Paul Carttar
Director of Social Innovation Fund
Corporation for National Service
Jacquelline Fuller
Director of Charitable Giving and Advocacy
Google
Moderator: Nancy Lublin
CEO
DoSomething.org
The Social Innovation Summit brings together top executives and thought leaders from around the globe to discuss opportunities for leveraging technology & innovation to affect social change. Attendees will discuss philanthropic trends, analyze innovative approaches for problem solving and build lasting partnerships that enable them and their organizations to discover new means of engaging with social challenges.
Bio
Paul Carttar
Paul Carttar brings more than thirty years of experience across sectors – public, private, and nonprofit – to the position of Director of the Social Innovation Fund. Recently he served as an Executive Partner with New Profit, Inc. and a Senior Advisor with the Monitor Group. Prior to that, he served as Executive Vice Chancellor for External Affairs at the University of Kansas and Chief Operating Officer for the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, where he oversaw all youth and entrepreneurship programs. In 1999, Carttar co-founded the Bridgespan Group, a nonprofit strategy consulting firm.
Carttar began his career as an analyst for the U.S. Senate Budget Committee and subsequently served as assistant to Ambassador Arthur F. Burns, former chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, at the U.S. Embassy in Bonn, West Germany. Carttar spent several years with Bain & Company, an international management consulting firm, where he assisted clients in the health care, high tech and consumer products industries. He later held executive positions in two private, venture-capital funded companies in the healthcare industry.
Carttar graduated with highest distinction from the University of Kansas with a B.A. in Economics and English and received his M.B.A. from Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business.
Jacquelline Fuller
Jacquelline Fuller joined Google in April 2007 and is the Director of Charitable Giving. Google gives over $100 million each year to support education, technology access and renewable energy efforts. Jacquelline also leads advocacy for Google.org and Google’s clean energy initiatives. She previously served as Deputy Director of Global Health at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where she was a member of the senior management team guiding efforts to influence public policy on behalf of Gates Foundation issues and grantees. In 2004-2005, Jacquelline and her family moved to Delhi, India where she helped to launch a nation wide HIV prevention initiative. Prior experience also includes serving as speechwriter and aide to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, Dr. Louis Sullivan. Jacquelline ghostwrote the inspirational autobiography, “Never Forget” by Kay Coles James. Jacquelline received her BA in Political Science from UCLA and a Masters in Public Policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. She serves on the Boards of World Vision and International Justice Mission.
Nancy Lublin
Since August 2003, CEO and Chief Old Person Nancy Lublin has overseen the website dedicated to youth volunteering and activism Do Something's growth and led the effort to begin awarding more grant money to young people who want to make a difference. She turned the organization from a debt-ridden, “old school” not-for-profit with offices in multiple cities nationwide, to a fast-moving Internet company capturing the attention of a generation of do-ers. Nancy is deeply passionate about Do Something and the activist mission behind the organization. She says her first activist campaign was liberating the purple crayons in pre-school after one loud boy had declared them “not allowed for girls.” Armed with a $5,000 inheritance from her immigrant great grandfather at the age of 23, Nancy founded the organization Dress for Success, which to this day provides women with interview suits, career development training, and boosts in their self-confidence in more than 105 cities in nine countries. Nancy was named to the World Economic Forum’s 100 Most Influential Young leaders (2007), one of Glamour Magazine’s Women of Worth (2006), received Fast Company’s Fast 50 Award (2002), and was named the NYC Women’s Commission Woman of the Year (2000). Nancy graduated from Brown University, Oxford University (where she was a Marshall Scholar), and New York University School of Law.