Call for Entries for Seventh Annual Wireless Innovation Project

Total Prizes of $600,000 Awarded to Mobile and Wireless Solutions for Global Community Impact

The Vodafone Americas Foundation has launched its seventh annual Wireless Innovation Project™ (WIP), offering applicants the opportunity to win a total prize fund of $600,000 for innovative mobile solutions that have high potential to solve critical global issues. The Director of the Vodafone Group Foundation, Andrew Dunnett, officially announced the opening of the competition at the Social Innovation Summit in San Francisco on November 19. More

InVenture—Financial Management for the Emerging Middle Class in Africa and Southeast Asia

Mobile phones are reaching an unprecedented number of individuals in regions such as Africa and Southeast Asia, with nearly 880 million new connections expected by 2020 (according to a 2014 report by GSMA). This penetration into impoverished urban centers and remote rural villages means that individuals formerly cut-off from basic financial services such as cash flow statements or credit can now be reached through a touch of a button. InVenture is leveraging this technological transformation to make financial tracking and loan applications as easy as possible for the emerging middle class. More

Our WIP Winners Reporting From Across the World!

MoboSens, the mobile water sensor, checking in from Champaign, Illinois, the home of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

MoboSens’s goal when entering the Vodafone Americas Foundation Wireless Innovation Project was to do what they can to help bring this technology to more deserving and curious citizen scientists around the world… and as a result of winning the WIP in 2013, MoboSens is on its way to accomplish this goal. More

SMART Diaphragm: Two and a Half Years In and Going Strong

Each year about 15 million babies are born prematurely and over one million of these babies die, making preterm birth the leading cause of infant mortality. In developed communities, these premature babies are often given a chance to thrive by spending their first days in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) of hospitals. But in many parts of the world, birth happens in a rural village far away from hospitals and it is impossible for pregnant mothers to make the trip once labor has begun.

Nearly three years ago, our team began tackling the challenge of preterm birth by developing a new type of intravaginal device that enables earlier detection of preterm birth. This “SMART Diaphragm” would use sensors to capture data about a pregnant woman’s cervix over time and transmit that data wirelessly to a cloud platform that would determine whether a woman is likely to give birth preterm. Since then, we have successfully developed more than 10 prototypes of the device and have worked with 20 women in clinical studies who have graciously given us permission to track them throughout pregnancy using our device. More

Bringing Economic Opportunity to the Un-banked: FrontlineSMS:Credit

For citizens of the developed world, the process of transferring, saving and managing money is as simple as visiting one of many bank branches near us or by using a debit card. Making purchases, obtaining loans and establishing credit enable us to purchase a home, start a business or send funds to relatives. In Kenya and many other developing countries, this process is much more difficult.

Without the baseline infrastructure that many of us take for granted, such as an extensive road and highway system or postal service, shipping goods or cash is a risky process. FrontlineSMS:Credit developed our software, PaymentView, for exactly this audience. Leveraging mobile payment systems and existing banking software, we are bringing financial services, including savings, credit, insurance and payroll, to those that traditional banking systems do not reach. Our mission is to effect social change and facilitate transactions in a way that previously wasn’t possible. More

Keeping Tabs on Life-saving Vaccines: NexleafAnalytics Monitors the Medical Supply Chain

Vaccines can play a life-saving role in preventing serious illnesses, including devastating childhood diseases like polio. But if they are not shipped, stored or monitored properly, they can lose potency or spoil altogether. For the developing countries, this challenge is a critical one as the nearly 1 in 5 children that are not vaccinated are concentrated within their borders.

Both government entities, such as national health ministries, and individual medical clinics are realizing just how challenging it is to track and monitor the quality of one of their most important resources: vaccines. For many low-resourced rural clinics, a staff member might have to literally be in the same room as a cold storage unit to see if it’s working or not. NexleafAnalytics has created a temperature-monitoring sensor, called ColdTrace, which remotely alerts personnel if a temperature change threatens the vaccines being stored there. More

Testing the Waters: MoboSens

Water: we’re all made of it, we all need it to survive – yet, more than 3 million people around the word die from water-related diseases every year. How do we solve this problem? Simple: make it entirely accessible for people we call “citizen scientists” to determine whether or not their water, and the water the community around them drinks, is actually drinkable.

Many times in developing areas of the world, access to trained professionals and the complex, high-power technologies they use to identify clean water is difficult to access and deploy. Enter MoboSens. Our product offers a great solution to this problem and eliminates the costs associated with the activities that were previously limited to a select few. With MoboSens, anyone who has access to a cell phone can identify safe drinking water by putting a single droplet onto our nanotechnology censor that plugs into the phone’s audio jack. We really do make it that simple. More

Fellowships as a Vehicle to Spur Innovation

Madhura Bhat is a Co-Founder of Health for America (twitter: @health4america)

According to the CDC, 133 million Americans are affected by chronic disease, accounting for more than 70% of all deaths. Reports by The Trust for America’s Health and the Commonwealth Commission suggest community-based programs targeting chronic disease could reduce disease burden and save $306 billion over 10 years. Technological advances such as mobile technologies make this feasible, yet health expenditures and innovation in the US remain focused on hospital-based care resulting in high costs and poor outcomes.

The challenges to health innovation are numerous. The health field is deeply technical requiring many years of training to master clinical knowledge. The field is highly regulated from drug and device development to data protection. There is tremendous aversion to risk given concerns for patient safety. There is an inherently conservative culture with an emphasis on incremental innovation. Payers and users are often different with disparate demands. The misaligned incentives result in greater emphasis on hospital-based innovation. More

Final Call for Entries: The 5th Annual Vodafone Americas Foundation Wireless Innovation Project™ Closes at Midnight PST, January 13th

The annual “wireless for good” competition awards $600,000 in cash to advance your innovative designs and ideas

January 8, 2013—Redwood City, CA –The Vodafone Americas Foundation™ today announced its final call for applicants for the annual Wireless Innovation Project™, a competition that identifies and supports wireless-related technologies with high potential to solve critical global issues. Proposals will be accepted through January 13th at Midnight PST and winners will be announced in April at the Global Philanthropy Forum to be held in the Bay Area.

Why apply? Simply, the statistics for success are largely in your favor. Since launching the Wireless Innovation Project™ competition in 2009, every single winner has experienced growth and success for their wireless solution.  More