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Home > How We Work > Selection Criteria & Due Diligence
Selection Criteria & Due Diligence

The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation identifies high-performing youth-serving organizations with effective programs and growth potential and invests in developing their capacity to expand and achieve sustainability. The Foundation broadens its search for such organizations by consulting experts in youth development, other foundations and nonprofits, and local groups.

After determining that an organization has achieved sufficient scale in both the number of youth it serves and the size of its budget to be likely to benefit from the Foundation’s grantmaking approach, staff use six criteria to begin assessing whether it is a promising investment.

Initially we concentrate on:

  • Compelling Product - Does the organization have empirical evidence of its program or service’s impact on youth? This is assessed using a three-stage scale developed by the Foundation.
  • Strong Leadership and Management – Do the staff and board have a track record of achieving the organization’s objectives, and do they have a vision of future growth?
  • Commitment to Evaluation – Is the organization measuring its performance and intent on evaluating and improving its outcomes?


If the answers to these questions are encouraging, we delve deeper in three areas:

  • Financial Viability - Are the organization's finances sound?
  • Operational Viability - Does the organization have the capacity to increase the number of youth it serves?
  • Compatibility - Is the organization a good “fit” with EMCF’s investment strategy?


Organizations that seem likely fits for the Foundation’s grantmaking approach are added to the pool from which the Foundation selects candidates for an intensive assessment process called Due Diligence. During this stage, the Foundation spends hundreds of staff hours interviewing an organization’s staff, board members, funders, recipients of its services, and experts in the field, conducting site visits, and analyzing the potential grantee’s program models and organizational capacity.


Although the Foundation does not accept unsolicited applications, it invites organizations that think they may qualify for support to complete the Foundation’s online Youth Organizations Survey.

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In the Spotlight


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EMCF Named Social Innovation Fund Intermediary


On July 22, 2010, the Corporation for National and Community Service announced it had selected the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation as of one of 11 intermediaries for the Social Innovation Fund (SIF). It has awarded the Foundation a $10 million federal grant to support youth-serving organizations with effective, evidence-based programs and a potential for substantial growth.

Learn more




Highlights from the News


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Mentor program aids at-risk kids in Prince George's schools (Hillside Work-Scholarship Connection)
The Washington Post, June 24, 2010

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Proven sex-ed programs get a boost from Obama (CAS-Carrera Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Program) All Things Considered, National Public Radio, June 6 2010
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The Harlem Children's Zone Featured on CBS 60 Minutes

December 6, 2009

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Nurse home visits for pregnant women could keep their children off the streets in years to come (Nurse Family Partnership)
Newsweek, September 12, 2009

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