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Tuesday, September 11, 2001; We'll Never Forget!

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Grant, Fellowship and Scholarship Programs
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U.S. Institute of Peace - Grants and Fellowships. Current Federal funding opportunities by department.
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Management Library for Non-Profit Organizations. Purdue University's Grant writing tutorial.
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Fiscal Sponsorship for social change organizations. A large fundraising reference and resource section.
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Introduction

The subject of this short course is proposal writing. But the proposal does not stand alone. It must be part of a process of planning and of research on, outreach to, and cultivation of potential foundation and corporate donors.
This process is grounded in the conviction that a partnership should develop between the nonprofit and the donor. When you spend a great deal of your time seeking
money, it is hard to remember that it can also be difficult to give money away. In fact, the
dollars contributed by a foundation or corporation have no value until they are attached to
solid programs in the nonprofit sector.
This truly is an ideal partnership. The nonprofits have the ideas and the capacity to
solve problems, but no dollars with which to implement them. The foundations and
corporations have the financial resources but not the other resources needed to create
programs. Bring the two together effectively, and the result is a dynamic collaboration.
You need to follow a step-by-step process in the search for private dollars. It takes
time and persistence to succeed. After you have written a proposal, it could take as long
as a year to obtain the funds needed to carry it out. And even a perfectly written proposal
submitted to the right prospect might be rejected for any number of reasons.
Raising funds is an investment in the future. Your aim should be to build a network
of foundation and corporate funders, many of which give small gifts on a fairly steady
basis and a few of which give large, periodic grants. By doggedly pursuing the various
steps of the process, each year you can retain most of your regular supporters and
strike a balance with the comings and goings of larger donors.
The recommended process is not a formula to be rigidly adhered to. It is a
suggested approach that can be adapted to fit the needs of any nonprofit and the
peculiarities of each situation. Fundraising is an art as well as a science. You must
bring your own creativity to it and remain flexible.


Gathering Background Information

The first thing you will need to do in writing the master proposal is to gather the
documentation for it. You will require background documentation in three areas:
concept, program, and expenses.
If all of this information is not readily available to you, determine who will help you
gather each type of information. If you are part of a small nonprofit with no staff, a
knowledgeable board member will be the logical choice. If you are in a larger agency,
there should be program and financial support staff who can help you. Once you know
with whom to talk, identify the questions to ask.
This data-gathering process makes the actual writing much easier. And by involving
other stakeholders in the process, it also helps key people within your agency seriously
consider the project's value to the organization.

Concept

It is important that you have a good sense of how the project fits into the philosophy and
mission of your agency. The need that the proposal is addressing must also be
documented. These concepts must be well-articulated in the proposal. Funders want to
know that a project reinforces the overall direction of an organization, and they may need
to be convinced that the case for the project is compelling. You should collect
background data on your organization and on the need to be addressed so that your
arguments are well-documented.

Program

Here is a check list of the program information you require:

the nature of the project and how it will be conducted;
the timetable for the project;
the anticipated outcomes and how best to evaluate the results; and
staffing and volunteer needs, including deployment of existing staff and new
hires.

Expenses

You will not be able to pin down all the expenses associated with the project until the
program details and timing have been worked out. Thus, the main financial data
gathering takes place after the narrative part of the master proposal has been written.
However, at this stage you do need to sketch out the broad outlines of the budget to be
sure that the costs are in reasonable proportion to the outcomes you anticipate. If it
appears that the costs will be prohibitive, even with a foundation grant, you should then
scale back your plans or adjust them to remove the least cost-effective expenditures.



