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Foundation Giving

Wooing Wealthy Donors With an ‘IPO Road Show’

August 31, 2015 | Read Time: 2 minutes

Alexandre Mars, chief executive and founder of Epic Foundation

Anthony Behar, Sipa Press, AP Images
Alexandre Mars, chief executive and founder of Epic Foundation

Newly minted millionaires often balk at making charitable gifts — not because they’re stingy but because they don’t know which nonprofits to trust. That’s according to Alexandre Mars, a technology entrepreneur who is turning his energy to doing good.

To inspire confidence and spur donations, Mr. Mars created a new instrument of philanthropy: a foundation that promotes vetted charities to donors in the same way a business woos investors for an initial public offering.

The venture will debut this fall, when Mr. Mars will travel the globe during a promotional tour — one that will mimic a road show before a stock IPO. Here’s how he turned his idea into reality:

Epic Foundation 1

2013

Alexandre Mars 
sells his third company, decides to pursue 
social good.


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Epic Foundation 2

2014

After seeking counsel 
from experts at the Bill 
& Melinda Gates Foundation, the Omidyar Network, and 
others, Mr. Mars creates 
the Epic Foundation.

Epic Foundation 3


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Early 2015

Epic calls for 
applications 
from nonprofits 
in four areas 
of children’s welfare:

  • Health,
  • Economic empowerment,
  • Human rights
  • Education.

Epic Foundation 4

January through 
July 2015

Mr. Mars and his team sift through 1,400 charity applications like a venture-capital firm eyeballing early-stage companies. Via phone calls and field evaluations, they cull the field to 100, then 50, then 20.


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Epic Foundation 5

September through 
December 2015

Epic will present its portfolio 
of 20 nonprofits to three groups 
of individuals: entrepreneurs, 
“voices” (e.g., entertainers and athletes), and 
corporate donors. This “road show” will stop in Boston, Geneva, Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles, Mumbai, New York, Paris, and Singapore. By the end of the year, Mr. Mars hopes to reap donations of at least $7.5 million. He put $1.5 million of his own money into the effort and will not take a fee.

Epic Foundation’s 2015 Portfolio

UNITED STATES: Ali Forney Center, Bottom Line, TeenForce, Nurse-Family 
Partnership, First Graduate

AFRICA: Schistosomiasis 
Control Initiative, Nyaka AIDS Orphan Project, Educate!

BRAZIL: Turma do Bem, Gastromotiva

EUROPE: Sport dans la Ville, Haven House, Brilliant Club, Simplon.co

SOUTHEAST ASIA: M’Lop Tapang, Friends-International, Reach

INDIA: Sneha, Apnalaya, Aangan Trust

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.

About the Author

Senior Editor, Foundations

Before joining the Chronicle in 2013, Alex covered Congress and national politics for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. He covered the 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns and reported extensively about Walmart Stores for the Little Rock paper.Alex was an American Political Science Association congressional fellow and also completed Paul Miller Washington Reporting and International Reporting Project fellowships.