Today, more than one in five children live in poverty and the numbers are rising.

Similar documents
Grantee Perception Report. Prepared for Ford Foundation November 2017

The Prudential Foundation s mission is to promote strong communities and improve social outcomes for residents in the places where we work and live.

Remarks by Paul Carttar at the Social Impact Exchange s Conference on Scaling Impact June 14, 2012

How Can Grantmakers Aggregate Resources to Grow Impact?

Philanthropic Investment in Minority-Led Nonprofits

Stewardship Principles for Corporate Grantmakers

FOUNDATION GROWTH AND GIVING ESTIMATES

REQUEST FOR INTEREST. Proposed Imperial County Health & Wellness Fund

Tahoe Truckee Community Foundation (TTCF) President and CEO Position Description

FOUNDATION GROWTH AND GIVING ESTIMATES

Strategic Plan

Request for Proposals. Safety-Net Services: Food and Shelter

Report on 2016 Direct Charitable Activities

...a little girl from Columbus, Georgia...

MORE THAN GRANTMAKING

Message from our leaders

Donors Collaboratives for Educational Improvement. A Report for Fundación Flamboyán. Janice Petrovich, Ed.D.

Report on Weingart Foundation s Grantmaking to Nonprofit Organizations Based in the Inland Empire. Executive Summary November, 2013

11/6/2013. CASE Webinar. Corporate and Foundation Relations: Top Trends

KEY FACTS ON COMMUNITY FOUNDATIONS

Following the Money. for Community and Economic Development Policy Summit on Housing, Human Capital, and Inequality July 22, 2017.

Mission. Articulating the Problem STRATEGIC PLAN

Expanding opportunity for the people of California.

Social Sector Innovation Funds

REFLECTIONS ON PHILANTHROPY FROM THE 2017 PHILANTHROPY INNOVATION SUMMIT

[ ] part of my responsibility is to be an ambassador for giving Report on Philanthropy Development Outcomes

THE PHILANTHROPIC LANDSCAPE

Impact Guidance Letter: Connected to Education and Job Training

STRATEGIC PLAN 1125 SOUTH 103RD STREET SUITE 500 OMAHA, NE PETERKIEWITFOUNDATION.ORG

Between 2001 and 2004, the Ms.

CONNECTING DREAMS. Truman Heartland Community Foundation

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

I. Background. Request for Proposals Camden Food Innovation Grants. Release Date: Monday, December 21, Proposals Due: Friday, February 5, 2016

FOUNDATION GROWTH AND GIVING ESTIMATES

The New York Women s Foundation

Opportunities Fund INCLUSIVE LOCAL ECONOMIES. 2017/2018 Program Guidelines METCALF FOUNDATION. We focus our efforts on three areas:

OPERATING PRINCIPLES. Strengthening Nonprofit Organizations. Approaching Grants as Investments. Leveraging Resources

principles for effective education grantmaking

VIBRANT. Strategic Plan Executive Summary

The Nonprofit Marketplace Bridging the Information Gap in Philanthropy. Executive Summary

ABOUT THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION FOR GREATER ATLANTA

FUNDING COHORTS. Microsoft Silicon Valley 2014 YouthSpark Cohort Program. A Summary Report

GRANT SEEKER GUIDEBOOK

Creating Philanthropy Initiatives to Enhance Community Vitality

First Fundraising Strategies for Startup Organizations

Grant Awards are Subject to the Availability of Funding Current Grantees are Eligible to Apply Under this Grant

RESOURCES GRANTS AND GRANTMAKERS

Sustainable Funding for Healthy Communities Local Health Trusts: Structures to Support Local Coordination of Funds

Shared Intelligence for the Greater Good: Plan for

2015 Lasting Change. Organizational Effectiveness Program. Outcomes and impact of organizational effectiveness grants one year after completion

Insights Into How Foundations Make Grant Decisions

Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country Community Impact Fund 2018 Grant Guidelines

Principal Skoll Awards and Community

Community Capacity Building Program 2015 Request for Proposals

1 P a g e. Strategic Plan

Exclusions Within our three areas of interest, the Charitable Fund will not consider:

