Social Good Accelerator

Empowering Social Entrepreneurs to
Enact Change in Madison.

What is the Social Good Accelerator?

The Social Good Accelerator is a collaborative initiative with the purpose of building ways and means for individuals and organizations that intentionally operate to address inequalities and expand prosperity.


It's Unique.

Our caring approach is to stabilize and grow ventures that seek to serve, support, and stay within the Greater Madison community and grow opportunities for disenfranchised communities.

It Works.

The Accelerator impacts the accepted projects by providing access, tools, and resources for non-traditional entrepreneurs— primarily people of color and women.

It Influences.

Our projects are already changing the face of entrepreneurs in the community by stepping up as new leaders and actively recruiting, hiring, and building equity for others in the community.

Are you a Social Entrepreneur?
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A Few of the Ventures Who Have Participated in the Social Good Accelerator

The African-American Girls Leadership Academy

Yoga Adapted for All (YAFA)

QB’s Magnetic Creations

Pierre Outreach Services

Progress Center for Black Women

Acupuncture for All

What People Are Saying

Acclaim for the Accelerator and its Projects

ConNEXTions
quote

Ouk says that Madison as a city is struggling to keep young, up-and-coming entrepreneurs in Madison and that Madison is particularly losing young adults of color because of lack of opportunities. “We help them see that there are opportunities here in Madison and we help connect them to employers. That’s why i call it ConNEXTions because you have to have these connections in order to build social capital.”

Madison365 — Sep 28, 2018

When We Lead
quote

Green and Strother want to help women political candidates with their advertisements and campaign materials because there aren’t a lot of women in Congress to address issues like wage equity and women’s health. “(Women) are 51 percent of the population and we should have equal representation in Congress,” Green said. “Right now only 21 percent of all political offices are held by women. Of that seven percent are held by black women.”

Madison365 — Jul 4, 2018

Where Is Care
quote

[Where Is Care] tries to address the ‘information gap’ that exists currently between the people who need support services and the people they depend on – health care professionals, and the support services in the community. “I figured if we can bridge that gap with a technology-based solution, that meets the needs of doctors so it can fit within the clinic workflow, so they actually want to use it to help their patients, then there’s a tremendous opportunity to reach a lot of people and help them get the help they need.”

Edgewood Magazine — Fall 2017

FoodWorks
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For many people whom the program actively targets, it can be enormously challenging or even impossible to take time away from job hunting, or to quit a job that provides some income in order to take a class, even if that class would open up new opportunities. When you’re living paycheck-to-paycheck, three weeks without pay is a big risk. So FoodWorks provides a $1,000 completion bonus and accelerates job placement for each of its graduates.

Edible Madison — Sep 9, 2017

FoodWorks
quote

“The way they were going to recruit for the course spoke to the mission of it,” said Carla Garces, co-director of the Latino Academy. “A lot of people would want to take this course, but their focus was people who were unemployed or underemployed, people from communities who don’t normally get this opportunity. For us that was attractive.”

The Cap Times — Jun 5, 2017

Progress Center for Black Women
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Madison, who is also the creator of the annual Black Women’s Leadership Conference, Black Excellence Youth Conference and Black Business expos, believes that bringing each of her organizations under one umbrella will help to expand her efforts to empower Black women and their families. “This is about providing a more concrete and long-lasting way to serve black women,” Madison told the Cap Times.

Essence — Oct 31, 2017

Make a Difference
Invest in Social Good

Your monthly contribution of helps keep the lights on and entrepreneurs supported, accelerated, and making change to our community, locally, that influences the world.

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A Brief History of the Social Good Accelerator

In 2015, the first annual Social Good Summit was created and introduced to Forward Festival as its kick-off event. The Summit’s focus was on Redefining Entrepreneurship. More than 100 people gathered to have a transformative conversation with 12 panelists, Amy Gannon as moderator, and each other. The Summit moved major constituents to start talking about more community-driven, regionally-focused, inclusive entrepreneurship. Now that there was a growing body of individuals and organizations interested in doing more and doing better, and the question became how do we Transform Intent into Action.

Year One of the Social Good Accelerator pilot focused on the identification, recruitment, support, and progress of up to twenty-five social entrepreneurial ventures. Accelerators can catalyze and catapult organizations in many ways, including: helping them grow their vision, evaluating the stages and phases of their effort, plotting strategies, mastering finances, orchestrating marketing, and tackling logistics. We were laying out a path to build not just accelerator entrepreneurs but community-driven social good. It was a new paradigm, one that moves beyond the singular metric of profit.

During our successful Pilot years, the Accelerator accepted fifty (50) projects from an open application round. Of those, forty-six (90%) projects completed the program. Racial or ethnic minorities have led sixteen (36%) of the projects. Women led thirty-six (80%) of the projects, and twelve (24%) were also women of color.

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We were laying out a path to build not just accelerator entrepreneurs but community-driven social good. It was a new paradigm, one that moves beyond the singular metric of profit.

The Accelerator Team

The Accelerator is powered by its co-chairs, Advisory Committee, and the coaches who work hands-on with the projects.

Member

Alnisa Allgood

Co-Chair

Collaboration for Good

Member

Amy Gannon

Co-Chair

Doyenne

Member

Preston Austin

Co-Chair

Rabble, Horizon Coworking

Member

Claudia Matta

Advisory Committee

Learning, Representations, and Technology Lab, UW Madison

Member

Annette Miller

Advisory Committee

EQT By Design

Member

Carrie Sanders

Advisory Committee

Edgewood College

Member

Jackie Austin

Advisory Committee

Madison-area Urban Ministry

Member

Corinda Rainey Moore

Advisory Committee

Kids Forward

Member

Jillana Peterson

Advisory Committee

Zendesk

Member

Carmella Glenn

Advisory Committee

Just Bakery

Member

Carla Garces

Advisory Committee

City of Madison

Sponsors & Partners

The following organizations have financially supported Social Good Madison.

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