Public compare route

Foundation
Compare

Compare two foundations across capital scale, governance visibility, open program surface, and recurring year-memory. Snow and Paul Ramsay are the default pair because they show the current best verified case and the first non-Snow replication case side by side.

Default: Snow vs PRFReusable compare surfaceSide-by-side operator view
Choose foundations
Current pair
Bridge pair

This pair crosses a benchmark foundation with a non-benchmark candidate. Use it to see what evidence is already present on the candidate side and what still separates it from the stable review set.

Backlog lane
General backlog

This pair does not collapse neatly into one missing layer, so the full backlog is the right next surface.

At a glance
Annual giving gap
Ian Potter leads

$38.0M vs $500K · 76.0x.

Governance visibility
Ian Potter leads

10 roles vs 9.

Recurring year memory
Good Things Foundation Limited leads

6 rows vs 2.

Verified grant layer
Ian Potter leads

1716 verified grants vs 7.

Review stability
Current estimate
Ready for stable review now

Both sides have governance visibility, recurring year memory, and at least some verified source-backed evidence. This is good enough for serious review.

Progress to stable review
8/8 signals complete

No major stability gaps remain for this pair.

Recommended next move
Review the strongest verified route

This pair is stable enough for review. Use the detailed route to audit the current evidence layer and keep it maintained.

Open next step
Benchmark fit
Benchmark-ready grantmaker

Corporate Foundation with enough evidence depth for stable philanthropic review.

Ian Potter
Stable review

Governance roles: 10

Verified grants: 1716

Year memory rows: 2

Verified source-backed rows: 2

Inferred rows: 0

Completion
4/4 stable signals

No major review-stability gaps remain.

What to do next
Maintain the verified layer

This foundation is stable enough for review. The next job is upkeep rather than core backfill.

Benchmark fit
Benchmark-ready grantmaker

Corporate Foundation with enough evidence depth for stable philanthropic review.

Good Things Foundation Limited
Stable review

Governance roles: 9

Verified grants: 7

Year memory rows: 6

Verified source-backed rows: 6

Inferred rows: 0

Completion
4/4 stable signals

No major review-stability gaps remain.

What to do next
Maintain the verified layer

This foundation is stable enough for review. The next job is upkeep rather than core backfill.

medium confidence

THE TRUSTEE FOR THE IAN POTTER FOUNDATION

Corporate FoundationABN 77950227010
Open route
Annual giving
$38.0M
Open programs
9
Governance
10
Year memory
2
Readiness signals
10 governance roles1716 verified grants2 year-memory rows9 open programs

The Ian Potter Foundation is one of Australia's largest philanthropic foundations, established by Sir Ian Potter in 1964. It makes grants nationally to charitable organisations across six program areas: Arts, Community Wellbeing, Early Childhood Development, Environment, Medical Research, and Public Health, with a vision of creating a fair, healthy, sustainable, and vibrant Australia.

The foundation operates through structured funding rounds with Expressions of Interest and formal application processes. They emphasise innovation, community benefit, and measurable outcomes across their program areas. Their approach includes evaluation panels, reporting requirements for grantees, and a focus on building capacity in supported organisations. The foundation believes in supporting projects that benefit the broader Australian community across health, education, environment, and social wellbeing.
artshealtheducationenvironmentAU-National
Latest program year memory
2025-26

Round 1, 2026 - Environment (EOI)

grant

Expressions of Interest for the Environment program area are open for Round 1, 2026.

Places: Australia

Source: official ian potter program page verified

Evidence: open source

2025-26

Round 1, 2026 - Medical Research (Applications)

grant

Applications for the Medical Research program area are open for Round 1, 2026. Grants will be announced late June 2026.

Places: Australia

Source: official ian potter program page verified

Evidence: open source

low confidence

Good Things Foundation Limited

Corporate FoundationABN 92618363974
Open route
Annual giving
$500K
Open programs
3
Governance
9
Year memory
6
Readiness signals
9 governance roles7 verified grants6 year-memory rows3 open programs
Good Things operates as an intermediary foundation that distributes government and corporate funding through grants to community organisations, providing not just funding but also training, resources, and support to build the capacity of local organisations to deliver digital inclusion programs. Their theory of change centers on creating sustainable digital literacy ecosystems through upskilling digital mentors, providing accessible learning resources, and ensuring those most at risk of digital exclusion receive culturally appropriate, community-based support. They emphasize co-design with people with lived experience and evidence-based advocacy to influence policy.
communityindigenousAU-National
Latest program year memory
2025-26

Capacity Building Grant

grant

Funding to run train-the-trainer programs for staff or volunteer digital mentors, two rounds per year

Places: Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia, ACT, Victoria, Tasmania, Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

2025-26

Digital Sisters

grant

Program supporting migrant and refugee women with digital skills

Places: Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia, ACT, Victoria, Tasmania, Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

2025-26

Get Online Week Event Grant

grant

Grants for community organisations to host events during Get Online Week, a national campaign promoting digital inclusion

Places: Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia, ACT, Victoria, Tasmania, Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

2025-26

Building Digital Skills Grant

grant

Funding for community organisations to run digital skills programs for over 50s, ranging from $3,000 to $20,500

Places: Northern Territory, Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia, ACT, Victoria, Tasmania, Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

How to use this
1. Compare the capital posture

Start with annual giving, open programs, and governance visibility before you look at stories or relationships.

2. Check year-memory depth

If recurring program rows exist, the foundation is ready for stronger portfolio tracking and annual review loops.

3. Open the detailed route

Use the detailed demo page only after the compare view has made the differences legible.