In 2016, Digital Impact awarded nearly $275,000 in grants to six projects spearheaded by US nonprofits and universities to build a higher impact social sector founded in responsible digital data use and infrastructure.
The selected projects represent the first cohort of grantees for the grants program, which launched in June 2016 with the support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The program aims to advance the role of digital data and infrastructure for improving decision-making in philanthropy and in the social sector writ large. Awards ranged from $12,000 to $100,000 and funded new and ongoing innovation and research in 2017.
Standardizing Resource Data APIs
Project Page
"We will develop an open specification for resource directory APIs — enabling institutions to publish interoperable data about the health, human, and social services available to people in need."
Good Data Collaborative
Project Page
"The Good Data Collaborative seeks to identify gaps in resources to assist civil society in using data responsibly through distinct activities: a landscape assessment of existing tools and resources, as well as academic literature; a consultation with key stakeholders and current and potential users of the resources; and a redesigned, central repository of resources to help them address responsible data challenges in their work."
“We’re excited to work with this inaugural cohort to see what we can learn and achieve for the benefit of the entire social sector,” said Lucy Bernholz, Senior Research Scholar at Stanford PACS and Director of its Digital Civil Society Lab. “We’re very encouraged by the response to the program and hope to leverage its outcomes to spur additional innovation, collaboration, knowledge building, and funding. We want these grants to catalyze a real shift toward digital data use and infrastructure that is not only effective but safe and responsible in supporting social impact.”
Grantees will use funds to develop research, prototypes, and shared learning that can help donors and social sector organizations use digital data safely, ethically, and effectively to improve their work. All work supported by these grants will be publicly shared and geared toward improving practice in the field. Grantees will attend the upcoming Data on Purpose conference at Stanford University on February 7-8, 2017, and they will present the outcomes of their work to the Stanford community in 2018.
The first grant cycle generated 74 applications from organizations in 49 cities across 25 states, including 64 applications for innovation grants and 10 for research grants. The total amount of funding requested was $2,786,175. The smallest request was $1,000 and the largest was $160,000. Ninety-six percent of applicants agreed to share some aspects of their project proposals publicly. Digital Impact has shared an interactive data visualization of the projects and ideas proposed through the first grant cycle, and will add to it through future cycles with the goal of spurring additional collaboration, ideation, and investment in the field. View a list of 2016 applicants who agreed to share details about their projects here.