The U. S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational Cultural Affairs (ECA) announces the American Music Mentorship Program (AMMP) open competition for one cooperative agreement to support a mentorship residency for music industry professionals from around the world.
AMMP is a two-to-three-week
U.S.-based mentorship residency for approximately 20 mid-career music industry professionals (“mentees”) from three to five countries.
AMMP is ECA’s Global Music Diplomacy Initiative’s (GMDI) mentorship program, first announced by U. S. Secretary of State Blinken in September 2023 in response to the PEACE through Music Diplomacy Act.
The program seeks to bolster music ecosystems, which play a vital role in fostering diverse and inclusive societies, championing innovation, protecting free expression, promoting economic opportunity, and contributing to the vitality of a civil society.
AMMP is facilitated by a partnership between ECA and a private sector partner.
With ECA input, the private sector partner will lead the recruitment and selection process and secure American professionals from its membership to serve as “mentors,” who will volunteer their time.
Mentors will be available four days during the in-person program and meet virtually monthly with the mentees for up to a year following the residency.
Mentors will provide behind-the-scenes access, bolster the mentees’ technical skills and build the foundations for lasting professional networks.
Mentees will represent careers that support creative talent and build the music industry infrastructure in their home countries and demonstrate English language proficiency.
Mentees will be recruited and selected in cooperation with participating U. S. Embassies and Consulates.
Areas of specialization, or “professional tracks,” will be determined each year between the ECA and the private sector partner in cooperation with the award recipient and in line with needs of the participating countries.
Mentees will be paired with mentors in the U. S. music industry who are in the same professional track and who bolster mentee’s professional skills and build networks.
Mentees will travel to the United States for a two-to-three-week residency, which will take place in a site(s) that have a music industry presence and/or access to individual experts, from small/niche companies, independent labels, mid-sized companies, and larger industry businesses.
During the residency, mentees work with expert workshop facilitators and mentors to receive state-of-the-art-training and industry access.
Mentees will participate in professional workshops, small and full group forums, cross-industry collaborations, site visits, and develop post-program action plans.
Program activities will provide opportunities for professional networking, career planning, and skills-building that create a holistic professional experience through a robust exchange of ideas and training by utilizing in-person and virtual approaches.
Mentors and mentees will meet virtually monthly for approximately one year to develop mentee career plans and ensure sustainable effects of the program.
Some of these sessions may occur prior to the in-person residency, but the majority should take place after the mentees have returned to their home countries.
The recipient will coordinate and track the virtual component throughout the course of the year-long mentorship.
The recipient must manage complex logistics, meet strict timelines, manage the needs of private sector partners and mentors, and promote the program through media and social media and develop a plan to share progress, status, updates and outcomes of program components with relevant stakeholders.
Only one proposal will be considered by ECA from each applicant organization.
In cases where more than one submission from an applicant appears in grants.gov, ECA will only consider the submission made closest in time to the NOFO deadline; that submission would constitute the one and only proposal ECA would review from that applicant.
Please see full announcement for additional information.