“Los Angeles is my home. It’s where I’ve been very happy, and I want to give back to this community,” says philanthropist Wallis Annenberg. Annenberg has done just that, leveraging her financial resources and her ability to convene public and private players to contribute projects such as a tree house that is wheelchair accessible and a theater made from out of an old post office.
In fact, since Wallis Annenberg assumed leadership of her late father, Walter’s, foundation in 2009, the Annenberg Foundation has given more than a quarter of a billion dollars to over 500 organizations, many of which bear their name. To do this, Annenberg, together with Executive Director Leonard Aube, have pounded the pavement in search of the most visionary nonprofit leaders in Los Angeles, and supported them not only through grants but also by building their leadership skills, particularly their relationships with their boards.
Annenberg’s own board is comprised of Annenberg and three of her children, each of whom, in addition to managing a joint portfolio of grants, exercise individual grantmaking discretion. Beyond her board, Wallis Annenberg has taken care to build a culture of teamwork at her foundation and to share responsibilities, so that every staff member has a chance to connect directly with grantees.
Though Annenberg’s philanthropy has been enormous over the last decade, she readily admits her favorite projects are relatively modest in scope. Take, for example, the Annenberg Community Beach House, which offers public access to the California coast. “If I can do these little things,” says Annenberg, “I’m very proud of that.”
More Remarkable GiversWallis Annenberg's Videos
- Addressing a leadership deficit: Wallis Annenberg and Leonard Aube work with board chairs and nonprofit executives together
- Balancing long-term relationships with innovation: Leonard Aube describes the tension between investing in existing grantees and identifying new ones
- Collaborating and convening: What Wallis Annenberg describes as the “great privilege” of philanthropy
- Creating space for community: Wallis Annenberg discovers a need and a solution
- Empowering and high standards: Leonard Aube on the characteristics of the Annenberg family that make his job fun
- “How do you develop a culture?” Wallis Annenberg introduces rituals in her organization
- How Wallis Annenberg and her Executive Director Leonard Aube learned to work together and find opportunities in their community
- In search of visionary leadership: Leonard Aube and the Annenberg Foundation focus on one thing in their nonprofit due diligence
- Investing in leaders first: Why Wallis Annenberg and Leonard Aube invest in good leaders regardless of what they do
- Keeping family foundations healthy: Leonard Aube on the importance of creating opportunities for staff and board members to speak candidly
- Leonard Aube and the Annenberg Foundation take a unique approach to giving feedback to grant applicants
- Making philanthropy a family affair: Wallis Annenberg on why she shares control of her foundation with her children
- One billion dollar grantmaking spree: Leonard Aube describes the Annenberg Foundation’s five-year period of giving twice that of a traditional foundation
- Partnering with the public: Leonard Aube discusses the challenges and the Annenberg Foundation’s response
- Philanthropy’s role in a family: Wallis Annenberg sees it as unifying now, but potentially destructive later
- Recruiting an executive director: How Wallis Annenberg and Leonard Aube became philanthropic partners
- Stewarding donor intent: Leonard Aube describes his role in capturing the Annenberg family’s philanthropic values
- Take philanthropy slowly: Wallis Annenberg says patience is a key virtue
- The “it” factor for nonprofit leaders: Leonard Aube describes what makes great leaders stand apart
- The power of small grants: Wallis Annenberg prizes her smaller endeavors
- Unity and autonomy in family philanthropy: How Wallis Annenberg allocates the Foundation’s resources
- Using experts to make a difference: Leonard Aube on how the Annenberg Foundation got smart on the environment
- Value-driven philanthropy: Leonard Aube describes how two values frame the Annenberg Foundation’s work