Early career After graduation, Dehlin worked for five years in software and as a consultant for
Bain & Company,
Arthur Andersen,
Citicorp, Heidrick & Struggles, and the LDS Church. He then worked at
Microsoft for seven years in programs for
developers,
marketing, speech technologies, and
product demos. Dehlin would serve two years as USU's OpenCourseWare Consortium Coordinator and Director of Outreach for the Center for Open and Sustainable Learning, promoting OpenCourseWare to other universities, and, in September 2005, Dehlin joined the board of directors and began a Sunstone podcast as well as
SunstoneBlog. In July 2007, he also became executive director of the Sunstone Education Foundation, in which he was to focus on strategic initiatives to strengthen Sunstone's position as an open forum for issues within the Latter-day Saint community. In that role, he increased organizational focus on its longstanding motto, "faith seeking understanding," and worked to attract new and younger membership. Dehlin resigned from Sunstone in January 2008.
Mormon Stories In September 2005, after experiencing doubts in his faith and subsequently finding reasons to remain a member of the LDS Church, Dehlin created the
Mormon Stories podcast as an open discussion of Latter-day Saint issues, intending to give listeners reasons to remain in the church. Through interviews,
Mormon Stories focused on varying religious experiences and perspectives.
Mormon Stories has been featured in many venues, including being broadcast on
KVNU in
Logan, Utah. Intermittently conflicted about continuing
Mormon Stories, Dehlin stopped and restarted the project a few times. In January 2010, Dehlin resumed the blog and podcast, focusing on faith crises and mental illness. The podcast has featured many notable guests, beginning with interviews of
Joanna Brooks and
John C. Hamer. Two other regular hosts joined Dehlin in conducting interviews for the podcast: Dan Wotherspoon, former editor of
Sunstone magazine; and Natasha Helfer Parker, a licensed clinical marriage and family therapist.
Open Stories Foundation The Open Stories Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization created in January 2011. Dehlin has been criticized for the lack of financial transparency and oversight in his
nonprofit umbrella organization, Open Stories Foundation. In 2022,
the Salt Lake Tribune reported several former employees of Open Stories Foundation filed a complaint with the
IRS alleging Dehlin and the foundation "'curated' its board membership to boost his compensation and blur lines between donations and personal expenses amid what they assert was lax supervision." According to nonprofit tax reports, Dehlin's personal annual compensation grew by more than 700% between 2010 and 2019. His annual compensation of $236,021 in 2019 represented 60% of Open Stories Foundation's total earnings from podcast revenues and donors. James Patterson, a former associate producer for Dehlin, wrote in his
whistleblower complaint to the IRS, that "Dehlin sees Open Stories Foundation as his and his alone, with an independent board of directors merely a roadblock to him achieving his personal financial goals."
Other blogs In June 2007, Dehlin started
Mormon Matters as a blog and weekly podcast. The format was a discussion panel on events, culture, politics and spirituality within the LDS Church. Panelists were to represent different sides of each issue, although the show later struggled to retain faithful Latter-day Saint panelists. In early 2008, Dehlin converted
Mormon Matters into a group blog and lessened emphasis on new podcast episodes. Dehlin resumed the
Mormon Matters podcast on March 5, 2011, with Dan Wotherspoon as the host and Joanna Brooks as a frequent co-host. Dehlin is also the co-founder of the pro-LGBTQ "Mormons for Marriage" website. He co-founded the now-defunct
Stay LDS, a community that was dedicated to helping "unorthodox Mormons" stay in the LDS Church. Dehlin briefly blogged at a non-partisan religion website, Patheos.com, in a current-issues/events dialogue format with
Mormon studies scholar
Patrick Q. Mason. ==LDS Church membership==