This month marked the culmination of the Women’s Fund’s first grants cycle centered in racial equity. Last fall Women’s Fund investors, nonprofit leaders, and members of our community participated in workshops and focus groups to help us refine our process and take an intersectional approach (gender and race) to our grantmaking.
The results of this feedback were substantial. To center our work in equity, we:
- Streamlined the application process, increased transparency, and eliminated barriers to applying. This meant a shorter application, publishing scoring criteria ahead of submission, fewer attachments and budget requirements, and allowing applicants to apply across multiple impact areas.
- We also incorporated community voice in the decision-making process. For the first time, the grants were reviewed and voted on by both Women’s Fund investors and community reviewers, who were provided a stipend for sharing their expertise.
- We made efforts to address implicit bias – both by offering training for all grants reviewers as well as refining the voting process. To curb implicit bias, identifying information was removed in the final vote.
- The Women’s Fund also made flexible, multi-year funding available to a broader portfolio of grant partners. By providing general operating support grants to all 20 of our semifinalists, we are listening to the needs of nonprofit leaders and supporting more organizations across our community.
- And finally, we launched a new funding opportunity focused on women’s health. This new grant increased our impact and is focused on reducing health disparities faced by women of color.
It was our hope and intention that implementing process changes could lead to more equitable outcomes. And while this is the first year we’ve officially collected this kind of data, anecdotally we have observed progress in our ability to engage a more diverse group of grants reviewers in funding organizations led by women of color.
This year all 20 semifinalists are receiving a grant from the Women’s Fund. Of the 20 organizations in this year’s grants portfolio: