Bark-Code: Digitizing Forest Management for Family Forest Owners
Impact programme
Resting Reef, Future Impact, 2023
Beirut's RiverLESS Forest, Future Impact, 2019
What is the Impact programme?
The D&AD Impact Programme is a 12-month package of training and support that’s designed to support project owners with the ideation, launch and early growth of their work. It’s available to anyone shortlisted in the Future Impact category.
A Future Impact cohort typically includes individuals, organisations and teams working on prototypes, MVPs, projects in testing or those that have recently launched. Through the programme we aim to to enable a cohort of creative thinkers, known as D&AD Impacters, to develop their projects within 12 months.
What can I win?
Anyone shortlisted in the Future Impact category will receive place on the D&AD Impact Programme and the opportunity to apply for a development grant from the £25,000 D&AD Impact Fund. The Impact Programme includes:
- 12-month package of training and support that’s designed to support project owners with the ideation, launch and early growth of their work
- A space on a live D&AD Masterclasses of your choice
- Access to D&AD’s on-demand courses for a year
- The opportunity to ask the Impact Council for project support in the year following your win
- Free entry into the D&AD Awards Impact category, valid for 3 years
Regardless of whether you would like to participate in the programme, your work will appear in the D&AD Annual, online and freely accessible to the global creative community. In 2024 this reached an audience of over 200,000 people, three quarters of which are outside the UK. Winners receive a Future Impact Pencil, a symbol of creative excellence, and a tree planted in recognition of their award.
Impact fund
The D&AD Impact Fund is a source of financial support for our awarded entrants. Anyone shortlisted in the Future Impact category is invited to apply for a development grant from the fund. Worth £25,000, applicants will need to show how the money will be used toward the development of their awarded project. The funds must be spent within 12 months of being received. D&AD does not claim any ownership of, or expect any financial return from, projects that receive funding.
The Fund will be allocated by the D&AD Impact Council at their discretion and based on the information provided in applications.
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In 2025, the full £25,000 of the D&AD Impact Fund was awarded to the project Bark-Code, a scanning-based solution designed to help small-scale family forest owners (FFOs) track and preserve their woodlands, especially where resources are limited.
Eligibility
Future Impact is for designs and initiatives that are on their way to being launched into the world. Prototypes, MVPs and work undergoing testing are all appropriate here. New product or service lines are also eligible under the same conditions.
We do not accept ideas without proof of concept and campaign communications are not be eligible.
Commercially released work will only be accepted in exceptional cases, where the work has not made a tangible impact yet and would benefit from the support of the D&AD Impact Programme. Work that has been commercially released and can demonstrate effectiveness should be entered into Impact.
Creativity as a catalyst for change — a D&AD Masterclass with WeTransfer
Tell me moreImpact fund recipients
- £25,000 to Bark-Code (2025); a scanning-based solution designed to help small-scale family forest owners(FFOs) track and preserve their woodlands, especially where resources are limited.
- £25,000 to ViWipe (2024); the world's first non-invasive, low-cost, paper-based HPV self-test empowering young women to prevent cervical cancer.
- £15,000 to Resting Reef (2023); an innovative memorial and eco-burial service that allows people to transform their remains into reef structures.
- £10,000 to Lungy Health (2023); initially released as a wellness app, Lungy’s technology will be developed into a platform for patients with breathing problems.
- £12,000 to Get Better Books (2021); this series of interactive books is designed to help paediatric patients understand their journey through treatment and stages of recovery.
- £9,700 to Baby BSL: Where is the Bird? (2020); a new form of immersive publishing that empowers the parents of deaf and hearing children to use British Sign Language in the home.
- £3,300 to Breathe (2020); a smart chest-binding garment that allows the wearer to customise the tightness of the garment on-the-go.
- $14,000 to Beirut's RiverLESS Forest (2019); a series of initiatives to address the deterioration of the polluted Beirut River.
- $3,800 to More Moms (2019); this project combines qualitative insights, quantitative data and customer experience design to improve the user experience of moms in advertising.
- $2,200 to Decoding Medicine (2019); through a mobile-friendly microsite, this project helps people in India understand essential drug information using clear text and universal pictograms, empowering safer, informed health decisions.
