May 19, 2022

E052: Melissa Stevens: Milken Institute

Melissa Stevens is the executive director of the Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy, leading its work with individual and family philanthropists and foundations seeking to deploy their capital to make a transformative, sustainable impact. Since co-founding the Center in 2015, she has overseen the creation and execution of strategies which have influenced $1 billion in philanthropic capital, and managed the development of programs and organizations including the Melanoma Research Alliance, the largest private funder of melanoma research.

E052: Melissa Stevens: Center for Strategic Philanthropy at the Milken Institute
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
00:30 So what inspired you to get into the area of strategic philanthropy? How does one go about doing that?
04:10 How do you think strategic philanthropy will impact venture capital or will it be an addition to venture capital? 
05:47 What are you currently reading or learning or listening to these days?
07:39 In 2 years, how do you see venture capital evolved or changed?
08:37 How do people contact you?
08:51 Thank you

Featured Guest Bio:
Melissa Stevens is the executive director of the Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy, leading its work with individual and family philanthropists and foundations seeking to deploy their capital to make a transformative, sustainable impact. Since co-founding the Center in 2015, she has overseen the creation and execution of strategies which have influenced $1 billion in philanthropic capital, and managed the development of programs and organizations including the Melanoma Research Alliance, the largest private funder of melanoma research. Under her leadership, the Center for Strategic Philanthropy has more than tripled in size, expanding its areas of expertise to include education and environmental conservation philanthropy, as well as health and medical research. Previously, Melissa was the deputy executive director of the Milken Institute’s FasterCures center, leading its growth and expanding its programmatic scope to include the development of a novel financing mechanism for early-stage drug development and building a global resource for large-scale, cross-sector collaboration. She also directed FasterCures’ Philanthropic Advisory Service, which aimed to deploy philanthropic capital effectively to advance medical solutions. This ultimately led to the creation of the Center for Strategic Philanthropy. Prior to joining the Institute, Melissa worked in the health sciences practice of PricewaterhouseCoopers, advising commercial and federal clients such as the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. Melissa received a bachelor's degree in biochemistry and an M.B.A. from Pennsylvania State University. She is based at the Institute's Washington, D.C. office.

Company Information:
The Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy advises philanthropists and foundations seeking to develop and implement transformative giving strategies.

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Company Contact:
Melissa StevensProfile Photo

Melissa Stevens

Executive Director

Melissa Stevens is the executive director of the Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy, leading its work with individual and family philanthropists and foundations seeking to deploy their capital to make a transformative, sustainable impact. Since co-founding the Center in 2015, she has overseen the creation and execution of strategies which have influenced $1 billion in philanthropic capital, and managed the development of programs and organizations including the Melanoma Research Alliance, the largest private funder of melanoma research. Under her leadership, the Center for Strategic Philanthropy has more than tripled in size, expanding its areas of expertise to include education and environmental conservation philanthropy, as well as health and medical research.

Previously, Melissa was the deputy executive director of the Milken Institute’s FasterCures center, leading its growth and expanding its programmatic scope to include the development of a novel financing mechanism for early-stage drug development and building a global resource for large-scale, cross-sector collaboration. She also directed FasterCures’ Philanthropic Advisory Service, which aimed to deploy philanthropic capital effectively to advance medical solutions. This ultimately led to the creation of the Center for Strategic Philanthropy.

Prior to joining the Institute, Melissa worked in the health sciences practice of PricewaterhouseCoopers, advising commercial and federal clients such as the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Qatar Foundation for Education, Scien… Read More