Components of a Proposal




Executive
Summary:

umbrella statement of
your case and summary
of the entire proposal
1 page






Statement
of Need:

why this project
is necessary
2 pages






Project
Description:

nuts and bolts of
how the project will
be implemented and evaluated
3 pages






Budget:

financial description
of the project plus
explanatory notes
1 page






Organization
Information:

history and governing
structure of the nonprofit;
its primary activities,
audiences, and services
1 page






Conclusion:

summary of
the proposal's
main points
2 paragraphs




The Executive Summary

This first page of the proposal is the most important section of the entire document.
Here you will provide the reader with a snapshot of what is to follow. Specifically, it
summarizes all of the key information and is a sales document designed to convince
the reader that this project should be considered for support. Be certain to include:


Problem — a brief statement of the problem or need your agency has
recognized and is prepared to address (one or two paragraphs);

Solution — a short description of the project, including what will take place and
how many people will benefit from the program, how and where it will
operate, for how long, and who will staff it (one or two paragraphs);

Funding requirements— an explanation of the amount of grant money required
for the project and what your plans are for funding it in the future (one
paragraph); and

Organization and its expertise— a brief statement of the name, history,
purpose, and activities of your agency, emphasizing its capacity to carry out
this proposal (one paragraph).




The Statement of Need

If the funder reads beyond the executive summary, you have successfully piqued his or
her interest. Your next task is to build on this initial interest in your project by enabling
the funder to understand the problem that the project will remedy.
The statement of need will enable the reader to learn more about the issues. It
presents the facts and evidence that support the need for the project and establishes
that your nonprofit understands the problems and therefore can reasonably address
them. The information used to support the case can come from authorities in the field,
as well as from your agency's own experience.
You want the need section to be succinct, yet persuasive. Like a good debater, you
must assemble all the arguments. Then present them in a logical sequence that will
readily convince the reader of their importance. As you marshall your arguments,
consider the following six points.
First, decide which facts or statistics best support the project. Be sure the data
you present are accurate. There are few things more embarrassing than to have the
funder tell you that your information is out of date or incorrect. Information that is too
generic or broad will not help you develop a winning argument for your project.
Information that does not relate to your organization or the project you are presenting will
cause the funder to question the entire proposal. There also should be a balance
between the information presented and the scale of the program.
Second, give the reader hope. The picture you paint should not be so grim that the
solution appears hopeless. The funder will wonder whether an investment in a solution
will be worthwhile. Here's an example of a solid statement of need: "Breast cancer kills.
But statistics prove that regular check-ups catch most breast cancer in the early stages,
reducing the likelihood of death. Hence, a program to encourage preventive check-ups
will reduce the risk of death due to breast cancer." Avoid overstatement and overly
emotional appeals.
Third, decide if you want to put your project forward as a model. This could
expand the base of potential funders, but serving as a model works only for certain types
of projects. Don't try to make this argument if it doesn't really fit. Funders may well expect
your agency to follow through with a replication plan if you present your project as a
model.
If the decision about a model is affirmative, you should document how the problem
you are addressing occurs in other communities. Be sure to explain how your solution
could be a solution for others as well.
Fourth, determine whether it is reasonable to portray the need as acute. You are
asking the funder to pay more attention to your proposal because either the problem you
address is worse than others or the solution you propose makes more sense than
others. Here is an example of a balanced but weighty statement: "Drug abuse is a
national problem. Each day, children all over the country die from drug overdose. In the
South Bronx the problem is worse. More children die here than any place else. It is an
epidemic. Hence, our drug prevention program is needed more in the South Bronx than
in any other part of the city."
Fifth, decide whether you can demonstrate that your program addresses the
need differently or better than other projects that preceded it. It is often difficult to
describe the need for your project without being critical of the competition. But you must
be careful not to do so. Being critical of other nonprofits will not be well received by the funder. It may cause the funder to look more carefully at your own project to see why you felt you had to build your case by demeaning others. The funder may have invested in these other projects or may begin to consider them, now that you have brought them to their attention. If possible, you should make it clear that you are cognizant of, and on good terms with, others doing work in your field. Keep in mind that today's funders are very interested in collaboration. They may even ask why you are not collaborating with those you view as key competitors. So at the least you need to describe how your work complements, but does not duplicate, the work of others.
Sixth, avoid circular reasoning. In circular reasoning, you present the absence of your solution as the actual problem. Then your solution is offered as the way to solve the problem. For example, the circular reasoning for building a community swimming pool might go like this: "The problem is that we have no pool in our community. Building a pool will solve the problem." A more persuasive case would cite what a pool has meant to a neighboring community, permitting it to offer recreation, exercise, and physical therapy programs. The statement might refer to a survey that underscores the target audience's planned usage of the facility and conclude with the connection between the proposed usage and potential benefits to enhance life in the community. The statement of need does not have to be long and involved. Short, concise information captures the reader's attention.


