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.
This pair is outside the benchmark set and should be treated as exploratory. Use it to spot the next data lifts: verified grants, recurring year-memory, and source-backed program memory.
This pair does not collapse neatly into one missing layer, so the full backlog is the right next surface.
$209.2M vs $500K · 418.5x.
15 roles vs 8.
4 rows vs 0.
3 verified grants vs 0.
The current pair still lacks enough verified evidence depth. Governance and year memory exist in places, but the review would still lean too heavily on inferred data.
3 stability signals still missing across the pair.
Link report-backed grantees or relationship rows so the review is not relying only on program surfaces.
Open next stepCorporate Foundation profile, but still too thin for benchmark review without more verified evidence.
Governance roles: 8
Verified grants: 0
Year memory rows: 0
Verified source-backed rows: 0
Inferred rows: 0
Missing: verified grant layer, year-memory rows, verified source-backed memory.
Link report-backed grantees or relationship rows so the review is not relying only on program surfaces.
Create program-year rows so recurring strands can be reviewed across years instead of only as static profile text.
Corporate Foundation with enough evidence depth for stable philanthropic review.
Governance roles: 15
Verified grants: 3
Year memory rows: 4
Verified source-backed rows: 4
Inferred rows: 0
No major review-stability gaps remain.
This foundation is stable enough for review. The next job is upkeep rather than core backfill.
Headspace National Youth Mental Health Foundation Ltd
Headspace National Youth Mental Health Foundation is a leading Australian organisation providing early intervention mental health and wellbeing services to young people aged 12-25. It supports and coordinates a national network of local centres and online services (eheadspace), aiming to improve the mental health and social outcomes of young Australians across diverse communities.
Australian Cancer Research Foundation
The Australian Cancer Research Foundation is dedicated to funding innovative cancer research across Australia. They aim to accelerate the translation of research discoveries into new treatments and life-saving therapies for cancer patients.
2025 Grants
Funding for innovative cancer research projects.
2025 Grants Program
Major grants for cancer research equipment, technology, and infrastructure at Australian research institutions
2026 Annual Research Grants
Capital grants for technology, equipment, and infrastructure supporting cancer research.
Applying for a Grant
ACRF accepts applications from Australian research institutes for cancer research projects requiring equipment or infrastructure
Start with annual giving, open programs, and governance visibility before you look at stories or relationships.
If recurring program rows exist, the foundation is ready for stronger portfolio tracking and annual review loops.
Use the detailed demo page only after the compare view has made the differences legible.