Last updated: February 2026
The short versionThe long-term plan for MyLog is to turn it into a nonprofit. The profits from every player unlock and every coach subscription will go toward scholarships, equipment grants, and league fees for kids whose families can't afford the rising cost of youth baseball and softball.When you buy MyLog, you're not just getting a development tool for your player. You're helping build something that will make the game more accessible for the next kid who loves it.For players, One-time purchase. No subscriptions. No ads. No selling your data.
And eventually, no profit going to anyone but the kids who need it most.---
WhyBaseball and softball have gotten expensive. Travel ball fees run thousands of dollars a season. Private lessons are sixty to a hundred dollars an hour. Bats, gloves, cleats, tournament fees, gas money to showcases — the real cost of playing at a competitive level puts the game out of reach for a lot of families who love it.That's not why these games exist. Baseball and softball are supposed to be the sports any kid can play. A ball, a bat, a glove, a field, and some friends. Somewhere along the way we built a pay-to-play ladder on top of that, and the kids at the bottom of it are the ones who get left behind.MyLog isn't going to fix that by itself. But if enough parents and coaches pay for a development tool that actually helps their player, and if enough of that money goes back into helping the kids who can't afford to play — that's a small thing worth building.---
How it'll actually workStarting from the first dollar MyLog earns, a portion of the revenue is being set aside for the future scholarship fund. MyLog is still early and the nonprofit structure is going to take time to set up properly — that's real legal work with accountants and lawyers, and we'd rather do it right than do it fast.From day one: a percentage of every player unlock and every coach subscription is earmarked for the scholarship fund, held in a dedicated account separate from MyLog's operating costs.As MyLog grows: the percentage grows with it. The goal isn't to maximize profit — it's to cover what it costs to keep MyLog running and send everything else to the kids.At the right scale: MyLog formally converts to a nonprofit structure, and 100% of profits go to scholarships, equipment grants, and league fees. Every dollar earned after operating costs goes back to the game.We'll be public about this as we go. When the nonprofit is formally set up, we'll share the legal structure. When money starts going to kids, we'll share how much and where. No smoke, no mirrors. If you're helping pay for it, you should be able to see exactly where it lands.---
The principle behind all of itMyLog exists to help kids get better at a game they love. Every decision about pricing, features, and the future comes back to that. We're not building a startup to flip. We're not running ads. We're not selling your kid's data. We're building a tool we'd want our own kid to use, and using what it earns to help kids who'd love to play but can't afford to.Track your game. See your growth. Help the next kid get on the field.---
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