10 steps for writing a kickass grant proposal

Step 4: Build relationship. If you think grantwriting is actually about writing, go ask the nearest person to drop kick you right now. 85% of 95% of grants is 90% relationship building. This step is very important, and the Fates will spit in your face if you skip it. Most program officers are surprisingly very friendly, so call them up and see if your idea aligns with the foundation’s priorities. If it doesn’t, you just saved yourself a ton of time; go back to step 1. If it does align, well, awesome! If you don’t know anyone of this foundation, see if anyone on your board does. If the foundation specifically requests you not to contact them, don’t contact them. Unless you know them really well; mini muffins here may not be a bad idea. Step 5: Procrastinate. The LOI or grant is not due for a few weeks. Work on some other stuff. Catch up on emails. Call a donor. Write a report. Take a walk. Go to the farmer’s market and try some of that naturally-fermented sauerkraut. It’s delicious and chock full of probiotics. Self-care, you know. If you haven’t done Step 4, make a mental note to do it one of these days.Step 6: Freak out. One day before the LOI is due, or one week before the full proposal is due, start freaking out. OMG, you haven’t done anything for it! What’s wrong with you?! You don’t even remember what the grant is about! The grant specifically asked for letters of support! You haven't even asked partner organizations for those letters! Arghhh!! Do steps 2 to 4. Berate yourself for once again getting into this situation and swear that you will be so much more organized for the next grant.Step 7A: Write your LOI. Your LOI is only 2 pages, but it still needs to be awesome. If the foundation has a template, then just follow it. If it doesn’t, then you have to determine what to say. I usually go with some or all of these headings below (bold them, to make your LOI easy to read):
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- Summary (your entire LOI, summarized in one paragraph. Spell out in the first sentence how much you are requesting and for what)
- Background and Needs (How did your program come about, what needs your program is addressing),
- Program model (what are you going to do to address the needs),
- Goals (what specific, measurable outcomes you are trying to achieve),
- Evaluation (how you will measure these outcomes),
- Budget (how much the project will cost in total, what other funders you have approached or have committed to the program),
- Timeline and work to date (when are you expecting to start the project and what major milestones will happen when, and what you have done so far; if possible, do a simple Gantt chart),
- Partnerships (highlight any awesome partners you are working with and their roles; optional if you don’t have any partners)
- Organizational background (add general information about your organization, such as history and mission), and
- Contact (your name, email, phone, website).
See also:
10 Steps for writing a kick-ass nonprofit organizational budget 10 steps for a kick-ass Emergency Succession Plan--
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