European Social Innovation Competition 2021

European Social Innovation Competition 2021

What was the European Social Innovation Competition 2021?

The 2021 edition of the Competition, ‘Skills for tomorrow’ was looking for scalable social innovations that will contribute to job creation, growth and European competitiveness by helping people, businesses and industries identify, develop and strengthen the skills that will power the European economy’s green and digital future. The Competition was open to early stage ideas that tackle challenges relating to the transition to either, or both, futures including but not limited to identifying and mapping skills gaps as well as approaches to development and training that will support people to reskill or upskill.

This was the ninth year in which Challenge Works had led the consortium delivering the European Social Innovation Competition. The competition is run by the European Commission’s DG GROW with the support of a consortium of partners: Challenge Works, KennislandEuropean Network of Living LabsAshoka and Scholz & Friends. It was funded by the European Commission.

Why did we do this?

The European economy is changing. The coming years will see a shift towards a green and digital future. These twin transitions present individuals, businesses and industries with exciting opportunities. Understanding the skills that will be needed and how best to develop them will be key to unlocking these opportunities for individuals and organisations alike.

What were we looking for?

This Competition aimed to incentivise, support and reward social innovations that will help people and organisations to identify, develop and strengthen the skills they will need to adapt and thrive in a changing world. The Competition was looking for early stage ideas that tackle these needs in a range of different ways. From innovative solutions that identify skills needs and gaps to skills development approaches, including but not limited to training.

This challenge was funded by

  • European Commission logo

The winners

Skill lab logo

SkillLab (Netherlands) 2021 winner

SkillLab has developed a mobile solution that helps people to identify and express their skills. On the basis of a detailed skill-profile, individual pathways are shown by mapping skills to occupations and to training offerings that address skill-gaps.

LEARN MORE ABOUT SKILLLAB

Snowball Effect logo

Snowball Effect (Austria) 2021 winner

Snowball Effect is the first school supporting aspiring social entrepreneurs to replicate proven social enterprises in their region. Participants learn directly from the initial founders of successful social enterprises to replicate their concept.

LEARN MORE ABOUT SNOWBALL EFFECT

Zekki logo on right with person standing on hilltop on left

Zekki – What’s up? (Finland) 2021 winner

Zekki is a digital service matching young people and diverse support services based on the online wellbeing self-assessment quiz. It gives tools for young people to ponder their own well-being, future, preferences, tomorrow’s choices and own tracks. It also gives guidance and leads to appropriate support when needed.

LEARN MORE ABOUT ZEKKI

Happaning logo

Happening (UK) People’s Choice winner

Like Google street view, but with video; Happaning lets you navigate events from any perspective, at any time and from anywhere in one immersive live/on-demand experience. Our patented ViiVid® (multi-Vantage Video) technology synchronises multiple video feeds with a real-time P2P blockchain-style codec.

LEARN MORE ABOUT HAPPANING

MycoTEX logo

MycoTEX (The Netherlands) 2021 Impact Prize winner

MycoTEX, which was a finalist in the 2020 competition – Reimagine Fashion, offers an award winning, all-in-one solution for fashion brands. They use an automated seamless production technology to create custom-fit products out of sustainable, vegan textiles made from mycelium (mushroom roots).

LEARN MORE ABOUT MYCOTEX

The finalists

About the competition

565 entries were submitted to the competition…

from across 39 different EU member countries

A third of entrants…

submitted a new idea that had been in development for 7-12 months only

46.6% of entries…

were made by people identifying as female social innovators

The Judges

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Other editions of the Competition