Summary
"This is the opportunity for us to ask people to think about specific things," says Sprout programs manager Matt Hanniqan. It's also a departure from the group's free-for-all model. "Our goal is not to try to create the most competitive process ever, but to encourage people to come together to develop strong applications around these [ideas], create strong collaboration among groups, and develop an idea into a full-fledged proposal - which is the whole point of the endeavor," he says.
"I have some experience working on kiosks previously," says [Nathan Martin]. "They are very expensive to maintain and questionably useful.""This is much more accessible to people more quickly," says Martin. "The cost is lower, and the reach is so much grander."See the full content of this document
Extract
Sprout Fund's Big Ideas Turn Into Big Proposals
After more than a hundred ideas blossomed at the civic brainstorminq event hosted by The Sprout Fund last fall, a handful of them ...
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