The name, the thesis, the standard, the founders. Read this once. Use it as the reference whenever something gets built under the Lighthouse Voyages name.
A lighthouse is a fixed light. It does not move. It stands on the shore and shines through fog, storms, and dark nights. Sailors look for it and use it to find their way home. Without it, ships crash. With it, ships make it to land.
The word lighthouse first showed up in English in 1606. The idea behind it is much older — over 2,300 years old. The Pharos of Alexandria, built around 280 BC, was a lighthouse that stood about 350 feet tall. It was the tallest building on Earth for more than 1,500 years.
That is the energy the word carries: tall, strong, steady, and easy to see from a long way off.
A voyage is not just any trip. From the first time the word was used in 1300, voyage meant a journey with a purpose. A mission. A trip with a destination, planned and prepared for.
NASA named its two deepest space probes Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. They are the farthest human-made objects in space. Voyage is the word we use for the longest, most important journeys we ever make.
Operators come to us stuck in the middle of the ocean of business — no map, no direction, no light.
We give them the GPS. We guide them home.
They are not on aimless trips. They are on voyages. They have missions. They have destinations they are trying to reach. And they need the light.
The standard everything else is measured against. The light that does not move when conditions get hard.
We do not chase operators. We stand where they can see us, and we shine.
Lighthouse Voyages will hold a portfolio of operator-focused businesses across multiple industries over time — not just one product, not just one service, not just one industry.
The parent name does not tell you what is inside. It tells you the standard everything inside is held to. This is the founder model — a parent name as the container; the founder builds underneath it; the portfolio compounds over time.
Lighthouse Voyages was started by Carrington Pierre and his wife, Nimalu. Every business they have built was built together.
Lighthouse Voyages is the next one — the parent company that will hold the work for the long run. The brand grows as the founders grow. The container scales as more ventures get added.
Every ship in the fleet runs because of the crew. These are the operators, builders, and problem-solvers who keep the lighthouse running.
Operators ask good questions. Here are the ones we get most — answered the way we answer everything. Plain. Direct. No padding.
It is the parent company. A holding company built to be plural — it will hold a portfolio of operator-focused businesses over time. The parent name does not tell you what is inside. It tells you the standard everything inside is held to.
Lighthouse Voyages. The old name was a person. The new name is a company built to hold the work for the long run, with room for ventures that get built or acquired down the road.
Operators. People who run real businesses, find a way without permission, and want sharper maps, better capital, and a room of peers who are doing the same. If you are not generating revenue yet, this is not your next step.
Lighthouse Voyages is the parent — the lighthouse. LV Wayfinders is the community inside it — the harbor where operators dock and trade what they have learned. The lighthouse guides them in. The harbor is where they share the maps.
Today: Funding Advisory, Business Acceleration consulting, Agency Services, and the LV Wayfinders community. The full portfolio lives on the Ventures page. More ships get added as the work compounds.
Carrington Pierre and his wife, Nimalu. Every business they have built was built together. The brand grows as the founders grow.
No. Lighthouse Voyages provides education, advisory work, and community resources for operators. Nothing on this site is financial, legal, or investment advice. No income is guaranteed. Results depend on your work.
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