[Part Two]







The Project Description


This section of your proposal should have five subsections: objectives, methods,
staffing/administration, evaluation, and sustainability. Together, objectives and
methods dictate staffing and administrative requirements. They then become the
focus of the evaluation to assess the results of the project. The project's
sustainability flows directly from its success, hence its ability to atract other support.
Taken together, the five subsections present an interlocking picture of the total
project.



Objectives


Objectives are the measurable outcomes of the program. They define your
methods. Your objectives must be tangible, specific, concrete, measurable, and
achievable in a specified time period. Grantseekers often confuse objectives with
goals, which are conceptual and more abstract. For the purpose of illustration, here
is the goal of a project with a subsidiary objective:



Goal: Our after-school program will help children read better.

Objective: Our after-school remedial education program will assist 50 children in
improving their reading scores by one grade level as demonstrated on standardized
reading tests administered after participating in the program for six months.



The goal in this case is abstract: improving reading, while the objective is much
more specific. It is achievable in the short term (six months) and measurable
(improving 50 children's reading scores by one grade level).
With competiton for dollars so great, well-articulated objectives are increasingly
critical to a proposal's success.
Using a different example, there are at least four types of objectives:



1.Behavioral — A human action is anticipated.

Example: Fifty of the 70 children participating will learn to swim.

2.Performance — A specific time frame within which a behavior will occur, at
an expected proficiency level, is expected.

Example: Fifty of the 70 children will learn to swim within six months and will
pass a basic swimming proficiency test administered by a Red
Cross-certified lifeguard.

3.Process — The manner in which something occurs is an end in itself.

Example: We will document the teaching methods utilized, identifying those
with the greatest success.

4.Product — A tangible item results.

Example: A manual will be created to be used in teaching swimming to this
age and proficiency group in the future.



In any given proposal, you will find yourself setting forth one or more of these
types of objectives, depending on the nature of your project. Be certain to present
the objectives very clearly. Make sure that they do not become lost in verbiage and
that they stand out on the page. You might, for example, use numbers, bullets, or
indentations to denote the objectives in the text. Above all, be realistic in setting
objectives. Don't promise what you can't deliver. Remember, the funder will want to
be told in the final report that the project actually accomplished these objectives.



Methods


By means of the objectives, you have explained to the funder what will be achieved
by the project. The methods section describes the specific activities that will take
place to achieve the objectives. It might be helpful to divide our discussion of
methods into the following: how, when, and why.



How: This is the detailed description of what will occur from the time the project
begins until it is completed. Your methods should match the previously stated
objectives.

When: The methods section should present the order and timing for the tasks. It
might make sense to provide a timetable so that the reader does not have to map
out the sequencing on his or her own....The timetable tells the reader "when" and
provides another summary of the project that supports the rest of the methods
section.

Why: You may need to defend your chosen methods, especially if they are new or
unorthodox. Why will the planned work lead to the outcomes you anticipate? You
can answer this question in a number of ways, including using expert testimony and
examples of other projects that work.



The methods section enables the reader to visualize the implementation of the
project. It should convince the reader that your agency knows what it is doing,
thereby establishing its credibility.



Staffing/Administration


In describing the methods, you will have mentioned staffing for the project. You now
need to devote a few sentences to discussing the number of staff, their
qualifications, and specific assignments. Details about individual staff members
involved in the project can be included either as part of this section or in the
appendix, depending on the length and importance of this information.
"Staffing" may refer to volunteers or to consultants, as well as to paid staff. Most
proposal writers do not develop staffing sections for projects that are primarily
volunteer run. Describing tasks that volunteers will undertake, however, can be most
helpful to the proposal reader. Such information underscores the value added by the
volunteers as well as the cost-effectiveness of the project.
For a project with paid staff, be certain to describe which staff will work full time
and which will work part time on the project. Identify staff already employed by your
nonprofit and those to be recruited specifically for the project. How will you free up
the time of an already fully deployed individual?
Salary and project costs are affected by the qualifications of the staff. Delineate
the practical experience you require for key staff, as well as level of expertise and
educational background. If an individual has already been selected to direct the
program, summarize his or her credentials and include a brief biographical sketch
in the appendix. A strong project director can help influence a grant decision.
Describe for the reader your plans for administering the project. This is
especially important in a large operation, if more than one agency is collaborating
on the project, or if you are using a fiscal agent. It needs to be crystal clear who is
responsible for financial management, project outcomes, and reporting.



Evaluation


An evaluation plan should not be considered only after the project is over; it should
be built into the project. Including an evaluation plan in your proposal indicates that
you take your objectives seriously and want to know how well you have achieved
them. Evaluation is also a sound management tool. Like strategic planning, it helps
a nonprofit refine and improve its program. An evaluation can often be the best
means for others to learn from your experience in conducting the project.
There are two types of formal evaluation. One measures the product; the other
analyzes the process. Either or both might be appropriate to your project. The
approach you choose will depend on the nature of the project and its objectives. For
either type, you will need to describe the manner in which evaluation information will
be collected and how the data will be analyzed. You should present your plan for
how the evaluation and its results will be reported and the audience to which it will
be directed. For example, it might be used internally or be shared with the funder, or
it might deserve a wider audience. A funder might even have an opinion about the
scope of this dissemination.




Sustainability


A clear message from grantmakers today is that grantseekers will be expected to
demonstrate in very concrete ways the long-term financial viability of the project to be
funded and of the nonprofit organization itself.
It stands to reason that most grantmakers will not want to take on a permanent
funding commitment to a particular agency. Rather, funders will want you to prove
either that your project is finite (with start-up and ending dates); or that it is
capacity-building (that it will contribute to the future self-sufficiency of your agency
and/or enable it to expand services that might be revenue generating); or that it will
make your organization attractive to other funders in the future. With the new trend
toward adopting some of the investment principles of venture capital groups to the
practice of philanthropy, evidence of fiscal sustainability becomes a highly
sought-after characteristic of the successful grant proposal.
It behooves you to be very specific about current and projected funding streams,
both earned income and fundraised, and about the base of financial support for your
nonprofit. Here is an area where it is important to have backup figures and
prognostications at the ready, in case a prospective funder asks for these, even
though you are unlikely to include this information in the actual grant proposal.
Some grantmakers, of course, will want to know who else will be receiving a copy of
this same proposal. You should not be shy about sharing this information with the
funder.




The Budget


The budget for your proposal may be as simple as a one-page statement of
projected expenses. Or your proposal may require a more complex presentation,
perhaps including a page on projected support and revenue and notes explaining
various items of expense or of revenue.


Expense Budget
As you prepare to assemble the budget, go back through the proposal narrative and
make a list of all personnel and nonpersonnel items related to the operation of the
project. Be sure that you list not only new costs that will be incurred if the project is
funded but also any ongoing expenses for items that will be allocated to the project.
Then get the relevant costs from the person in your agency who is responsible for
keeping the books. You may need to estimate the proportions of your agency's
ongoing expenses that should be charged to the project and any new costs, such
as salaries for project personnel not yet hired. Put the costs you have identified next
to each item on your list.
Your list of budget items and the calculations you have done to arrive at a dollar
figure for each item should be summarized on worksheets. You should keep these
to remind yourself how the numbers were developed. These worksheets can be
useful as you continue to develop the proposal and discuss it with funders; they are
also a valuable tool for monitoring the project once it is under way and for reporting
after completion of the grant.
A portion of a worksheet for a year-long project might look like this:



