Four Pillars launched a community grant programme called Four Pillars of the Community to channel AU$25,000 to local organisations, featuring five AU$5,000 awards for grassroots projects. The initiative targeted not-for-profits and community groups around Healesville in Victoria, with eligibility requiring Deductible Gift Recipient status and annual revenue under AU$500,000.
Applications closed on the 31st of March and successful recipients are to be selected in April, with projects required to complete within 12 months of funding. The relaunch forms part of a broader two-year AU$50,000 community investment by Four Pillars aimed at strengthening ties across the Yarra Valley. Grants covered work across sustainability, education and skills, social inclusion and Indigenous-led initiatives, positioning the programme as a targeted way for a regional spirits brand to support local impact.
Local Community Grant Programmes
Four Pillars Launches Four Pillars of the Community Grants
Trend Themes
1. Regional Brand-led Philanthropy - Local consumer brands are reallocating marketing budgets to fund community programmes, creating novel pathways for place-based brand trust and co-created social value.
2. Microgrant Targeting for Grassroots Impact - Smaller, focused grants directed at hyper-local organisations are enabling rapid testing of community solutions and more measurable social outcomes compared with traditional large-scale funding models.
3. Sustainability and Inclusion-focused Funding - Grant streams tied to sustainability, skills and Indigenous-led initiatives are reshaping donor priorities toward long-term resilience and culturally grounded project design.
Industry Implications
1. Alcohol and Spirits - Regional distilleries are evolving into community anchors where product storytelling and local investment converge to differentiate brands in crowded beverage markets.
2. Not-for-profit Sector - Small charities with DGR status are increasingly positioned to pilot scalable social innovations through short-cycle funding and closer corporate partnerships.
3. Regional Economic Development - Place-based grant programmes are influencing local ecosystems by seeding workforce development, social inclusion projects and climate-resilient initiatives that alter traditional regional growth models.