Talk:Casebook PBC

Latest comment: 24 days ago by Kerriann becker in topic History

Casebook PBC

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Casebook PBC is a US cloud computing public-benefit corporation headquartered in New York City. With its configurable, easy-to-use SaaS solution, Casebook PBC empowers government agencies and nonprofits of all sizes by providing them with the tools to control everything from intake to case management while delivering reliable data about the effectiveness of their programs. By centralizing tracking, communication, and faster reporting, Casebook PBC reduces operational costs, fosters internal collaboration, and helps the helpers accelerate an end to poverty. Kerriann becker (talk) 20:22, 28 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

History

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Casebook initially started as Case Commons, a project of the Annie E. Casey Foundation[2] under the leadership of Kathleen Feely, who was Vice-President for Innovation at the foundation.[3]

In 2012, Indiana's Department of Child Services was the first state agency to implement Casebook as a web-based solution[buzzword] for its child welfare caseworkers.[4] This effort led to the organization receiving the Design for Experience Award in 2014 [5] and a Code for America Technology Award in 2015.[6][7]

In 2017, the organization helped the state of California's Child Welfare Digital Services agency learn how to build and ship software.[8] That same year, under the leadership of a new CEO, Tristan Louis, Casebook PBC entered into a national partnership with KPMG, allowing KPMG to leverage the Casebook platform as its exclusive solution[buzzword] for the child welfare vertical.[9]

In late 2018, Assets from Case Commons were sold to Casebook PBC, a new organization founded by Mr. Louis with the purpose of building a SaaS platform for human services.

In mid-2020, the company started offering Case Management and Provider Management software aimed at not-for-profit organizations in social services.[10]

As of 2024, Casebook PBC has served more than a quarter of a million individuals on its SaaS solution, with 350 customers and 100,000 service enrollments across 75,000 cases. Kerriann becker (talk) 20:17, 27 September 2024 (UTC)Reply