Who can be entered?
This Award is open to individual women only. Please note Winners of any category are excluded from nominations for any Women in Defence UK Awards for 2 years.
What will the judges be looking for?
Innovation could include science and technology, or ways of working, such as operations, funding mechanisms or governance. The nominee could be the originator and developer of the idea, the leader who recognised its value and enabled it to happen or any other individual worthy of recognition.
Sustainability could include outstanding environmental or societal programmes or the innovative development of more sustainable capability and solutions.
The key aspect for both areas is that the nominee must be seen to be going above and beyond their day job. The judges will be looking for evidence of the benefits – such as improved capability in delivering the mission, benefits to morale or retention, or other improvements such as making the process quicker, more efficient or less costly. Specific sustainability benefits could include a reduction in carbon emissions, greater resilience to climate change or new programmes to address resources, biodiversity or positive societal impact.
Finalists from earlier years
Last year’s Finalists were from RAF, Civil Service and DSTL. The Winner was recognised for her significant contributions to Signatures work in the Land Domain and for being the Innovator of the Year at DSTL. The other Finalists were nominated for their work transforming Air Wing dispatch centre processes; her ability to drive innovation in the method of tackling one of the most consequential tasks placed on the Joint Intelligence Organisation and the wider assessment community: assessing what deters our most dangerous and powerful adversaries.
Please note
The citation must reflect a true and accurate account of the attributes, achievements and impact of the actions of the individual. Women in Defence UK requires all nominators to verify that the citations are factually correct.
AI can be used to create all or part of the citation. If used, it is the nominator’s personal responsibility to ensure that all company or organisational security, privacy and information management protocols have been followed. We ask for transparency if any AI tool has been used – you will see a question as part of the nomination procedure.
You should only include information that is up to the classification of ‘Official’. Information that is ‘Official Sensitive’ or higher must not be included.
A nomination using essentially the same narrative or evidence should not be entered in more than one Award by a single nominator. A nominee may be entered more than once in one or more categories by different nominators, providing the narrative in the citation does not duplicate, or near word for word resemble, the citations of other nominators.
Entries will not be accepted from the partner, spouse or other close family member of a nominee.
There is a word limit of 200 words per section. Even if the form allows you to enter more, the citation sent for judging will be shortened if it exceeds this limit, which could mean that it ends mid-sentence.
If you experience any difficulties using the form, require the information in an alternative format, or need support completing your application, please contact us at awards@womenindefenceuk.co.uk A member of the team will be happy to assist you.
Hints and Tips
The judges refer to these category criteria when judging submissions. They look to see how the activity/behaviour/impact meets the criteria for each category. So put yourself in the judges’ shoes. They read lots of citations so capture their attention early, be concise and provide context. It may be obvious to you why an achievement is so worthy of recognition, but our judges may not have the same background or experience so please explain the significance.
Providing context to the citation (i.e. sphere of work, day to day tasks, key challenges, etc.), and tangible evidence of the outcome or effect that this had on others will strengthen the nomination hugely. Our judges may not be familiar with all parts of the defence enterprise so avoid, or at the very least explain, acronyms.