Sample funder match
How NEW PROFIT INC stacks up for Riverside Youth Coding Academy.
This is the same funder analysis Kindora delivers to a real nonprofit user — fit verdict, alignment notes, giving footprint, and recommended next steps. The funder is real; the sample analysis was generated for a fictional Bay Area youth STEM nonprofit.

NEW PROFIT INC
EIN 04-3396766
Fit score
84
Fit analysis
Why this funder ranked where it did against the sample org's mission and programs.
New Profit appears to be a strong prospect for Riverside Youth Coding Academy based on clear issue alignment, strong geographic evidence, and a funding model that matches growth-stage nonprofit social ventures. The grantee is a 501(c)(3), operates in the Bay Area, and offers youth coding, apprenticeship, and workforce pathways—an especially good fit with New Profit’s education, economic mobility, postsecondary/career pathways, and workforce development priorities. Geographic fit is unusually strong: California received 19.7% of total grant dollars, and Oakland and San Francisco are both among New Profit’s top funded cities, with Oakland alone receiving 25 grants totaling $4.45 million and San Francisco 10 grants totaling $1.7 million. New Profit also funds organizations similar in profile and theme, including America On Tech, Braven, and employment-preparation organizations. The main constraints are incomplete data on Riverside Youth Coding Academy’s budget, age, staff size, and leadership, plus likely selectivity for organizations led by recognized social entrepreneurs and, for Build, a documented minimum $2 million expense budget. Even with those gaps, this is the kind of Bay Area youth workforce/education organization New Profit demonstrably funds, making it worth pursuing as a priority prospect.
Strategic framing
The application should position Riverside Youth Coding Academy as an equity-driven talent pipeline organization, not merely an after-school coding provider. The strongest framing is that the organization removes barriers to entry for underserved youth, builds durable technical and workplace skills, and converts learning into paid work experience through apprenticeships and employer partnerships. New Profit is likely to respond best to a concise scale narrative: what the model is, why it works, evidence of outcomes, and how funding would expand district partnerships, apprenticeship placements, and long-term economic mobility outcomes.
What's working
- Direct fit with education, economic mobility, workforce development, and career pathways.
- Strong Bay Area geographic alignment with verified New Profit grantmaking in Oakland and San Francisco.
- Differentiated model combining free access, cohort design, school integration, summer programming, and paid apprenticeship.
- Potential to extend from coding education into employer-connected opportunity pathways, which is attractive to venture philanthropy funders.
What's marginal
- Grantee budget is unknown, making Build eligibility impossible to confirm.
- No founder/CEO or leadership profile is provided, despite New Profit’s emphasis on social entrepreneurs.
- No evidence on organization age, staff size, outcomes, or current revenue scale.
- Expansion case is promising but underdeveloped; the grantee needs a clearer replication or growth thesis beyond Bay Area service delivery.
- Current priorities do not explicitly mention democracy/civic engagement, mental health, or justice-impacted communities, which could limit fit with some Catalyze cohorts.
Programs that match
- Build Investments
- Catalyze Investments
- Transform Investments
- Discovery Form (General Intake for New Profit Funding)
- Early Childhood Support Organizations (ECSO Initiative)
What we'd want to confirm
- Does the organization meet Build’s minimum $2 million expense threshold?
- Who is the lead social entrepreneur/founding executive, and what is their credibility/story?
- What outcome metrics prove that the model improves educational attainment, workforce readiness, or earnings pathways?
- Can the model scale beyond current school or employer partners?
- Is the civic-tech/nonprofit employer expansion already tested or still exploratory?
Suggested next steps
- Submit the New Profit Discovery Form rather than waiting for a perfect-fit cycle.
- Lead with an economic mobility narrative: free coding education plus paid apprenticeship pipeline for youth, tied to postsecondary and career pathways.
- Explicitly frame the model as scalable across school districts and employer sectors, not just as a local program.
- Prepare and include core readiness data: current budget, staff size, years operating, youth served, placement metrics, apprentice wages, employer retention, and alumni outcomes.
- If annual expenses are at or above $2 million, signal readiness for Build consideration; if below that threshold, position as a Catalyze candidate.
- Highlight Bay Area employer partnerships and proximity to Oakland/San Francisco districts because New Profit has demonstrated grantmaking in both cities.
- Develop a sharper founder/social entrepreneur profile and explain what is innovative about the integrated in-school, after-school, summer, and apprenticeship model.
- Consider packaging the civic-tech expansion opportunity as a future-forward workforce pathway aligned with democracy/civic participation, but do not overstate it if it is still conceptual.
Generated by Kindora's AI from the funder's public 990 filings, public website, and aggregated public grant history.
Funder snapshot
Capacity and giving footprint at a glance — drawn from the latest public 990 filings.
Total assets
$120M
Annual giving
$46M
Geographic scope
National
5% in MA
Application mode
Not specified
| Grant size | 25th percentile | Median | 75th percentile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Range across recent grants | $100k | $100k | $250k |
Our multiracial, intergenerational, cross-sector community of entrepreneurs, philanthropists, and partners is on a mission to expand access and opportunity in America.
Source: Latest public IRS Form 990 / 990-PF filings and aggregated public grant histories.
Focus areas
Themes Kindora extracted from the funder's public profile, program pages, and grant history.
Programmatic focus
Funding philosophy
Source: Public funder websites, public program pages, and AI synthesis of public 990 filings.
Recent giving signals
A look at where this funder has placed grants recently — useful for benchmarking and warm-intro paths.
No notable grantees pulled yet for this funder. The funder's stated focus areas are below — Kindora updates this as new public 990s are filed.
Stated focus areas (from public profile)
- Education
- Economic Mobility
- Democracy / Civic Engagement
- Youth Mental Health
- Justice-impacted communities
- Postsecondary and Career Pathways
Source: Public 990 grant lists and the funder's own published program descriptions.
Take the next step
Go deeper on this funder.
In the live product, briefs are generated for your top matches first. The sample org has briefs for 7 funders.
Sample analysis — generated for fictional org against real public funders
Sample data: Riverside Youth Coding Academy is a fictional 501(c)(3). The fit score, verdict, and rationales above were generated by Kindora's real matching and AI fit-analysis pipelines using public IRS Form 990 filings, public funder websites, and aggregated public grant histories. The funder is real.
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