partnership with Think Tank, Bill has facilitated hundreds of COPE experiences, inviting thousands of people into spaces of empathy, understanding, and connection. For him, COPE isn’t just about awareness. It’s about what happens afterward — when hearts open, assumptions soften, and collaboration begins.
Unite Dallas serves regions across the metroplex, bringing together churches, schools, nonprofits, and community leaders. Early on, Bill saw that COPE could be more than an event — it could be a space of convening.
When Unite begins work in a new area, they often start with COPE — bringing diverse stakeholders into one room to experience the realities of poverty together. The simulation creates proximity. It builds trust. And it invites shared responsibility.
“We don’t want COPE to be something we just did,” Bill explains. “We want it to stir collaboration beyond the room.”
Each experience ends with two questions:
What will you do differently now that you see differently?
What next step can you take, together?
That follow-up is where transformation begins — as communities move from transactional responses to relational engagement rooted in dignity and partnership.
Churches begin new collaborations. Schools find fresh ways to support families. Leaders gain perspective — and make space for others to lead alongside them.
For Bill, that movement from transaction to connection is what progress looks like.
Leading Through Lived Experience — and Humility
Over the years, Bill has seen COPE create sacred moments where people feel safe enough to share parts of their stories long kept private.
After one simulation with a school district, a principal shared how she began working at age 13 to support her family. In that room — one shaped by empathy and mutual understanding — she connected her own story with her leadership today.
“COPE gives voice to people who haven’t always felt heard,” Bill says. “It builds dignity.”
Despite facilitating hundreds of sessions, Bill reminds each group that he’s still learning.
“You’d think I’d know everything about poverty by now,” he smiles. “But every room teaches me something new.”
That humility — confident in purpose, open in posture — has helped Unite Dallas build trust across diverse spaces, including churches navigating complex cultural conversations. Rather than leading with critique, Bill offers an invitation: an opportunity to deepen the good already being done.
It’s a gentle approach. But it opens doors.
Rethinking Poverty — Together
For Unite Dallas, COPE has become a bridge — helping communities move from assumption to understanding, from isolation to connection, from knowing about poverty to learning with those who experience it.
For Bill, this work is no longer just part of his role. It’s part of his life. His family speaks the language of empathy and shared learning. His community feels the ripple effect of collaboration.
After a decade of partnership, one truth endures: rethinking poverty is not a one-time act — it’s a mindset of proximity, humility, and shared humanity.
And Bill continues to embody it — helping communities see differently, so together, they can act differently.