TheSkoll Foundation is an Americanprivate foundation based inPalo Alto,California.[3] The foundation makes grants and investments intended to reduce global poverty. It was founded byJeffrey Skoll in 1999.[4] The total assets of the foundation (including its affiliated funds) amount to $1.127 billion as of 2018.[5] The combined entities madegrants totaling about $71 million in 2018 (and disbursements of $56 million), based on unaudited numbers reported by the foundation.[5] According to the most recent audited financial statements, the non-grant expenses for the foundation totaled around $17 million in 2018.[2]
Skoll set up the foundation in 1999 to fundsocial entrepreneurship[6] through awards, grants and educational programs atOxford andHarvard Universities.[7] Skoll, the first president ofeBay, created the Skoll Foundation after setting up the eBay Foundation.[8][9]
In 2001, Skoll hiredSally Osberg, formerly the founding executive director of theChildren's Discovery Museum of San Jose.[10] Osberg was the foundation's first employee, president and CEO. Osberg claims that she led the organization through its startup, implementation and renewal phases. Osberg and her colleagues set up platforms to connect civil society members with private and public sector leaders. These platforms included partnerships withSundance Festival and Oxford'sSaïd Business School.[11]
In 2003, Skoll established the private Skoll Foundation. The two entities, which have distinct governing bodies but share staff and offices, together operate the foundation's grantmaking and other programs.[12]
In April 2017, Osberg announced plans to step down from the role of CEO.[13]
In 2018, Richard Fahey assumed the role of interim president after 14 years of executive leadership at the foundation.[14] In February 2019,Donald Gips was appointed as the foundation's CEO. Formerly, Gips served as the U.S. Ambassador to theRepublic of South Africa.[1] In March 2021, the foundation hired Marla Blow as its president andchief operating officer. She had formerly served as the senior vice president for social impact in North America for theMastercard Center for Inclusive Growth.[15]
The foundation, which moved to its Palo Alto headquarters in 2004, also collaborated closely with the Skoll Global Threats Fund, established in 2009, toaddress climate change,pandemics,water security,nuclear proliferation, andconflict in the Middle East. Some of the fund's initiatives supported by the foundation have included an app, developed in partnership with theBrazilian Ministry of Health, that allowed monitoring of health conditions and potential infection by theZika virus during the2016 Olympics;[16] supporting surveillance technologies that identify epidemics at their earliest outbreak;[17] and development of an online tool that will help policymakers identify global water risk andfood security hot spots.[18]
The foundation began funding research into pandemic preparedness and prevention in 2009. Simultaneously, the organization funded research into climate changewater scarcity, nuclear weapons and conflict in the Middle East; it called this its Global Threats Fund. Previously, the foundation partnered with Google's philanthropic arm,Google.org to fundNathan Wolfe's 2008 research intocross-species transmission amongst Cameroonian bushmeat hunters.[19] In 2018 the fund created Ending Pandemics, a non-profit spun out from its research into pandemic detection and rapid response.[20]
Skoll increased the foundation's 2020 grant to $200 million to respond to the pandemic's economic, health and social impact.[21] The African Field Epidemiology Network, a group that works withAfrica Centres for Disease Control and Prevention were the foundation's first COVID-related grantees. The foundation also gave sixty-four past and current Skoll grantees $50,000 in emergency funding during this period.[20]
Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship at the University of Oxford
In 2003, the foundation donated $7.5M to theSaïd Business School at Oxford University to establish theSkoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship. The center studies and promotes socially purposed businesses and hosts a one-year MBA programme in social entrepreneurship.[22] The grant also funded an endowed lectureship, program director, visiting fellows, fiveMBA student fellowships,visiting fellows, and the annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship.[12][23] The Skoll Centre's activities concentrate on educating social change leaders, practical research and convening leaders in the social change field.[24]
The annual Skoll World Forum assemblessocial entrepreneurship leaders[25] at theSaid Business School at to discuss solutions to social challenges.[26] The foundation held its first forum in 2004.[27] Attendance was roughly 1200 as of the 2019 Forum,[28] and the delegates represented around 80 countries.[29] The event facilitatesimpact investing.[30]
Jeffrey Skoll (left) and Desmond Tutu (right) at the Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship
Each year, the Skoll Foundation presents the Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship.[36] The foundation accepts nominations from within its network.[37] The following list of Skoll Awards organized by year. Skoll claims the awards are to raise awareness through storytelling. "We felt that part of our mission was to create a ceremony where these folks are given more notoriety.”[38]