Year Here Social Innovation Fellowship 2022

About this Programme

Year Here is a full-time postgraduate course and incubator in London designed to cultivate innovative approaches to entrenched social problems.

Date & Time

10 months | Starting Mon 12th Sep 2022

Cost

£0

Type

Free

Programme type

Applications

30th May 2022 - 00:00 (GMT+1)

Applications Open

Calendar

10th Jul 2022 - 00:00 (GMT+1)

Applications Close

Location

London

Location

Facilitated By

Year Here

Year Here

Year Here is a full-time postgraduate course in London designed to cultivate entrepreneurial approaches to entrenched social problems.

Unlike a traditional Master's degree, it's immersive, action-oriented‚ and grounded in the daily experience of those at the frontline of inequality.

Our Fellows try their hand at building creative and entrepreneurial responses to social problems, supported by industry mentoring and a rigorous social innovation curriculum.

About the Programme

Year Here launches, grows and connects the social innovators and social ventures of tomorrow. The Social Innovation Programme is about learning in the real world rather than in a lecture hall. Through three major projects in very different contexts, you’ll have multiple opportunities to build smart, scalable responses to some of society’s toughest challenges

About the programme

Launch your social impact career in one year.

Year Here is an immersive full-time course in social innovation, kicking off on September 12th 2022.

Over 10 months, you’ll gain deep insight into complex social issues and learn to build entrepreneurial solutions to society’s toughest problems – from the housing crisis to knife crime.

If selected to become a Fellow, you will:

  • Get frontline insights. You’ll spend the first 5 months working with the people hit hardest by austerity and gain deep user insight. To deepen your systemic understanding, you’ll also work on briefs set by clients like Crisis, the NHS and the Greater London Authority.
  • Meet your co-founders. Our Fellows have an average of 7 years’ career experience in fields ranging from biochemistry to law, and from journalism to engineering. They will become your support network, your collaborators and, if you choose to launch a venture, co-founders.
  • Build scalable ventures. You’ll test and build your own social business, with the potential to progress to our Incubator and launch it into the world. Venture teams are guided by expert partners like the Boston Consulting Group, ForwardPMX and BNYMellon.
  • Learn from expert faculty. You’ll get a personal mentor and receive tonnes of training from a faculty of more than 80 social innovation leaders.

Beyond Year Here

Finish the programme with a venture and you’ll get seed funding, business support, desk space and client introductions to launch your business.

Our alumni have launched 50 social ventures, including:

  • Chatterbox, an online language tuition platform powered by refugee talent, featured in The Economist, Tech Crunch and The Times.
  • Birdsong, the feminist fashion brand selling wardrobe staples made by women paid a fair wage. Featured in Vogue, Dazed and Vice.
  • Appt, a HealthTech business that uses behavioural economics to help patients manage their long-term conditions – with a multi-year investment from Innovate UK.
  • Supply Change, Supply Change is a digital marketplace that helps social enterprises to win public sector contracts – so that public money has maximum impact on local communities.

Those that don’t start a venture further grow the Year Here ecosystem, join other fast-growing social startups or lead social innovation in their respective industries.

Our impact

Since launching in 2013 at 10 Downing St, we have worked with 278 Fellows who collectively have contributed over 161,280 hours to crucial frontline services.

Our reach is growing, and you’ll be part of that. So far we’ve launched 50 startups, generating over £8.5 million. These have all supported over 18,000 people, from at-risk youths to isolated older people. You could be part of the next wave.

No course fees

Unlike a Master's degree or MBA, we have no tuition fee. This is a reimagination of higher education. Rather than spending a year in a lecture hall and paying £10,000 for the privilege, we challenge you to learn by doing – working on real social impact projects. Our partners pay us to be involved and that covers your tuition costs.

To widen access to the programme we have a small number of means-tested bursaries available and offer additional support through TfL discounts and recommendations for flexible paid work and affordable accommodation.

Selection Process

Our Fellows come from a range of backgrounds and industries, from finance to medicine, engineering to law, bringing an incredibly diverse set of professional skills and life experiences to the programme. What unites them is their brilliant personal qualities – like resourcefulness, humility and resilience – and their passion for social action.

It’s a 3-stage process: a written or audiovisual application, a video interview and a half-day selection workshop. Typically, 1 in 10 applicants secure a place on the programme.

Click here to register with Year Here and start your application.

Find more FAQs about the programme here.

Our alumni

Our alumni remain central members of the Year Here family, acting as buddies for new Fellows and sharing their stories as part of future programmes. You’ll also join us at events throughout the year – like Off the Record, GradFest and Crowdbacker. 97% of our Fellows find paid employment within three months of graduating from Year Here. Twelve months after the programme, 34% of our alumni are leading their own social business while 34% work for another social start-up. The remainder of our alumni work in government, innovation, frontline delivery or private sector roles. Meet a few of our alumni below.

Sophie Slater

Sophie worked with grassroots women's charities during her time at Year Here in 2014 and saw how cuts were posing an existential crisis to the charities that supported them. In response, she co-founded Birdsong, a fashion brand that connects women from worker to wearer.

