Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation

OVERVIEW: The Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation is the philanthropic vehicle of GoDaddy founder Bob Parsons and his wife, Renee, who support human services, education, opportunity, health and mental health in Arizona and beyond.

IP TAKE: The Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation is a responsive funder that works to provide “critical funding at critical times.” It recently articulated a commitment to invest in mental health services and advocacy, for instance, and has been funding organizations working with the homeless in Arizona since its earliest years. Another specific interest for this funder is organizations supporting veterans of the U.S. Marine Corps. The Parsons Foundation accepts letters of inquiry via its application portal at any time, but full proposals are accepted only by invitation. This is an accessible and approachable funder, however, particularly if your organization operates in Arizona.

PROFILE: Established in 2012, the Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation is the foundation of GoDaddy founder Bob Parsons and his wife, Renee. The couple signed the Giving Pledge in 2013. Parsons grew up "poor as a church mouse" in inner-city Baltimore. He struggled in school but credits his service in the Marine Corps in Vietnam with turning his life around. He later started Parsons Technology, which was sold to Intuit for $64 million. Three years later, Parsons founded Internet domain registrar and web hosting company GoDaddy, where he served as executive chairman before stepping down in the summer of 2014. The Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation seeks to “inspire hope by providing critical funding at critical times to communities striving to make a difference.” Grantmaking areas of interest are youth and education, health and home, military and first responders and the American Dream,” an initiative for higher education and career skills. Grantmaking focuses on the foundation’s home state of Arizona, but the Parsons Foundation also has national and, to a lesser extent, global reach.

Grants for Public Health, Mental Health, Housing and Community Development

The foundation’s health and home giving area “is dedicated to increasing access to medical care and housing for those who are in need.” Grants stemming from this program prioritize vulnerable people, particularly those who are homeless, uninsured, undocumented or “overlooked.” In Arizona, the foundation supports the Phoenix Children’s Hospital, the HonorHealth Foundation, the Homeless Youth Connection and Native American Connections, which provides “culturally appropriate health, affordable housing, and community development services.” Elsewhere, the foundation has given to the Icahn School of Medicine’s Center for Psychedelic Psychotherapy and Trauma Research in New York, the Greater Baltimore Medical Center and the Arts Council of Greater New Haven, Connecticut, which received support for retreats for BIPOC mental health care professionals.

Grants for Higher Education, Work and Opportunity

The Parsons Foundation’s American Dream giving program supports “organizations that break down barriers to opportunities in which people change their lives forever.” Specific areas of focus include higher education, vocational training and career development for marginalized groups. In Arizona, the foundation supports Arizona State University, Local First Arizona and Jobs for Arizona’s Graduates. Outside of Arizona, the foundation has provided multi-year support to Women Moving Millions, which works “to advance women, girls, and gender expansive individuals,” and RedF, which invests in “businesses that reveal and reinforce the talent of people breaking through barriers to employment.”

Grants for Military and Veterans Causes

Grants for military and veterans causes stem from the foundation’s military and first responders focus area. Bob Parsons served in the U.S. Marine Corps, and grants appear to prioritize organizations working with Marine veterans. The foundation provides ongoing support to the Semper Fi & America’s Fund, which supports “for our nation’s critically wounded, ill, and injured service members, veterans, and military families” and the National Museum of the U.S. Marine Corps. Another grantee, the Headstrong Project, is a national organization that offers “stigma-free, evidence-based, trauma-focused mental health treatment for our nation’s military, veterans, and their associated family members.”

Grants for K-12 Education

Parson’s giving for youth and education makes grants for K-12 populations, supporting in- and out-of-school learning, enrichment and wellness programs. Grantmaking prioritizes vulnerable students, as well as students from low-income, urban and immigrant backgrounds.In Arizona, the foundation has supported Elevate Phoenix, which provides mentoring, counseling and scholarships to at-risk urban students. Other grantees include FosterEd, Teach for America, the Boys and Girls Cubs of Greater Scottsdale and Read Better Be Better, and after-school reading program in Phoenix.

Grants for Global Development and Disaster Relief

While the Parsons Foundation does not name global development or disaster relief specifically among its focus areas, a significant number of grants have supported global and relief-focuses organizations. The foundation has made several grants to Hope for Haiti, which focuses on “[i]mproving the quality of life for the Haitian people, particularly women and children” and provided emergency hurricane and earthquake response. The foundation has also supported Team Rubicon, a veterans’ organization that provides “relief to those affected by disaster or crises, no matter when or where they strike.”

Important Grant Details

the Bob and Renee Parsons Foundation’s grants range from $10,000 to about $850,000.

  • Arizona-based organizations generally receive more than half of this funder’s giving.

  • About 57% of Parsons’s funding provides general operating support to its grantees.

  • The foundation gives to organizations of all sizes and provides multi-year funding in many cases.

  • The grant application process begins with an eligibility quiz and submission of a letter of interest. The foundation may take up to three months to respond with an invitation to apply.

  • For additional information about past grants, see the foundation’s impact page.

Submit general inquiries to the foundation’s staff at info@tbrpf.org.

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