Public contracting is the largest marketplace in the world.
Governments spend around $13 trillion dollars a year on contracts with private companies: this spending is vital to deliver services to citizens, to public governance, and to global development.
Yet many governments don’t seem to know what they are buying and selling, for how much, and with whom they are dealing. Contracting is the government’s number one corruption risk (the OECD, UNODC, and EU all agree).
Open contracting seeks to transform public procurements by opening up the entire chain of public procurement data and documents from planning to tender, contract, implementation and works with local reformers to put that data to use, so that the money in public procurement is spent more effectively, honestly and fairly.
The challenge aims to support the creation of tools based on open contracting data.
We want to encourage collaborations & partnerships of non-governmental actors with central & local authorities creating innovations that contribute to:
Support data-driven analysis, financial & civic control over public spending
Empower authorities to deliver better value for money and boost their efficiency
Create fairer competition
Detect and prevent fraud & corruption
Drive effective goods & service delivery for citizens
Weekly check-in calls with mentors, invited experts & OCP team members to help your projects evolve
9 teams that will get to the finals (3 per country) will receive $ 5,000 USD of seed funding to develop their projects
Finalists will receive approximately 20 hours of OCP technical assistance per team throughout the program
Finalists will get priority access to OCDS helpdesk and data analysis support if relevant for the project, with up to 20 hours per project
Three grand prizes of $15,000 USD each (1 per country) of direct financial support over the course of the program, depending on team progress and needs.
(Note: teams must demonstrate progress and momentum prior to receiving financial support)
Winners will receive support for documentation, and communication from OCP comms consultants to develop 1 blog/story and other communication materials.
Connections and collaboration with a global network, including other reform teams, experts and funders, to share ideas and learn together on the journey to achieving impact, as well as celebrate and elevate success in global fora, such as conferences.
Innovation Challenge 2021 in the EECA region supports projects from Moldova, Kazakhstan & Kyrgyzstan.
We are looking for data journalists, civic technologists, hackers, open data enthusiasts, citizen activists & government innovators who understand the transformational impact on people’s lives that better public contracting can have.
If you have any doubts about applying for the Innovation Challenge, register and come to the Q&A sessions and ask all your questions on30 April and 6 May.
Ideally, teams should include experts in public procurement, advocacy, and technical/IT expert. However we can help to find relevant technical experts if needed.
Projects need to use open data. The priority is to use procurement data published using the Open Contracting Data Standard and/or the Open Contracting for Infrastructure Data Standard (OC4IDS) but can also use other open contracting data. We encourage projects to find ways to make closed data more accessible and actionable. Ideally use one of the available APIs to public procurement systems of Moldova, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan. Applicants may use any other data sources to strengthen their
projects (eg. beneficial owners, assets declarations, etc).
Our preference is for open source and openly licensed projects.
Tools are powerful but transformation comes from their use. Winning projects need to demonstrate how they will apply the tools to achieve real change.
We love key performance indicators and other hard M&E measures. We want to know how projects are planning to track
their progress and impact.
Innovations are clearly added value to existing work and the funding provided is catalytic to the organization
We believe that innovation often comes from collaboration. We encourage that projects involve stakeholders from the government or local authorities and civil society sectors.
The Innovation Challenge will be open for entries from 15 April until 15 May. During this month we will have two Q&A sessions – 30 April & 6 May for all your questions. To enter, participants must complete the application form.
All entries will be assessed for compliance with the eligibility criteria. All teams that pass the eligibility criteria proceed to Phase 1 of the Incubation. Participants for Phase 1 will be announced on 21 May.
Participants will take part in four weekly online workshops to strengthen their project proposals with a focus on the theory of change, collaborative approaches of civic tech start-ups with government, civic tech sustainability, and accessing procurement data via API in Moldova, Kazakhstan & Kyrgyzstan. Participants will have one month to progress their projects and to prepare an up to 5-minute long video presentation about their project (this can be a simple screen recording with audio). All projects will be evaluated according to the judging criteria. Finalists of the Innovation Challenge will be announced by 29 June. The nine strongest teams (three projects per country) will receive financial support of US$5000 each, and tailored incubation support during Phase 2.
During Phase 2, finalists will receive mentoring and tailored expert support, including workshops, meetings & discussions with officials, developers, donors & other stakeholders to empower their tools implementation, and learning sessions across selected projects. During two months, finalists should develop a minimum viable product (MVP) and start implementing their tools. Finalists should fill in a more detailed questionnaire until 6 September. Finalists will pitch their tools, highlighting their MVPs, progress during the challenge, plans for further implementation on 10 September. The judges will select the three winners receiving US$15,000 in financial support each (one per country) to implement their tools.
Winners will have bi-weekly check-ins with the Open Contracting Partnership team. We will facilitate the advocacy and deliver in-kind support for documenting and communicating via our communication consultants to develop one blog/story about the project and team.
The challenge will not fund аny kind of equipment