Challenge.gov Program Launches New Training Opportunities

Jul 14, 2015

Seven new training modules aim to help Federal Challenge and Prize Community members learn more about using prize competitions to solve problems. The expert series, Designing and Operating Prizes to Maximize Success, kicked off module one on July 14, 2015, with “Prize History, Prize Theory and What Makes a Good Prize.” Module one is designed to give challenge managers a foundation on prizes starting with their role in history and demonstrate well-known advancements that have resulted from prizes.

Full logo for Challenge.gov with the tagline: Government Challenges, Your Solutions.

The new training modules come in response to an ever-increasing demand across government to use challenge and prize competitions to drive innovation and solve mission-centric problems. We invite members of the vendor and government community with expertise to share successes and lessons learned as panel members on future expert series. Contact the Challenge.gov team for more information.

In the coming months, the remainder of the modules and additional expert series will be offered via webinar to government community members interested in learning more about prize competitions. “Module 2: It’s All About the Teams—The Importance of Operational Incentives in Prizes” is scheduled for August 4, 2015. Registration is now open.

In the coming months, the remainder of the modules and additional expert series will be offered via webinar to government community members interested in learning more about prize competitions. “Module 2: It’s All About the Teams—The Importance of Operational Incentives in Prizes” is scheduled for August 4, 2015. Registration is now open.

Watch modules one through seven on DigitalGov’s YouTube channel:

Module 1: Prize History, Prize Theory and What Makes a Good Prize

Module 2: It’s All About the Teams—The Importance of Operational Incentives in Prizes

Module 3: Operational Best Practices and Lessons Learned

Module 4: The Importance of Marketing and Public Education

Module 5: Legal Considerations for Prizes

Module 6: Building a Community

Module 7: Post-Prize Industry and the Post-Prize Impact

Approaching its fifth year, Challenge.gov has seen participation on a global scale. There have been over 100,000 solvers who have participated in over 400 challenges from 76 agencies and more than $120 million in prizes awarded for successful solutions. There have been more than 3.5 million site visits to the platform from every country around the globe, including participants from every state in the U.S.