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Fortune
Fortune
Jessica Mathews

How to nominate a company for Fortune’s Change the World list

keller-rinaudo-40-under-40-health-industry (Credit: Photograph by Jacques Nkinzingabo for Fortune)

When Fortune first started putting together its annual Change the World list in 2015, it was big business that dominated. After all, corporations had the billion-dollar budgets that seemed best poised for tackling the world’s health, climate, and social problems.

But big data and technological advancements have made it possible for even the smallest companies to make a big impact. Last year was proof of that. Fortune’s 2022 Change the World list—which spotlights companies that are making strides to tackle climate change, public health crises, gender and racial inequities, and lack of economic opportunity—featured nine venture-backed startups. And 18 out of 54 of those companies had less than $1 billion in revenue, as my colleague Matt Heimer reported at the time. Last year’s list included Zipline, backed by Andreessen Horowitz, which delivers vaccines across West Africa, and KarmSolar, which develops solar energy for Egyptian farms and businesses to use instead of diesel fuel. And SoftBank-backed Alto Pharmacy is automating outdated prescription systems. 

That’s why we are calling out Term Sheet readers to nominate companies for next year’s list. Which companies are using the creative tools of business to help the planet and tackle society’s unmet needs—and trying to turn a profit in the process?

We are currently accepting nominations until July 31. You can nominate a company (or your own) by using this Google form, and if you have any questions about the process, please send them to changetheworld@fortune.com. 

A full list of last year’s honorees can be found here

Hello from Park City…The Term Sheet team is out in Utah this week for Fortune Brainstorm Tech, and as you read this I’ll be hitting the mountain biking trails. Today attendees will be hearing from former Vice President Al Gore, Mercury cofounder and CEO Immad Akhund (Mercury is a Term Sheet sponsor), Anthropic cofounder and CEO Dario Amodei, and Dr. Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology, among others. We’ll be bringing you the highlights of this week’s conference in Term Sheet, so stay tuned.

See you tomorrow,

Jessica Mathews
Twitter: @jessicakmathews
Email: jessica.mathews@fortune.com
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

Jackson Fordyce curated the deals section of today’s newsletter.

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