Business Services Industry
Sand Hill Group Announces First Annual Awards for Software Industry Good Samaritans, Social Entrepreneurs and Luminary; Winners Recognized At Software 2006 Gala Benefit; Awards Celebrate Philanthropy in the Software Industry Ecosystem
Business Wire, April 5, 2006
SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Sand Hill Group last night announced the winners of the first annual SHG Foundation awards for software industry Good Samaritans, Social Entrepreneurship and Luminary. At a gala benefit event in conjunction with Software 2006 this week, awards were given to eight organizations and people across the three categories.
Sand Hill Good Samaritans
-- LiveOps (www.liveops.com)
-- Sahana (www.sahana.lk)
-- Santa Clara University's Center for Science, Technology, and Society (http://www.scu.edu/sts/programsandpartnerships/gsbincubator.cfm)
Sand Hill Social Entrepreneurs
-- Suzanne McKechnie Klahr, BUILD (www.build.org)
-- David Green, Project Impact (www.project-impact.net)
-- John Wood, Room to Read (www.roomtoread.org)
-- Vikram Akula, SKS Microfinance (www.sksindia.com)
The Sand Hill Luminary Award was given to FC Kohli, founder in 1968 of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and considered the father of Indian IT. CK Prahalad, highly-decorated business thought leader and distinguished professor, made a tribute and presented the award to FC Kohli on stage last night. The Luminary Award is given to an individual who has dramatically improved people's lives. TCS envisioned and pioneered the adoption of the flexible global business practices that today enable companies to operate more efficiently and produce more value. Known as the "global delivery model," this delivery concept has reshaped the IT services industry and enabled employment for thousands of people.
"As software industry entrepreneurs and investors it's important that we give back to our community and at Sand Hill we have had a philanthropic mission since we started our events almost 10 years ago," said M.R. Rangaswami, co-founder of the Sand Hill Group. "The SHG Foundation annual awards allow us to look at a wider array of organizations, including those that combine social and technology vision. It is a great pleasure to recognize these forward thinking individuals and companies, all of whom reflect a spirit of selfless giving and sacrifice and who help complete the software industry ecosystem."
The SHG Foundation Good Samaritans
Good Samaritan awards were given to three organizations that have substantially aided emergency or disaster victims and helped other non-profit organizations.
LiveOps is a for profit provider of distributed call centers that aided Hurricane Katrina victims by setting up a call center for the Red Cross and a toll free number for victims. More than 200,000 phone calls placed to the national Family Link service have reunited over 17,000 family members and friends since September 2, 2005. LiveOps will donate their cash award to the Red Cross.
Sahana's Free and Open Source (FOSS) project was quickly built over a 2-3 week period around the time of the tsunami in Asia to help coordinate the relief effort in Sri Lanka. Sahana's FOSS project facilitates online management of missing person, organization, camp registries and request management systems. In addition to its work assisting tsunami victims, Sahana's FOSS project was used to great effect in the recent Pakistan earthquake and Philippines mudslides.
Santa Clara University's Center for Science, Technology, and Society, in partnership with the Leavey School of Business Administration, has developed the Global Social Benefit Incubator (GSBI) program. GSBI recruits award-winning, socially conscious innovators from around the globe and provides them with knowledge, skills and mentoring support they need to develop business models that are more likely to attract funding and generate the critical resources for achieving sustainability at scale. With its intensive two-week residential program, world-class partnerships, and access to Silicon Valley resources, GSBI's "business boot camp" empowers program participants' to advance their social enterprises through technological and business model innovations that address urgent human concerns throughout the world.
The SHG Foundation Social Entrepreneurs
Social Entrepreneurship awards were given to four organizations whose chief executive officers have left highly profitable jobs in technology and other professions to start a non-profit because of their passionate belief in a cause.
Suzanne McKechnie Klahr graduated from Stanford Law School at the height of the dot-com boom and passed up a lucrative opportunity at one of the nation's most prestigious law firms to start BUILD, a social venture which bridges the divide between youth and business in the Bay Area. BUILD empowers academically struggling youth from low-income communities to excel in the classroom, on the job, and beyond by giving them an education in entrepreneurship through all four years of high school. Suzanne began the program with four students and now serves over 200 in multiple low-income communities. To date, 100 percent of BUILD graduates have gone to college.
David Green, of Project Impact, is devoted to making technology and healthcare services accessible, affordable, and financially self-sustaining. David and many international partners, including Seva Foundation, helped establish an independent non-profit company in India called Aurolab that makes intraocular lenses -- plastic implants that restore sight to cataract patients -- and in the process lowered the cost from $300 to three dollars. Aurolab is one of the largest intraocular lens companies and has sold over 5 million to 120 countries since its inception. He has helped many eye care programs in India, Nepal, Egypt, Malawi, Tanzania and Guatemala become self financing from user fees but still oriented to serving the lower economic strata, proving a model of sustainability that can be applied to other arenas.
- 5 Rules for Immediate Annuities
- Death in the Family: 12 Things to Do Now
- Dumbest Things You Do With Your Money
- 6 Online Networking Mistakes to Avoid
- 401(k) Mistakes to Avoid
- 5 Economic Scenarios to Keep You Up at Night
- The Real ‘Best Places to Retire’
- Best Credit Cards for You
- 12 Tough Questions to Ask Your Parents
- The Real ‘Best Colleges’
- Home Buyer Tax Credit: How to Cash In
- Why You Shouldn't Bash Cash
- 8 Phony 'Bargains' and Better Alternatives
- Danger: 3 Debit Card Scams to Avoid
- 6 Myths About Gas Mileage
- 29 Fees We Hate Most
- Quick and Easy Ways to Boost Returns
- Best Stocks to Buy Now
- Lower Your Taxes: 10 Moves to Make Now
- New Jobs: 8 Lessons from Real-Life Career Switchers
- The New Job Market: Who Wins and Who Loses?
- Health Care Reform's Public Option: Everything You Need to Know
- Volunteer Work When Unemployed: Should You Work for Free?
- Whose Recovery Is This?
- Long-Term-Care Insurance: 4 Biggest Risks to Avoid
Content provided in partnership with
Most Recent Business Articles
- Multiple criteria evaluation and optimization of transportation systems
- Multi-criteria analysis procedure for sustainable mobility evaluation in urban areas
- A two-leveled multi-objective symbiotic evolutionary algorithm for the hub and spoke location problem
- Multi-criteria analysis for evaluating the impacts of intelligent speed adaptation
- The development of Taiwan arterial traffic-adaptive signal control system and its field test: a Taiwan experience
Most Recent Business Publications
Most Popular Business Articles
- 7 tips for effective listening: productive listening does not occur naturally. It requires hard work and practice - Back To Basics - effective listening is a crucial skill for internal auditors
- FAS 109: a primer for non-accountants - Financial Accounting Standards Board's "Statement 109: Accounting for Income Taxes"
- LIFO vs. FIFO: a return to the basics
- Too Young to Rent a Car? - 25-years-old the minimum age for car renting - Brief Article
- Design a commission plan that drives sales - Sales Commissions


