Will Byrne is an activist and entrepreneur. Will was named one of
Forbes’s 30 Under 30,[2] and his writing has appeared inForbes and Fast Company.[3][4]
During his work on President Obama's 2008 campaign, Byrne utilized online and offline community organizing tactics. Byrne and his co-founders saw the impact of community organizing in the political sphere.[5][6] Rather than joining the administration after Obama was elected, Byrne went on to develop these tactics as a
social entrepreneur.[7]
Groundswell
In 2009, Byrne, Max Harper, Marcus Ryan, John Lauer, Kristen Psaki, and Tony Ficarotta co-founded
Groundswell after working on President Obama’s 2008 campaign.[8]Groundswell is a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C. that uses
collective buying power to drive positive social change, especially in the
clean energy sector.[9] Byrne called this model "civic consumption."[10] Byrne served as CEO until 2014; as of 2022, it is led by Michelle Moore, a former White House official.[11]
Stanford Design School
In 2015, Byrne joined the Stanford Design School as a Civic Innovation Fellow.[12]
Later work
Following Stanford, Byrne was Senior Director of the Innovation Lab at Human Rights First, and presented about issues of bias, inclusion, and human rights in computer vision and artificial intelligence technology.[13][14] He also wrote articles on emerging technology, AI, human rights and democracy for
Fast Company.[15][16] As of 2023, he was listed as an affiliated fellow at the Citris Policy Lab, which describes itself as supporting interdisciplinary research and education regarding the role of regulation in promoting innovation.[17]
Honors and awards
Forbes 30 Under 30 Selection; Social Entrepreneurs, Forbes Magazine (December 2012) [2]
Champions of Change, White House Executive Office of the President, 2011 [1][18]