Item
Description

Cost


Executive
director
Supervision
10% of salary = $10,000
25% benefits = $ 2,500



Project
director
Hired in month one
11 months at $35,000 = $32,083
25% benefits = $ 8,025



Tutors
12 working 10
hours per week
for three months
12 x 10 x 13 x $ 4.50 = $ 7,020



Office
space
Requires 25% of
current space
25% x $20,000 = $ 5,000



Overhead
20% of project
cost
20% x $64,628 = $12,926







With your worksheets in hand, you are ready to prepare the expense budget. For
most projects, costs should be grouped into subcategories, selected to reflect the
critical areas of expense. All significant costs should be broken out within the
subcategories, but small ones can be combined on one line. You might divide your
expense budget into personnel and nonpersonnel costs; your personnel
subcategories might include salaries, benefits, and consultants. Subcategories
under nonpersonnel costs might include travel, equipment, and printing, for
example, with a dollar figure attached to each line.



Support and Revenue and Statement


For the typical project, no support and revenue statement is necessary. The
expense budget represents the amount of grant support required. But if grant
support has already been awarded to the project, or if you expect project activities to
generate income, a support and revenue statement is the place to provide this
information.
In itemizing grant support, make note of any earmarked grants; this will suggest
how new grants may be allocated. The total grant support already committed should
then be deducted from the “Total Expenses” line on the expense budget to give you
the “Amount to Be Raised” or the “Balance Requested.”
Any earned income anticipated should be estimated on the support and
revenue statement. For instance, if you expect 50 people to attend your performance
on each of the four nights, it is given at $10 a ticket, and if you hope that 20 of them
will buy the $5 souvenir book each night, you would show two lines of income,
“Ticket Sales” at $2,000 and “Souvenir Book Sales” at $400. As with the expense
budget, you should keep backup worksheets for the support and revenue statement
to remind yourself of the assumptions you have made.



Budget Narrative


A narrative portion of the budget is used to explain any unusual line items in the
budget and is not always needed. If costs are straightforward and the numbers tell
the story clearly, explanations are redundant.
If you decide a budget narrative is needed, you can structure it in one of two
ways. You can create "Notes to the Budget," with footnote-style numbers on the line
items in the budget keyed to numbered explanations. If an extensive or more
general explanation is required, you can structure the budget narrative as straight
text. Remember though, the basic narrative about the project and your organization
belong elsewhere in the proposal, not in the budget narrative.




Organizational Information and Conclusion

Organizational Information


Normally a resume of your nonprofit organization should come at the end of your
proposal. Your natural inclination may be to put this information up front in the
document. But it is usually better to sell the need for your project and then your
agency's ability to carry it out.
It is not necessary to overwhelm the reader with facts about your organization.
This information can be conveyed easily by attaching a brochure or other prepared
statement. In two pages or less, tell the reader when your nonprofit came into
existence; state its mission, being certain to demonstrate how the subject of the
proposal fits within or extends that mission; and describe the organization's
structure, programs, and special expertise.
Discuss the size of the board, how board members are recruited, and their level
of participation. Give the reader a feel for the makeup of the board. (You should
include the full board list in an appendix.) If your agency is composed of volunteers
or has an active volunteer group, describe the function that the volunteers fill.
Provide details on the staff, including the numbers of full and part-time staff, and
their levels of expertise.
Describe the kinds of activities in which your staff engage. Explain briefly the
assistance you provide. Describe the audience you serve, any special or unusual
needs they face, and why they rely on your agency. Cite the number of people who
are reached through your programs.
Tying all of the information about your nonprofit together, cite your agency's
expertise, especially as it relates to the subject of your proposal.




