Public compare route

Foundation
Compare

Compare two foundations across capital scale, governance visibility, open program surface, and recurring year-memory. Snow and Paul Ramsay are the default pair because they show the current best verified case and the first non-Snow replication case side by side.

Default: Snow vs PRFReusable compare surfaceSide-by-side operator view
Choose foundations
Current pair
Candidate pair

This pair is outside the benchmark set and should be treated as exploratory. Use it to spot the next data lifts: verified grants, recurring year-memory, and source-backed program memory.

Backlog lane
General backlog

This pair does not collapse neatly into one missing layer, so the full backlog is the right next surface.

At a glance
Institution type
Type mismatch

Australian Red Cross Society is Service Delivery while Epilepsy Foundation is Corporate Foundation.

Annual giving gap
Australian Red Cross Society leads

$265.7M vs $500K · 531.3x.

Governance visibility
Australian Red Cross Society leads

10 roles vs 8.

Recurring year memory
Epilepsy Foundation leads

3 rows vs 0.

Verified grant layer
Epilepsy Foundation leads

1 verified grants vs 0.

Review stability
Current estimate
Needs more build before stable review

The current pair still lacks enough verified evidence depth. Governance and year memory exist in places, but the review would still lean too heavily on inferred data.

Progress to stable review
5/8 signals complete

3 stability signals still missing across the pair.

Recommended next move
Australian Red Cross Society: Build the verified grant layer

Link report-backed grantees or relationship rows so the review is not relying only on program surfaces.

Open next step
Benchmark fit
Outside benchmark lane

Service Delivery profile. Use this as institutional context unless a real grantmaker layer is verified.

Australian Red Cross Society
Early review

Governance roles: 10

Verified grants: 0

Year memory rows: 0

Verified source-backed rows: 0

Inferred rows: 0

Institutional context
Benchmark review not applicable

This foundation is currently typed as Service Delivery, so the benchmark completion score is not the right readout.

What to do next
Build the verified grant layer

Link report-backed grantees or relationship rows so the review is not relying only on program surfaces.

Seed recurring year memory

Create program-year rows so recurring strands can be reviewed across years instead of only as static profile text.

Benchmark fit
Benchmark-ready grantmaker

Corporate Foundation with enough evidence depth for stable philanthropic review.

Epilepsy Foundation
Stable review

Governance roles: 8

Verified grants: 1

Year memory rows: 3

Verified source-backed rows: 3

Inferred rows: 0

Completion
4/4 stable signals

No major review-stability gaps remain.

What to do next
Maintain the verified layer

This foundation is stable enough for review. The next job is upkeep rather than core backfill.

medium confidence

Australian Red Cross Society

Service DeliveryABN 50169561394
Open route
Annual giving
$265.7M
Open programs
0
Governance
10
Year memory
0
Readiness signals
10 governance roles

The Australian Red Cross Society is a humanitarian organization that provides aid and support to individuals and communities impacted by disaster, conflict, and crisis. They operate various services ranging from emergency assistance to programs addressing homelessness and supporting migrants in transition.

The Australian Red Cross believes in the power of humanity to alleviate suffering and transform lives. They focus on community resilience and aim to empower individuals to help themselves and each other through disaster response and recovery initiatives.
human_rightscommunityemergency_managementaged_careAU-National
Latest program year memory
No year-memory rows available yet.
low confidence

Epilepsy Foundation

Corporate FoundationABN 75967571784
Open route
Annual giving
$500K
Open programs
2
Governance
8
Year memory
3
Readiness signals
8 governance roles1 verified grants3 year-memory rows2 open programs
The Foundation funds research that may not be currently fundable by traditional agencies like NHMRC due to preliminary nature, with emphasis on early career researchers and rare genetic epilepsies. They employ a unique peer review process combining scientific assessment with input from people living with epilepsy and carers to ensure research has real-world impact. Priority is given to high-quality research that will fundamentally benefit people living with epilepsy, with equal consideration for rare and common epilepsy conditions.
healthcommunityhuman_rightsindigenousAU-NSWAU-VIC
Latest program year memory
2025-26

Epilepsy Foundation Research Fund

grant

Grants for medical and psycho-social research into epilepsy including pre-clinical, translational, clinical and social/community research. Must be for organisations with DGR Item 1 and Tax Concession Charity status.

Places: Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

2025-26

SYNGAP-1 Research Grant

grant

This grant, in collaboration with Syngap Research Fund Australia, sought Expressions of Interest (EOI) from investigators for SYNGAP-1 research, focusing on novel therapeutic approaches or clinical trial readiness.

Places: Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

2025-26

Australian Epilepsy Research Fund (AERF)

grant

This fund supports innovative and high-quality research aimed at curing epilepsy or reducing its impact on people's lives, and finding new and improved treatments. It supports researchers, universities, research.

Places: Australia

Source: official program url verified

Evidence: open source

How to use this
1. Compare the capital posture

Start with annual giving, open programs, and governance visibility before you look at stories or relationships.

2. Check year-memory depth

If recurring program rows exist, the foundation is ready for stronger portfolio tracking and annual review loops.

3. Open the detailed route

Use the detailed demo page only after the compare view has made the differences legible.