Funders, thank you for doing these 12 awesome things

whom we can only stare at and daydream about. We are really appreciative of program officers who are down-to-earth, who answer phone calls, who are willing to meet, who genuinely want to build a relationship with us. Even when someone can’t help us, or it’s bad news on a grant decision, it’s just really nice when people call/email us back in a timely manner. It lessens the crippling existential crises that so often mark the funding process (“What is the meaning of life? Why am I doing this? If I am not funded, do I still exist?”)Working as true partners and looking out for us: Says a colleague, “We reached out to the ED of a foundation when we were in his city. Not only did he agree to meet with us, he volunteered to read our LOI and give us feedback before we submitted it.” Another colleague writes, “My fave foundation meets with us first and has a long conversation about our capacity and organizational needs. Once we identify what our most pressing need is—software? Training? New hummus platters?—they invite us to develop a proposal around THAT. It's truly focused on what YOU need most!” I’ve had program officers who said, “It seems like you didn’t calculate enough indirect expenses into your budget. You should increase it, and increase your ask.” We appreciate the funders who treat nonprofits like important partners, who are patient, kind, and supportive; you make our difficult work easier.Gathering feedback, acting on it, and being transparent: Funders who take time to gather feedback from grantees, and then change their practices based on what they hear, are downright sexy. Says a colleague, “A couple months after being rejected by a small family foundation, we received a request to take a survey on their grant application process - website navigation, accessibility of program officer, whether the directions were clear and easy to follow, etc. It felt great to know that even though they couldn't fund our program, they still valued our opinion.” You get extra points if you publish these findings along with a plan for changing priorities and practices based on input.Giving honest feedback: “I am always encouraged when a program officer gives you an honest appraisal of why your application was rejected.” Like with job interviews, it’s very helpful to get genuine, honest feedback, instead of the usual, “We had a lot of candidates, we had to choose the one who had the best matching qualifications.” That may be true, but I realize that just sounds like, “We have a lot of liabilities, and therefore we can’t give you any actual useful feedback at all. You will die haunted by not knowing what you could have done better.”Respecting our time: I recently participated in a focus group for a project a foundation was doing. The 90-minute focus group was on the phone to save everyone’s time, and at the end every participant got $150 as a donation to their organization. That’s not a lot of money, but it’s a really thoughtful gesture that shows the foundation is valuing our time. Actually, for us small nonprofits, that is a lot of money. I bought two metal filing cabinets with that money. New ones. Not rusty ones from Craigslist that require tetanus shots before using.Introducing us to other funders: “Our agency has provided legal representation for unaccompanied minors from Central America for over ten years. Last year of course there were unprecedented numbers of children. Our numbers of kids helped shot up with no increase in resources. One local Foundation hosted an event where we were able to present to multiple foundations simultaneously. We raised enough money to hire a lawyer dedicated to do those cases.” Funders know other funders. Huge thanks to those who take time to make introductions or to encourage their colleagues to meet with organizations that may align with their priorities.Developing relationships with program staff: “I recall a funder who asked for a site visit and meeting. He said something like ‘...you're great to talk to (I was the development officer) but I would like to sit with the program staff who are directly facing your clients.’ That was refreshing and the meeting and outcomes were very positive for agency.” Thank you, foundations that take time to understand all facets of an organization and get to know staff besides just the ED; this is also very strategic, as, unfortunately, EDs don't last long.Trusting us nonprofits and allowing us to do our jobs: Funders who have simple grant report requirements, who don’t make us account for every staple that their specific dollars paid for, who streamline processes, who don’t make us waste time that should be spent fulfilling our missions—thank you. We appreciate it “when a foundation says, We're not going to tell you how to do your job--and mean it!”Providing multi-year, general operating funds: Of course, no list of awesome foundation practices will be complete without recognizing foundations that provide multi-year general operating funds, the holy grail of funding and the most effective way to allow nonprofit staff to focus our time on our missions instead of counting pennies and tearing out our hair. These funders, I’ve noticed, tend to not get a lot of recognition. If your foundation provides multi-year gen-op, you are awesome; in fact, you are the wind beneath our wings. Here, listen to the classic song, because that’s how we feel about you, even if we don’t say it enough.--
Make Mondays suck a little less. Get a notice each Monday morning when a new post arrives. Subscribe to NWB by scrolling to the top right of this page and enter in your email address. Also, join the NWB Facebook community for daily hilarity.Oh, one more thing: UNICORN CARDS! I’ve ordered some more unicorn self-care business cards. They say “card-carrying nonprofit unicorn” on one side, and has the Unicorn Mantra on the other. Send a self-address-stamped-envelope to Vu Le, Chief Unicorn, 3700 S. Hudson St., Unit C, Seattle, WA 98118 and I’ll send you back three. They’re free, until I run out again.