


Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team Email Formats
Non-profit Organizations • Washington, District of Columbia, United States • 201-500 Employees
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team Email Formats
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team uses 4 email formats. The most common is {first initial}.{last name} (e.g., j.doe@hotosm.org), used 62.3% of the time.
| Format | Example | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
{first initial}.{last name} | j.doe@hotosm.org | 62.3% |
{first name}.{last name} | john.doe@hotosm.org | 34% |
{2char} | {2char}@hotosm.org | 1.9% |
{first initial}.{second initial} | j.o@hotosm.org | 1.9% |
Key Contacts at Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
Rebecca Firth
Executive Director
David Lemayian
Regional Director, Eastern And Southern Africa Open Mapping Hub
Fabrizio Scrollini
Senior Director Of Programs
Anne Sorensen
Director Of Philanthropy
Leen D'Hondt
Director Of Technology & Data
Dr Ibrahima Cissé
Regional Director Humanitarian Openstreetmap Hub Western And Northern Africa
Nama Budhathoki
Regional Director For Asia-Pacific
Russell Deffner
Secretary Board Of Directors
Paul Uithol
Director Of Humanitarian Data
Emilio Mariscal
Senior Technical Product Owner
Company overview
| Headquarters | 1100 13th Street NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20005, US |
| Phone number | +12024498124 |
| Website | |
| NAICS | 813 |
| SIC | 871 |
| Keywords | Data Quality Assurance, Crisis Response, Design Of Osm Documentation And Tools, Humanitarian Mapping, Open Data Collection, Openstreetmap, Outreach Activities, Partnership With Data Providers |
| Employees | 201-500 |
| Socials |
About Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
Free, collaboratively generated maps are uniquely valuable to humanitarian work and economic development, especially in places where base map data is often missing, out of date, or rapidly changing. OpenStreetMap is an open data project founded to create a free and open map of the world, built primarily by volunteers surveying with pencil and paper, GPS units or by digitizing aerial imagery and finding and liberating existing public sources of geographic data. Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team [HOT], a US 501(c)(3) charitable organization, was launched in 2010 to promote and support the thousands of volunteers and dozens of local groups around the world that work to build OpenStreetMap, with an emphasis on humanitarian mapping to aid disaster relief, preparedness and economic development. In its role organizing crisis response mapping, HOT acts as a bridge between the OpenStreetMap community and traditional humanitarian responders like MSF, the Red Cross, UNOCHA as well as local groups and governments. To further the mission of OpenStreetMap, HOT sponsors and coordinates the development and hosting of several open source software tools specifically for the OpenStreetMap community. We also fund field training and data collection for existing and new OpenStreetMap groups, produce learning and training materials for people doing OpenStreetMap mapping and train skilled mapping coordinators to organize volunteer mappers' efforts in emergency response to crises and disasters. HOT sponsored teams work in countries around the world helping collect geographic data and training and learning from local communities to map information in OpenStreetMap that is important to them. Our goal is to help build self sustaining local groups of motivated and skilled mappers. We are dedicated to applying the principles of open source software and open data sharing towards humanitarian response and economic development and inclusiveness in all of our endeavors.
Employees by Management Level
Total employees: 201-500
Seniority
Employees
Employees by Department
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team has 50 employees across 11 departments.
Departments
Number of employees
Funding Data
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team has never raised funding before.
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team Tech Stack
Discover the technologies and tools that power Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team's digital infrastructure, from frameworks to analytics platforms.
JavaScript frameworks
Miscellaneous
PaaS
Analytics
Miscellaneous
CDN
JavaScript libraries
Programming languages
Video players
CDN
Frequently asked questions
4.8
40,000 users