Measuring Constituent Engagement to Drive Nonprofit Success

COLLECTIVE IMPACT: VENTURING ON AN UNFAMILIAR ROAD

Inclusive Local Economies Program Guidelines

Coalition for New Philanthropy

Community Foundations: Key Players in Rural Development

BRINGING PAY FOR SUCCESS FINANCING TO SOUTH CAROLINA: RESULTS OF A FEASIBILITY STUDY

United Way of Central New Mexico

THE ROLE AND VALUE OF THE PACKARD FOUNDATION S COMMUNICATIONS: KEY INSIGHTS FROM GRANTEES SEPTEMBER 2016

COMMUNITY GRANTS PROGRAM 2018 GUIDELINES FOR NONPROFITS

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

The Importance of a Major Gifts Program and How to Build One

Using the Community Foundation Centennial Portfolio

An Essay in Two Parts. Total Foundation Asset Management: Exploring Elements of Engagement Within Philanthropic Practice

About Social Venture Partners and Our Investment Process

Principal Investigators. Successfully Tapping Unusual Sources of Research Funding. Association. Presented by: Tia Cavender, MA, GPC

CENTRAL INDIANA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION GRANT SEEKER S GUIDEBOOK

The financing, delivery and effectiveness of programs to reduce homelessness

Family and Community Support Services (FCSS) Program Review

Assessment of Capacity Building to Strengthen New Mexico s Nonprofit Sector

Mike Bell, President Mike Bell & Associates, LLC Advisors in Philanthropy.

Funding, Funding, Funding!

The Community Foundation Difference

Foundation Resource Guide: A Compilation of Major Foundations That Sponsor Activities Relevant to College-Community Partnerships

Forms and Guidance. A. Uniform Grant Application Cover Sheet. Contents: Uniform Grant Application Cover Sheet

Grant Guidelines. 4. Is this the best possible use of Citi Foundation funds given other opportunities before us?

JPMorgan Chase Giving Tuesday Program Rules

Consumer Health Foundation

TEACHING NOTE FOR JOHN AND MARCIA GOLDMAN FOUNDATION

Financial Stability Request for Proposal. RFP 2: Youth Financial Literacy

Asset Building Grants

US Virgin Islands. Current situation: Facts and figures from the 2010 CF-GSR survey

GLOBAL GRANTS BREAKDOWN. 1.2 million Rotary Members. A rating from Charity Watch, ,000 Rotary Clubs

ocume Lambeth Community Fund Fund guidelines

Funding your Collective Impact Effort: The Basics. Emily Jensen, Lead Development Officer The Forum for Youth Investment

Statement of Guiding Principles

GRANTS PROGRAM GUIDELINES AND POLICIES

CAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION CAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION STRATEGIC PLAN

Youth Service Improvement Grants

Ten Ideas for Grants (Descriptions included on Following Pages)

RULES FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE COLORADO OPPORTUNITY SCHOLARSHIP INITIATIVE

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS The Massachusetts Juvenile Justice Pay for Success Initiative Revised December 16, 2014

GRANT GUIDELINES: 2018 GRANT CYCLE HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES

Alfred E. Mann Foundation for Biomedical Engineering

MEMBER & COMMUNITY INVESTMENT

Transcription:

The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation seeks to transform the life prospects of impoverished and vulnerable youth. We make large, long-term investments, frequently partnering with other funders, to expand programs with compelling evidence they can help more young people become successful adults. Today, more than one in five children live in poverty and the numbers are rising. Nearly one in three public school students fails to graduate from high school, while many are unable to attain meaningful employment. And one in four young people aging out of foster care becomes homeless at some point. Though the problems confronting these youth may seem intractable, we believe solutions exist. Our Investment Approach uses a comprehensive, competitive and rigorous process to identify, assess and invest in high-performing organizations that help economically disadvantaged youth, ages 9 24, get an education, find a good job, and stay out of trouble such as teen pregnancy or crime. Our goal: to dramatically expand the numbers of vulnerable youth served by effective programs that make a real and enduring difference in their lives. Yet we know the sums currently invested in programs that work are dwarfed by the enormity of the challenges facing these young people, and to meet them will take more resources and expertise than any one funder can provide. That s why we pioneered in 2007 a new form of coordinated, collaborative invest ment we call Growth Capital Aggre gation. This approach drives significantly greater resources to the most promising organizations those with the greatest potential for growth and the strongest evidence of their programs effectiveness. Such investment helps these nonprofits expand and enable more young people to become productive adults who contribute to their communities and the economy. PAGE 1 OF 7

