| Grant Proposals Must Promote Funder's Goals, Not Yours, in Grant Writing Fund Raising |
|
|
|
| Written by Alan Sharpe | |
|
The bad news about grant proposal writing is that grant makers will never fund what you want them to. They only fund what they want to fund. They fund projects that further their mission. They fund initiatives that meet their priorities.They don't award grants because they have money to give away. They award grants because they have goals to attain. Which means the biggest mistake you can make as a non-profit organization seeking a grant is asking grant makers to fund something they will never fund. Doing so wastes a tremendous amount of your time and little of theirs because your proposal will land in the shredder without delay. Here are a few of the reasons that grant makers have given for why a grant proposal failed to meet their criteria:
The majority of sources for grants (governments, foundations, corporations and individuals) know who they will give money to and who they won't, and they've done you a favour by putting their bias in writing. A little homework (or a lot) will tell you:
Remember, just because a funder has money to give away in grants doesn't mean your project or organization will get any. Your project, however innovative or necessary, will not receive a penny of funding from a funder whose interests and goals do not match yours.
About the author |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
|
| ||
This website was successfully developed by Thewebmaster4hire.com