Meet Liesl, Our Content Manager
SPL is Very Online.
Our primary mission is to advance secular arguments against abortion, and we do that mainly by creating a lot of online content. In 2025 we published an e-book, wrote 160 blog articles, posted over 500 tweets, uploaded over 1,000 videos, and shared nearly 1,500 images. Creating content is one thing, but publishing different formats across different platforms focused on different subjects takes real focus and organization.
Historically I have handled most of content management in addition to creating the content in the first place, and also balancing the significant responsibilities of an Executive Director. It’s been a lot. As SPL has grown, I’ve been eager to identify a professional who can take over the major aspect of content management.
Meet Liesl Bohan.

Liesl first heard about SPL through a video we created with Live Action. Committed to the pro-life cause and seeking more meaningful work, she reached out to me as soon as she saw the job posting in our newsletter.
Liesl brings more than 15 years of experience in project coordination and multi-platform content management. She is incredibly detail oriented and organized (we share a love of spreadsheets). She’s previously worked with universities and nonprofits, and she’s also run her own content and design business for years. She’s built websites, created ads, and adhered to complex publication schedules. And it shows.
Since Liesl joined our team in early 2025, our content views have gone way up: while we had almost 13 million views in 2024, we had more than 24 million in 2025. This would be worth celebrating in any case, but I am particularly grateful because that increase coincided with me dramatically stepping back from content management as Liesl took over. She’s taken so much off of my plate and our metrics have only improved!
Liesl’s work is behind-the-scenes, but absolutely crucial. She oversees our primary form of communication (online content) and frees the rest of our team to focus more on dismantling stereotypes, debunking pro-choice myths, and coordinating our many volunteers.
People think of social justice work and they think of provocative protests, lobbying politicians, and other front-facing confrontations. But a lot of the work is in the less flashy background, keeping projects organized and processes running smoothly. Liesl keeps us running. If you have a heart for the behind-the-scenes folks, support her role today:


