Ecosystem fit
How HelpSignal Fits Alongside Existing Tools
Different from, not in competition with, and open to collaboration and integration.
Every tool below does a job the community needs, and HelpSignal does not do those jobs. HelpSignal does one narrow thing none of them were built for: a public, provider-updated status layer across urgent local resources. Where it makes sense, we would rather integrate with these tools than duplicate them.
211 and information lines
They do: Provide referral navigation by phone, text, and web, with trained specialists and broad service coverage.
HelpSignal adds: A public at-a-glance status for listed resources, Available, Limited, Full, or Call First, with a last-updated timestamp.
Together: 211 owns referral navigation; HelpSignal adds the public status layer on top of it.
Volunteer-driven resource apps and directories
They do: Provide broad, volunteer-driven resource listings with wide coverage and provider self-listing.
HelpSignal adds: A locally operated model with an administrator who verifies listings, chases stale statuses, and resolves outdated-information reports.
Together: Directories solve breadth; HelpSignal solves freshness and accountability in one community.
Findhelp, Unite Us, and closed-loop referral tools
They do: Provide enterprise-scale directories, closed-loop referrals, and integrations with health systems and payers.
HelpSignal adds: A lightweight public front door with no login and no referral workflow, asking providers for seconds rather than a platform adoption.
Together: HelpSignal can be the no-account public status layer above an existing referral platform, not a replacement for it.
HMIS, coordinated entry, and bed boards
They do: Provide client-level coordination, housing prioritization, HUD reporting, and internal staff-facing bed and unit management.
HelpSignal adds: A public-facing view with zero client data: should I call, come in, or try elsewhere today.
Together: No integration is required to start because HelpSignal holds no client records; any future capacity signal is opt-in.
DVBeds and protected-category systems
They do: Provide deep, secure, advocate-facing availability within sensitive categories such as domestic violence shelter.
HelpSignal adds: Breadth across everyday urgent needs in a public view, while never displaying sensitive locations.
Together: Specialized tools own protected categories; HelpSignal covers the public daily-needs layer.
Static community directories
They do: Provide trusted, comprehensive local listings maintained by community institutions.
HelpSignal adds: Freshness: a static guide cannot show that bus passes ran out at 11 AM or that a warming center activated tonight.
Together: Static directories are a natural seed source for HelpSignal listings, and HelpSignal can link back to the full directory for breadth.
Sensitive locations, including domestic violence shelters, are never displayed on HelpSignal.
In one sentence
Directories and referral systems show where help may exist. HelpSignal shows the latest provider-updated public status, and it is built to plug into the ecosystem, not replace any part of it.
HelpSignal does not replace HMIS, coordinated entry, 211, provider intake, or case management. It complements existing systems by adding a public-facing status layer for local urgent resources.