OUR CURRENT GRANTEES BELL (Building Educated Leaders for Life) CAS Carrera Center for Employment Opportunities Children s Home Society of NC Children s Institute, Inc. Citizen Schools Communities In Schools First Place for Youth Gateway to College National Network Good Shepherd Services Harlem Children s Zone Hillside Work-Scholarship Connection National Guard Youth ChalleNGe Program Nurse-Family Partnership PACE Center for Girls Reading Partners SEED Foundation Youth Villages OUR CO-INVESTING PARTNERS ArcLight Capital The Atlantic Philanthropies Andrew and Melora Balson Bank of American Charitable Foundation Josh and Anita Bekenstein Mike Bruns Caithness Energy Carnegie Corporation of New York The Annie E. Casey Foundation Day Foundation Deerbrook Charitable Trust Stanley Druckenmiller The Duke Endowment FedEx Corporation Paul and Phyllis Fireman Charitable Foundation Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation GreenLight Fund The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Jenesis Group Robert Wood Johnson Foundation The JPB Foundation George Kaiser Family Foundation W.K. Kellogg Foundation The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation The Koogle Foundation, a donor-advised fund at Silicon Valley Community Foundation The Kresge Foundation The Lovett-Woodsum Foundation Open Society Foundations The Penzance Foundation The Picower Foundation Dan and Lise Revers The Robertson Foundation Arthur and Rebecca Samberg The Samberg Family Foundation The Schusterman Family Foundation Skoll Foundation The Starr Foundation Strategic Grant Partners Tipping Point Community The Wallace Foundation Weingart Foundation Citizen Schools Board of Directors Harlem Children s Zone Board of Directors Nurse-Family Partnership Board of Directors Youth Villages Board of Directors Anonymous PAGE 2 OF 7

WHAT WE VE ACCOMPLISHED Since 2000, EMCF has invested $333 million in 42 grantees, helping these organizations reach approximately 61,735 additional youth annually. MORE YOUTH SERVED On average, during the period of EMCF s investment grantees increased the number of youth they served by 244 percent, with an average compound annual growth rate of 19.3 percent. In 2012, EMCF s 18 current grantees served more than 140,600 young people, ages 9 24, in 49 states, Washington DC and Puerto Rico. STRONGER ORGANIZATIONS EMCF has helped its grantees increase their annual operating budgets by a total of $473.7 million. On average, during the period of EMCF s investment grantees increased their revenues by 249 percent, with an average compound annual growth rate of 23.1 percent. EMCF s current grantees earned a total of more than $768 million in revenue in FY 2012, an increase of 11 percent over the previous fiscal year. GREATER EVIDENCE OF OUTCOMES Our grantees have progressed toward ever more rigorous evaluation of their programs effectiveness. Sixteen of our current 18 grantees have completed or are currently undertaking experimental or quasi-experimental evaluations. Eight have already proven the effectiveness of their programs by meeting the most rigorous empirical standard, while one has demonstrated its program s effectiveness by reaching the next-highest level of evidence. Since 2000, the proportion of young people benefiting from EMCF-supported programs validated by independent research has risen from zero to 64 percent. MORE GROWTH CAPITAL Since 2007, EMCF has leveraged $105 million of its own resources to help 13 grantees secure $249 million in growth capital from 46 philanthropic co-investors, and $30 million from the federal Social Innovation Fund. PAGE 3 OF 7

