Taproot Foundation DC: Pro Bono Week

Oct 25, 2013 2:15 PM ET
Campaign: Pro Bono Week

Pro Bono Week 2013 has generated great events, strengthened partnerships, and created new opportunities for the pro bono marketplace. Stone Soup Films, a nonprofit that uses pro bono film and media professionals to make strategic videos for nonprofits, shot, edited, and in 48 hours screened this film about Taproot DC’s Pro Bono week effort! We are grateful for all of their hard work in capturing the energy that has made this a Pro Bono Week to remember.

About Taproot

Since 2001, Taproot Foundation has proven that pro bono service is a viable and reliable tool for strengthening nonprofit organizations. Today, Taproot continues to lead nationally by acting locally, and seeks to build a pro bono marketplace that, like philanthropy, is large, accessible, professional and transparent. By taking lessons learned from our award-winning Service Grant Program and applying them to our innovative new program areas, we work to stimulate the supply of pro bono resources through our corporate Advisory Services practice, as well as demand for these services by giving nonprofits the tools and training that sets them up for successful pro bono engagements. Our work has evolved to include thought leadership and international field-building, convening global leaders in the social sector to guide the design and direction of the pro bono movement while focusing on infusing a pro bono ethic into business professions, professional schools, companies and nonprofits in communities across the country and around the world. Visit www.taprootfoundation.org to learn more.

ABOUT PRO BONO SERVICE

Pro bono--short for pro bono publico, "for the public good"—refers to professional services delivered without expectation of a fee to organizations serving the social good. It is both a form of support for community organizations as well as an increasingly core part of the ethic of business professionals from design to HR and technology, who believe that high-quality professional services are too important to only be available to those who can afford them.