Letter Proposal


Sometimes the scale of the project might suggest a small-scale letter format
proposal, or the type of request might not require all of the proposal components or
the components in the sequence recommended here. The guidelines and policies
of individual funders will be your ultimate guide. Many funders today state that they
prefer a brief letter proposal; others require that you complete an application form. In
any case, you will want to refer to the basic proposal components as provided here
to be sure that you have not omitted an element that will support your case.
As noted, the scale of the project will often determine whether it requires a letter
or the longer proposal format. For example, a request to purchase a $1,000 fax
machine for your agency simply does not lend itself to a lengthy narrative. A small
contribution to your agency’s annual operating budget, particularly if it is a renewal of
past support, might also warrant a letter rather than a full-scale proposal.
What are the elements of a letter request? For the most part, they should follow
the format of a full proposal, except with regard to length. The letter should be no
more than three pages. You will need to call upon your writing skills because it can
be very hard to get all of the necessary details into a concise, well-articulated letter.
As to the flow of information, follow these steps while keeping in mind that you
are writing a letter to someone. It should not be as formal in style as a longer
proposal would be. It may be necessary to change the sequence of the text to
achieve the correct tone and the right flow of information.
Here are the components of a good letter proposal:

Ask for the gift: The letter should begin with a reference to your prior contact
with the funder, if any. State why you are writing and how much funding is
required from the particular foundation.
Describe the need: In a very abbreviated manner, tell the funder why there is
a need for this project, piece of equipment, etc.
Explain what you will do: Just as you would in a fuller proposal, provide
enough detail to pique the funder’s interest. Describe precisely what will take
place as a result of the grant.
Provide agency data: Help the funder know a bit more about your
organization by including your mission statement, brief description of
programs offered, number of people served, and staff, volunteer, and board
data, if appropriate.
Include appropriate budget data: Even a letter request may have a budget
that is a half page long. Decide if this information should be incorporated into
the letter or in a separate attachment. Whichever course you choose, be sure
to indicate the total cost of the project. Discuss future funding only if the
absence of this information will raise questions.
Close: As with the longer proposal, a letter proposal needs a strong
concluding statement.
Attach any additional information required: The funder may need much of the
same information to back up a small request as a large one: a board list, a
copy of your IRS determination letter, financial documentation, and brief
resumes of key staff.
It may take as much thought and data gathering to write a good letter
request as it does to prepare a full proposal (and sometimes even more).
Don’t assume that because it is only a letter, it isn’t a time-consuming and
challenging task. Every document you put in front of a funder says something
about your agency. Each step you take with a funder should build a
relationship for the future.



Conclusion

Every proposal should have a concluding paragraph or two. This is a good place to
call attention to the future, after the grant is completed. If appropriate, you should
outline some of the follow-up activities that might be undertaken to begin to prepare
your funders for your next request. Alternatively, you should state how the project
might carry on without further grant support.
This section is also the place to make a final appeal for your project. Briefly
reiterate what your nonprofit wants to do and why it is important. Underscore why
your agency needs funding to accomplish it. Don't be afraid at this stage to use a bit
of emotion to solidify your case.



What Happens Next?


Submitting your proposal is nowhere near the end of your involvement in the
grantmaking process. Grant review procedures vary widely, and the
decision-making process can take anywhere from a few weeks to six months or
more. During the review process, the funder may ask for additional information
either directly from you or from outside consultants or professional references.
Invariably, this is a difficult time for the grantseeker. You need to be patient but
persistent. Some grantmakers outline their review procedures in annual reports or
application guidelines. If you are unclear about the process, don't hesitate to ask.
If your hard work results in a grant, take a few moments to acknowledge the
funder's support with a letter of thanks. You also need to find out whether the funder
has specific forms, procedures, and deadlines for reporting the progress of your
project. Clarifying your responsibilities as a grantee at the outset, particularly with
respect to financial reporting, will prevent misunderstandings and more serious
problems later.
Nor is rejection necessarily the end of the process. If you're unsure why your
proposal was rejected, ask. Did the funder need additional information? Would they
be interested in considering the proposal at a future date? Now might also be the
time to begin cultivation of a prospective funder. Put them on your mailing list so that
they can become further acquainted with your organization. Remember, there's
always next year.