Team

Pam Wuichet
Founder & Senior Partner, Atlanta
Pam Wuichet has more than 25 years of fundraising experience and a passion for working on ventures that bridge the public and private sectors, deliver a more comprehensive solution to a complex social issue and leverage new and existing resources.
Pam provides the strategic direction for Project Resource Group and management leadership to all partners and other stakeholders in our firm.
She provides oversight for product development and deliverables for the full range of our clients and leads selected client engagements. Her fundraising and program development experience is particularly strong in working with professionally staffed foundations and a myriad of global health institutions. On a local and personal level, Pam is involved in her community with a nationally recognized youth development program, Moving in the Spirit, which uses dance to positively transform the lives of inner city youth and whose teen members have achieved a 100% high school graduation rate for the last five years. Sustainable living is very much a part of her and her husband's lives (he is an accomplished professional photographer whose work is featured on this site), as evidenced by their support of food cooperatives and eco-friendly living and development.
Prior to founding Project Resource Group, Pam served as Director of Development for The Carter Center and also for The Task Force for Global Health. With both organizations, she worked closely with board members, senior management, and program directors to develop as well as market new initiatives, particularly in the area of neglected diseases. To further this work, she traveled extensively within Africa, Latin America, Europe and Asia to cultivate donor and program partnerships. Previously Pam held the position of Associate Vice President for Corporate and Foundation Relations at Emory University and initiated the Foundation Relations Office at Rollins College in Florida. She has served as a faculty member for Proposal Writing Institutes sponsored by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, and as a member of grant review panels for the National Endowment for the Humanities. She wrote the chapter on collaboration and fundraising for Foundation Fund Raising: Challenges and Solutions, which was published in 2001 by Jossey-Bass. Pam received her B.A. in Art History from Mary Washington College.





