After assessing your fit through the Organizational Readiness Tool, you must register your organization by Thursday, August 15, 2024 at 5:00 PM U.S. Central Time. Any organization or legal entity, except for government agencies, can apply. Multiple organizations may collaborate on a single application.
Once you’ve registered for 100&Change, complete and submit your application by Thursday, September 5, 2024 at 5:00 PM U.S. Central Time. Describe an urgent, significant problem and propose a bold and lasting solution. Your idea can come from any field or sector, but the solution must be impactful, evidence-based, feasible, durable, and just.
Each valid application will be scored using a common rubric and will receive feedback from five fellow applicants within the same domain. Based on the rank order of scores, up to 500 applications will move forward.
Up to 500 applications will receive an additional set of five scores and comments from our Wise Head Panel who will use a common rubric.
Seven years ago, we set out to do something bold and different, launching the first round of 100&Change. Now, we are launching the third cycle to help address another of the world’s most critical issues.
By funding 100&Change at a level far above what is typical in philanthropy, we seek to address problems and support solutions that are radically different in scale, scope, and complexity. We believe $100 million can enable real progress toward a meaningful and lasting solution to a critical problem of our time.
The first and second rounds of 100&Change offered opportunities for learning. An evaluation of the selection process from the inaugural competition informed changes to the selection process for the 2020 award recipient.
In the second round, we created an organizational readiness tool to help potential applicants determine their readiness to compete in 100&Change. We added a participatory review process, where applicants within the same domain scored and provided feedback on each other’s proposals.
Proposals experienced a drop in the number of applications compared to the inaugural competition, 755 in 2021 vs. 1,904 in 2017 due to the introduction of the organizational readiness tool and a peer-to-peer review before the Wise Head Panel review. We believe that the new organizational readiness tool helped eliminate projects that were not a good fit for 100&Change, and we will continue to use it.
For the third round of the competition, we revisited the application criteria to align with MacArthur’s Just Imperative rooted in the value of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.
As a result, we have added “just” as a criterion. In doing so, we sought to frame the five criteria as a whole so that any applicant can see their project reflected. We ask applicants to demonstrate a commitment to equity, inclusion, and accessibility and provide a solution that benefits different populations equitably. We believe there is no topic that is exempt or excluded from these commitments, and so this criterion is not a barrier to entry.
These changes are intended to provide an enhanced level of feedback and ensure that all applicants benefit at each stage of the competition.
Lever for Change was born of the success of the MacArthur’s 100&Change competition, which awarded its first $100 million grant in 2017 and leveraged an additional $511 million to date in funding, thus spurring the philanthropic sector to rethink its approach to achieving impact at scale.
Founded in 2019 as a nonprofit affiliate of the MacArthur Foundation with the goal of driving $1 billion in philanthropic funding to bold solutions by 2023, Lever for Change has influenced more than $1.7 billion in awards and provided support to more than 175 organizations to date.
Lever for Change is dedicated to tackling the world’s biggest problems—including issues like racial inequity, gender inequality, lack of access to economic opportunity, and climate change. By matching donors with problem solvers—through customized challenges and tailored funding opportunities—Lever for Change helps to find and fund bold, effective solutions to accelerate social change.
What is unique about 100&Change is its focus on problems and their solutions, and the requirement that proposals address both. It is also unique because no single field or problem area is designated, unlike most prizes and challenges, and proposals from all sectors and anywhere in the world are encouraged.
Working with philanthropic and nonprofit partners and others, Lever for Change is creating new infrastructure to allow willing and interested funders to explore ideas excluded from consideration by “invite only” policies regarding proposals.
The openness and transparency of the 100&Change application process are also distinctive. Applicants know exactly what they are being scored on, and every applicant receives meaningful feedback on their proposal from our Wise Head Panel. The process provides vital feedback—and useful public visibility—to applicants, even if they do not ultimately receive the grant.
We considered three different models.
The first was a crowdsourcing model. We liked the idea of people proposing which problems to solve and having a crowd vote whether a proposal is meaningful or compelling. But we did not want 100&Change to turn into a popularity contest.
The second approach was the specialists’ panel model, where we would define a field of work and then identify experts to evaluate applications. There was a sense, however, that experts in a certain field tend to struggle with new ideas that come from outside of their discipline.
What we realized is crowds provide a way to take more risks and innovate. And the wisdom of experts is important. So, we decided to create a crowd of wise experts. We refer to them as our Wise Head Panel. We will randomly assign proposals to them and ask them to score proposals based on their broad knowledge. Each application that advances past Participatory Review will be reviewed by a minimum of five Wise Heads.
Since the inaugural round of 100&Change, we have worked with an evaluation panel of 699 Wise Heads, including thinkers, visionaries, and experts in fields that included education, public health, impact investing, technology, the sciences, the arts, and human rights.