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Digital
Hackathons bring together teams to solve problems, build solutions, and push ideas forward fast. When structured well, they spark innovation and turn ideas into action. Notably, over 80% of Fortune 100 companies use hackathons as a strategy to fuel innovation, according to Forbes.
Over the past year, we’ve hosted multiple hackathons with Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM), as well as our internal one, xPrize. We’ve witnessed breakthrough ideas, unexpected collaborations, and solutions with significant business impact. If you want yours to drive similar results, here’s what you need to know.
Still unsure? A well–run hackathon can:
Whether in–person or virtual, every hackathon follows a similar structure:
Beyond the fundamentals, these strategies ensure your hackathon creates lasting value.
A slick, well–rehearsed presentation can overshadow a more practical or innovative idea. To counter this, create a weighted scoring system that prioritizes feasibility, originality, and real–world impact. Consider using blind evaluations for certain criteria so judges focus on the solution, rather than solely on the delivery.
Internal experts can miss disruptive ideas because they’re too close to existing ways of working. Bringing in judges from completely different sectors adds fresh perspectives. These judges ask critical questions that industry insiders might overlook, helping teams refine their ideas beyond “business–as–usual" thinking.
Many hackathon ideas sound great in theory but fall apart in execution. To ensure real impact, require teams to outline an implementation roadmap, including technical feasibility, budget, and potential roadblocks. Instead of asking, “What’s your idea?” push them with, “How will this actually work?”
Some of the best hackathon solutions don’t win simply because they don’t fit the competition’s immediate priorities. Create a pathway for non–winning ideas to be developed further – whether through mentorship, funding, or connecting teams with the right internal stakeholders. A structured “runners–up” program can ensure great ideas don’t get lost.
Similarly, too many hackathons end with teams walking away feeling like their work disappeared into a void. Give every team something valuable to take forward. That can be detailed judge feedback, an internal sponsor interested in their idea, or an invitation to present their solution elsewhere. Even teams that don’t win should leave with a sense of progress.
This one applies if you’re planning to run multiple hackathons (but we trust you will)! So, a strong hackathon ecosystem doesn’t bring back the same people – it continuously attracts fresh perspectives. Measure how many participants are returning versus how many are new and adjust your outreach to ensure a diverse and evolving pool of talent.
A hackathon is an opportunity to drive change.
The best hackathons don’t follow a rigid formula – they test ideas, push teams to think differently, and compress weeks of innovation into days. These are our insights, but it’s your hackathon. Take what works, adapt what you need, and make it your own!