Social Entrepreneurship Nomination and Selection

The nomination period for the 2010 awards ended on March 19th. Winners will be notified later this summer.
Nominations for the 2011 Social Entrepreneurship Awards will be accepted beginning in January 2011.

Each year, the Manhattan Institute presents the William E. Simon Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Social Entrepreneurship, a $100,000 prize, and up to five Awards for Innovation in Social Entrepreneurship at a value of $25,000 each. Please note that beginning in 2010, the nomination process for the William E. Simon Prize is separate from that for the Awards for Innovation in Social Entrepreneurship.

Nominations may be submitted by anyone familiar with a person's or group's activities except for a current employee of that person or group. All nominations must be submitted through the online form—the link to which will be found here.

Applicant organizations are assessed according to the following criteria:

  • Energetic founding leaders;
  • Strong vision;
  • Committed volunteers;
  • Creative, entrepreneurial ways of conceiving and meeting goals;
  • Significant private sector financial support;
  • Sustainability or permanence;
  • Clear, measurable results;
  • Commitment to sustaining the vitality of civil society.

All nominations are submitted to the Social Entrepreneurship Selection Committee. After review and discussion, the Committee selects a small group (up to ten) as finalists. A representative of the Manhattan Institute visits each of these finalists. The Committee then makes the final selections based on their site visits.

Recognition is reserved for those organizations whose guiding purpose and function stem from private initiatives and ideas. However, accepting government funds does not, in itself, preclude consideration.

The award recognizes the creative energy of the nonprofit sector by highlighting new ideas and approaches even by mature organizations.
Any nonprofit organization that provides a direct service within the continental United States to address a public problem can be nominated for this award.

Examples of the types of organizations we want to recognize include:

  • Private social service groups that assist poor families with housing, health care, job training, and other similar needs;
  • Reformative organizations that help people cope with moral or psychological problems, such as drug addiction or criminal behavior;
  • Education groups that, through mentoring, counseling, or other after-school programs improve children's educational achievement and possibilities;
  • Community groups that improve the quality-of-life in their neighborhoods;
  • Conservancies that use private donations from corporations or individuals to purchase land and preserve it from development.

Nonprofit organizations that engage in political advocacy or that bring legal actions, or whose primary activities are in response to government RFPs are not eligible for this award, nor are individual charter or private schools.

Selection Committee Members

In addition to Manhattan Institute President Lawrence Mone and Vice-President Howard Husock, the social entrepreneurship award selection committee includes the following members, who cast votes for both the $100,000 Simon Prize and the annual, $25,000 awards:

  • Anne Marie Burgoyne, Portfolio Director, Draper Richards Foundation, San Francisco, CA;
  • Cheryl Keller, Foundation Consultant, Rye, NY;
  • Leslie Lenkowsky, Professor of Public Affairs and Philanthropic Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN;
  • Adam Meyerson, President, the Philanthropy Roundtable, Washington, D.C.;
  • Sheila Mulcahy, Consultant, William E. Simon Foundation, New York, NY;
  • William Schambra, Director, Bradley Center for Philanthropy and Civic Renewal, Hudson Institute, Washington, D.C.




 

 

 

 

 

 

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