700 Strong: Challenge.gov Crosses New Milestone in Open Innovation

Jun 15, 2016

Challenge.gov, the official website for crowdsourcing and prize competitions across government, celebrated its five-year anniversary in October 2015.

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

Now, not even one year later, the site has reached another milestone.

On Monday, two agencies launched new challenges, bringing the total number of competitions on Challenge.gov across the 700 mark.

The 700th challenge, Start a SUD Startup, comes from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). The challenge looks to award biomedical scientists up to $100,000 to help transition their research ideas into viable business opportunities.

Screen cpature of the Challenge.gov page for the NIH SUD Startup

Competition organizers seek ideas that can address multiple conditions and diseases associated with substance use disorders, or prevent and/or treat such disorders. The challenge is unique because NIDA will fund potential biotech startups much earlier than most investors, incubators or traditional methods of funding, like small business grants.

On its heels, NASA also launched a health-related challenge today, aiming to improve the resiliency of the human body in space.

Screen capture of the homepage of NASA's website for the Vascular Tissue Challenge.

The Vascular Tissue Challenge offers $500,000 in prizes to the first three teams that can can “create thick, human vascularized organ tissue in an in-vitro environment while maintaining metabolic functionality similar to their in-vivo native cells throughout a 30 calendar day survival period.”

Essentially, the space agency wants solvers to submit technologies that can advance research and one day grow tissues and organs in orbit to ensure the health of astronauts injured or recovering from injuries sustained during lengthy missions.

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Since its launch in September 2010, Challenge.gov has seen a steady increase in use among both federal agencies and citizens. The 700 challenges on the site have seen more than 300,000 citizens compete for over $250 million in prize money.

Join nearly 700 federal managers across more than 70 government agencies to collaborate and share best practices on running challenge competitions by becoming a member of the Challenges and Prizes Community of Practice. Also check out DigitalGov’s other articles on challenge and prize competitions and the recent 7-module webinar, Expert Training Series: How to Design & Operate Prizes to Maximize Success, from DigitalGov University (DGU).