ABOUT EMCF S INVESTMENT APPROACH We identify and invest in organizations that have outstanding leadership, strong evidence of their impact on youth, and the potential to expand significantly. BEFORE THE INVESTMENT OUR SELECTION PROCESS First and foremost, EMCF seeks to select well among the promising nonprofits that make a meaningful difference in the lives of disadvantaged youth. When we consider invest ment opportunities, we look for: A service or program with empirical evidence of its impact on youth Strong leadership and a vision for growth Commitment to measuring and evaluating performance Financial and operational capacity to expand Preliminary Review We begin by conducting extensive research to identify promising nonprofits and broaden our search by consulting experts in youth development, other foundations and nonprofits, and local groups. A preliminary assessment determines whether EMCF s investment approach might help an organization expand to greater scale. If this assessment is encouraging, the organization proceeds to due diligence. Due Diligence We consider due diligence the heart of our work, and spend hundreds of hours poring over every aspect of a prospective grantee s program and operations to be confident an EMCF investment will benefit the organization and vulnerable youth. Competitive Review A competitive review of every investment opportunity compares it to other oppor tunities under consideration as well as to investments already in our portfolio. This helps us decide whether investing in a new organization and also whether continuing to invest in a current grantee will put to best use the Foundation s resources and have the greatest impact on disadvantaged youth. PAGE 4 OF 7

THE FOUR COMPONENTS OF OUR INVESTMENT APPROACH Once we select grantees, we strive to invest well. We invest on the basis of sound business planning, we provide growth capital to help implement a plan, and we hold a grantee accountable for executing the plan by measuring its performance. Our investments help build the evidence base and organizational capacity grantees need to improve, expand and sustain their operations at greater scale. Augmenting our financial support, we try to support well. Our investment approach incorporates four major components: Growth Capital Our multimillion-dollar investments consist of flexible growth capital that a nonprofit can use to strengthen its organizational capacity and the evidence of its program s effectiveness. By aggregating growth capital, we help an increasing number of grantees secure upfront all the resources they need to execute their business plans. Business Planning EMCF helps grantees think strategically about their needs and develop sound plans to achieve their growth, evaluation and quality goals. Relationship Management and Support We augment our financial resources with the strategic counsel of an experienced EMCF portfolio manager who can also provide access to technical assistance. Measuring Performance All our investments are structured so that payout depends on a grantee s progress toward goals that are the terms of our investment. This progress is quantified by mutually agreed-upon performance measures that reflect the goals set during business planning. PAGE 5 OF 7

ABOUT GROWTH CAPITAL AGGREGATION In 2007, the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation pioneered a new approach to amassing and directing growth capital to its grantees. We call this form of coordinated, collaborative investment growth capital aggregation. We hope this approach will influence philanthropy and public policy toward even greater good. Although many of the features that distinguish growth capital aggregation are not without precedent, we believe their combination is unusual and holds great promise for disadvantaged youth and great advantages for the investors and nonprofits that champion them. Capital aggregation adds three elements to EMCF s investment approach: 1. Flexible Growth Capital EMCF leverages its resources with those of co-investors whose commitments we help to secure, providing upfront not just some but all of the flexible growth capital a grantee needs to achieve its plans to expand to scale. 2. Structured Collaborative Investment A structured collaborative investment unites co-investors and grantees behind common goals: All co-investors fund a single plan for growth. All co-investors and the grantee agree to the same terms and conditions of investment, performance measures, reporting and payout. All co-investors share learning with each other and the public. 3. Co-investor Community and Collaboration The network of co-investors amplifies aggregated capital with the power of partnership: Co-investors assist grantees with expertise and exposure. Co-investors help each other with knowledge and networking. Co-investors seek to promote a funding and policy environment more favorable to evidence-based programs. PAGE 6 OF 7

TWO MODES OF GROWTH CAPITAL AGGREGATION Growth capital aggregation is evolving, and EMCF currently implements it in two different forms: 1. Investing in Individual Grantees We are partnering in four investments in single grantees: Citizen Schools (total investment: $48.8M) Harlem Children s Zone ($80M) Nurse-Family Partnership ($50M) Youth Villages ($85M) 2. Investing in a Portfolio of Grantees In 2011, we introduced an alternative approach by establishing the True North Fund, aggregating $120 million in capital to support a portfolio of nine organizations selected by EMCF to receive Social Innovation Fund grants. We will add 3 5 more grantees to this portfolio in June 2013. 415 MADISON AVENUE 10TH FLOOR NEW YORK, NY 10017 617-282-1567 WWW.EMCF.ORG PAGE 7 OF 7