She has written and lectured in sustainability for publications including Vice, i-D, Vogue, Refinery29, The Guardian and institutions such as Goldsmiths and London College of Fashion. Sophie served as a jury member for the D&AD awards and was recognised in Forbes' 30 under 30 list in 2019.

Mursal Hedayat

Mursal Hedayat is the founder of Chatterbox, a platform that trains refugees as foreign language tutors and connects them with learners around the world.

She is a multi-award-winning entrepreneur, recognised in the Forbes 30 under 30, Natwest WISE100, and Ashoka Emerging Innovators lists.

A former refugee to the UK from Afghanistan herself, Mursal was inspired to create pathways into professional careers for refugees after observing first-hand the vast untapped talent in the community.

Josh Babarinde

Josh is the CEO of Cracked It, a smartphone repair business that gives young people an entrepreneurial route away from gang crime. Cracked It is winner of two Social Enterprise of the Year awards (Centre for Social Justice, 2018 and Evening Standard, 2019) and Josh was recognised on Forbes’ 30 under 30 list.

After the Brexit vote, Josh’s call for an independent office to monitor political campaigns was backed by over 160,000 and he became a founding convenor of More United. He is also a trustee of the Shackleton Foundation and The Funding Network.

Xenia Moseley

The Independent named Xenia one of the UK’s five freshest talents for socially useful design. She currently works for Blackhorse Workshop CIC as their creative programme manager.

During the 2014 programme, she founded Curiosity Club, an enterprise that challenges disengaged school students to discover their abilities by exploring their curiosity. Xenia has produced work for Roman Krznaric’s Empathy Museum, the Department Store for the Mind and Terence Conran – and has been exhibited in the V&A as part of the London Design Festival.

Sam Boyd

Sam joined the Fellowship in 2015. During his time on the programme Sam worked at the YMCA North London, and during his consulting project, he helped food-industry incubator Kitchenette develop a social offering, which became street food social enterprise Kitchenette Karts..

Sam is now Director of Impact and External Affairs for Switchback, an award-winning small charity supporting young Londoners to build stable lives after prison, where he has established and grown the charity’s policy and influencing activity from the ground up.

Sneh Jani Patel

Former Management Consultant Sneh is the co-founder of Bread and Roses, a social enterprise florist tackling the social and financial isolation experienced by many refugee and asylum-seeking women – featured in The Guardian, Financial Times, The Independent, Time Out and Stylist among others.

Sneh is also a consultant with FutureGov and is a member of social innovation collective, The Point People.

Programme FAQs

All your questions should be answered here.

Yes, the vast majority of our Fellows live in London. Our studio is in central London and our placements and consulting projects are all in London. Occasionally, Fellows have commuted in from nearby but placement hosts often can’t cover this additional travel cost.

We offer a limited amount of reduced rate accommodation through our partnership with Dot Dot Dot Property Guardians at £50-£75 per week. Fellows stay in a home that would otherwise be empty at a heavily subsidised rent. Flats are often unfurnished and in need of a lick of paint. You can read more about being a property guardian on Dot Dot Dot’s website.

Yes. If you have permission to work and volunteer in the UK and plan to build your career here, we’d welcome an application from you. Our Fellows have included Argentinian, Colombian, Bulgarian, Nigerian, Palestinian and Portuguese nationals.

Unfortunately, we do not sponsor visas and cannot provide immigration advice – but we’d advise prospective applicants from overseas to research the visa advice from the UK Government if they’re interested in the programme. It is your responsibility to check your visa status and eligibility with the relevant embassy or government institution before applying.

The programme is free. You will need a laptop for your project work. Support to cover your living expenses is covered on our costs and funding page.

Yes, we have various mechanisms to keep the course affordable. Please see our costs and funding page and Financial Support Factsheet.

In terms of bursaries, we typically have 4 bursaries available at £5,000 each (although we are always doing our best to fundraise for more). If you get a bursary, these are usually paid out in 4 equal instalments every 2 months.

Some of our bursaries are held aside for specific programmes, like our Life Shocks partnership with Royal London. Other bursaries are available to all prospective Fellows. If you do feel like you need financial support to take part in our programme we would encourage you to apply to our bursaries.

Anyone is welcome to apply for bursary support. We encourage everyone who is considering it to lodge an application regardless of whether you believe others might be in a more difficult financial decision. We will be able to make that decision when reviewing applications as you will be asked to tell us about your financial situation with some supporting evidence.

We would always let you know about the outcome of your bursary application before we ask you to accept your place on the programme. Please get in touch if you want more information (although note we will send through further details if we invite you to our selection workshop).

Absolutely – in this case, we would ask you to provide good evidence of your other strengths and achievements.

We recognise that applicants will have made educational and professional achievements in a variety of environments and academic success is only one indicator of potential. While many of our Fellows do have undergraduate degrees and/or at least two years of work experience, if you don’t, we would encourage you to apply and demonstrate how you meet the programme requirements.

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