每年将在智慧社区论坛上宣布获奖最佳智慧社区。智慧社区奖的评选结果为12个月周期。
每年2月份,从7大智慧社区中选出年度最佳智慧社区。 从2月到6月,智慧社区论坛将每个社区提供的详细数据资料提交给一家独立研究分析公司,帮助智慧社区论坛制定奖励计划的初始指标。 该公司根据数十个因素的信息进行定量分析,并为每个社区打分。
同时,智慧社区论坛的联合创始人将访问这7大智慧社区,实地考察验证他们提供的信息,并编写报告,由之前智慧社区的年度评审委员会,政府官员,商界领袖,学者和顾问参与最佳智慧社区的评选活动。 陪审团对每个社区进行排名,智慧社区论坛将这种定性排名与研究公司的定量评分相结合,最终选出年度最佳智慧社区。
智慧社区论坛的颁奖仪式还包括年度有远见的智慧社区致辞。



Toronto has both the assets and the liabilities that come with being Canada’s largest city. On the asset side is its diverse economy and success as a magnet for immigrants that have made it one of the most multicultural cities in the world. On the liability side are the high cost of living and transportation gridlock that gives residents of the region the world’s longest average commute times. To reverse this trend, Toronto is doubling down on the value of a dense, superbly equipped and culturally rich urban experience.
When the city and county of Taichung merged in 2010, it created a huge metropolis uniting completely different economies: a major seaport city where 70% of employees work in services, and a rural county where 50% work in industry and agriculture is a significant source of income. The city’s leadership, under Mayor Chih-Chiang (Jason) Hu, was determined to create a whole much greater than the sum of its parts.






Mitaka, Japan, a suburb of Tokyo, has a population of 173,000. It was the first city in Japan to host a field test of fiber-to-the-home, and its cable TV company became the first ISP in Japan to offer broadband in 1996. The community has a tradition of active citizen participation when it comes to developing its infrastructure.
Calgary is a western city of 900,000 people that is one of the fastest-growing communities in Canada. Leading the charge to build a Digital Age economy for the community is the public-private corporation, Calgary Technologies. Its projects include Calgary INFOPORT, the Calgary Innovation Center, and the Alastair Ross Technology Center incubator.
The US capital of finance, publishing and broadcast television, New York launched investments in the late 1990s to build a digital economy. In 1995, the city created a venture fund, the Plug ‘n’ Go program, which offered affordable, pre-wired, Internet-ready office space to young companies, and “Digital New York: Wired to the World,” which provides seed funding to create new high-tech clusters in the rest of the city outside Manhattan.
The city negotiated a deal in the 1990s that motivated a cable TV company to develop a state-of-the-art broadband network. The city issued a municipal bond to fund network construction under an agreement in which the cable carrier leased back the network for its own use, with payments covering the debt service on the bond. The city retained a percentage of bandwidth for its own use, and went on to become a network and IT services provider to communities throughout the county.
ICF named Singapore as its first Intelligent Community of the Year in 1999 for its ambitious plan for the Singapore One project beginning in 1998. The aim was to provide every citizen and business with a high-speed Internet connection, and to foster the development of an online economy benefiting all of its citizens.