Grant Writing Tips

I've been writing grants for about 15 years, and a part of my consulting practice involves grant-writing to foundations, corporations, and local, state and federal government sources.

This page includes a list of grant planning questions and a list of basic proposal elements that I use when I offer grant-writing workshops. I hope you find them useful. Please do keep the attribution to me if you use them - but you are certainly welcome to reproduce and use them with that caveat. Finally, I've included some selected links to other grant-writing/grant-seeking resources on the net. There's a lot out there - so these are just a starting point. If you know of a great link I should add, drop me a line and I will!


Grant and Program Planning

Program planning and grant planning are intimately linked. Ideally, grant planning should be only one phase in the whole program development, program implementation, and evaluation cycle. Too often, it is treated as something separate and foreign. The best results in fund development will come when your grant and solicitation strategies are closely intertwined with your goals and program strategies. Build partners - not donors!
Having said that, if you can answer the following questions, you will be well on your way to both solid program development and successful fund development.


© Sylvie McGee/All For A Good Cause - 1995

Proposal Basics

As you research potential funders, you will sometimes encounter that tricky situation - a donor who specifies: "No application form is required, submit proposal." What proposal!?! you scream (but only out of hearing of the donor!) Well, a complete proposal has basic and time-honored elements - and here they are!

Note that when a brief proposal or letter is specified, you want to try to hit most of these points as well - only in a more abbreviated way.

  1. Cover Letter
  2. Proposal Summary 90% of funding decisions by private donors and foundations will be made by the time the funder finishes reading this page. It must be concise, compelling, and clear!

  3. Introduction to the Organization
  4. Statement of Problem or Need
  5. Project Goals and Objectives
  6. Methods and Schedule
  7. Evaluation Criteria and Process
  8. Budget
© Sylvie McGee/All For A Good Cause Consulting (1995)


Selected Other Grant Seeking Resources on the Net

Hotlinks for Grant Seekers Grant Writers Assistant HotLinks is a starting point for accessing grants-related information and resources on the Internet.

CPB - Basic Elements of Grant Writing Basic Elements of Grant Writing . The Corporation for Public Broadcasting evaluates hundreds of proposals each year for a variety of funding purposes. This publication is an easy guide to the basic elements of successful grants.

URLs for Grant Seekers URL List for Grant Seekers . (Last Updated January 6, 1996) .

The Foundation Center home page The Foundation Center and its affiliated libraries across the US are primary sources of foundation information, grant history and funding interests for grant seekers. Their home page includes a variety of information and contacts.

Various Grant Sources 1 A variety of links to foundation, federal government and other grants resources - with some links for the arts.

Various Grant Sources 2 Links to grant sources including the Federal Domestic Assistance Catalog. Federally-Funded Research in the U.S. The Foundation Center and the University of Minnesota Funding Sources page.

.


Human Service and Human Rights Links

Blue Ball IconQuaker Information and Links

Graphic of Blue BallQuaker Queries/Community Journal on Simplicity

blueball iconCompanion Animal Page

Drop Me a Line!

Home Page IconGo to Home Page