Engage Your Business in the Movement to End Hunger

Rise Against Hunger offers corporate partners and their employees many opportunities to actively engage in our mission to end hunger. Our team collaborates with global and domestic companies to help them achieve their CSR, ESG and employee engagement objectives while addressing food insecurity worldwide. Every partnership is tailored to your unique goals, and we look forward to connecting with you to develop a collaboration that aligns with your needs.

Ready to get your company engaged? Fill out our brief interest form!

Is your business ready to make a global impact? Let’s connect!

We’re looking forward to working together! To learn more about hosting a meal packaging event, complete the interest form, and a Rise Against Hunger team member will be in touch soon to guide you through the planning process. Together, we can end global hunger — one meal at a time.

Corporate Partnership Spotlight

Ending Food Insecurity
One Plate at a Time

Zambrero, our longtime corporate partner, has donated more than 90 million meals (and counting) through its Plate 4 Plate initiative. For every burrito or bowl sold, Zambrero donates a meal to help people facing food insecurity. Each year, Zambrero hosts a meal packaging day to bring together thousands of its team members across the globe to grow the movement to end hunger and nourish lives.

Working to Alleviate Hunger Across the Globe

Kraft Heinz has been a valued partner in the fight against global hunger, driving meaningful impact through initiatives like the provision of micronutrient sachets and support for sustainable agricultural development. The Kraft Heinz Foundation’s partnership has helped package millions of meals and strengthen communities around the world alongside Rise Against Hunger.

Together, this work is helping expand access to nutrition, support local food systems and create lasting impact where it’s needed most. Learn more about the difference this partnership is making.

Organizational Donors!

$1,000,000+
$400,000 – 999,999
  • BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company)
  • FedEx Cares
  • Liquid Church
  • PwC
  • The Pfizer Foundation
  • United Airlines
  • Western Digital
$100,000 – 399,999
  • ADP
  • AMD
  • BNY
  • Capital One
  • Christ Fellowship Church
  • Cross Community Church
  • Decker Brands
  • Dunwoody United
  • Methodist Church
  • EisnerAmper
  • Elevation Church
  • Grace Family Church
  • Grace Lutheran Church, Bowie, MD
  • JPMorganChase
  • Menlo Church
  • Northrop Grumman
  • Prologis
  • ServiceNow
  • The Walt Disney Company
  • Unifi Service

It Starts With YOU!

Strength, Stability And Hope

The gift that filled Nelly’s table.

“We were yielding very little, and the crops could not sustain us the whole year,” Nelly remembers. As a mother of seven and a farmer with two decades of experience, the stress of inconsistent yields was all-consuming. A poor harvest not only strained her family financially, but also limited their own meals to just two a day. Their story reflects that of many in their fishing and farming village near a lake in the Karonga district of northern Malawi. Here, heavy rainfall makes conventional farming methods nearly impossible. The entire village is, quite literally, saturated in food insecurity — a reality that leaves families struggling to survive season after season without a dependable source of nourishment.

In 2019, Nelly began participating in Harvesting Prosperity and Resilience, a sustainable agriculture project implemented by Rise Against Hunger in partnership with the Foundation for Community Support Services (FOCUS). The project works with 3,100 smallholder farmers in Malawi’s Karonga and Mzimba districts to strengthen food and nutrition security by improving production methods, nutrition practices and household income.

Just one year later, Nelly was ready to expand the variety of crops on her farm. What land once only produced maize began to flourish with sesame, cowpeas, rice and groundnuts during the rainy season (summer), as well as maize and vegetables during the dry season (winter). Through climate-smart agriculture training, she learned new techniques like manure making, pit planting and mulching, crop rotation and intercropping. Equipped with these tools, Nelly’s farm began to thrive.

After the 2023–2024 growing season, she sold enough produce to purchase an ox cart. Her harvests in 2024-2025 season yielded over 500 pounds of crops, including 22 bags of groundnuts, seven bags of maize, 12 tins of sesame and three bags of rice. With this surplus, she was able to invest in a motorbike, which she now uses to transport African doughnuts (mandasi) that she cooks and sells — creating yet another source of income for her family.

The transformation reaches far beyond her finances. Nelly now has the stability to provide for her husband and children. “I am able to eat different food types, pay school fees for my children and fulfill the visions that I have made with my family,” she beams. “I am now sleeping peacefully without any fears of food or paying school fees for the children.”

Her leadership has also grown. Today, Nelly serves as a leader in the Harvesting Prosperity and Resilience project, teaching other farmers in her district to adopt climate-resilient, labor-saving practices. By sharing her knowledge, she is multiplying her impact — empowering her neighbors to experience the same transformation she has achieved.

Across Nelly’s community, food and economic security are on the rise. Lombani, a government extension officer for the region, explains, “I can see the community is being transformed in the sense that in the area, there is food, income and nutrition security. Development is also happening at the household level.”

Nelly reflects on what it means to invest in holistic programs that address the root causes of hunger: “We are now healthy people. Children are going to school after eating their breakfast, having high yields and different types of crops due to conservation agriculture practices. With the support from the project, we have food, and we can access other food items from the market after selling our produce.”

This is the gift that fills: a future full of stability, strength and hope. It fills tables with food, families with security and communities with the resources to thrive. It’s an investment in futures rooted in resilience and hope.