Check to see if the agency you have in mind has any specifications for the
Title Page (often they have a required format).
Usually
the Title/Cover Page includes signatures of key people in your organization
(Department Head, Supervisor, Contracts Officer, etc.).
If
your proposal is built on collaborating with other groups/organizations it
is usually a good idea to include their names on the Title/Cover Page.
Your
cover should look professional and neat. However, do not waste time using
fancy report covers, expensive binding, or other procedures that may send
the wrong message to the potential funding agency. You are trying to impress
the potential funding agency with how you really need funding, not the
message that you do things rather expensively!
The
title should be clear and unambiguous (do not make it "cute").
Think
of your title as a mini-abstract. A good title should paint a quick picture
for the reader of the key idea(s) of your project.
The
words you use in your title should clearly reflect the focus of your
proposal. The most important words should come first, then the less
important words. Notice that both of the following titles use basically the
same words, except in a different order. The project with Title #1 appears
to be focused on Red Haired Musicians. The project with Title #2
appears to be focused on Musical Style Preference. However, both
projects are the same! Make sure your words are in the correct order.
Title #1 - Red Haired Musicians and their Preference for Musical
Style
Title #2 - Music Style Preference of Red Haired Musicians
Try
to remove words from your title that really are not necessary for
understanding. Title #1 has too many words. Title #2 is just as clear but
with fewer words.
Title #1 - The Systematic Development of a Local Initiative to
Create a Learning Center for Community Education
Title #2 - A Local Learning Center for Community Education
Try
and use only a single sentence for your title. If the sentence is getting
too long try removing some words. When all else fails try using a two part
title with the parts separated by a colon (use only as a last resort!). Do
not attempt to use the title as an abstract of your entire proposal.
Think
of the Project Overview as an Executive Summary (the busy executive probably
only has enough time to read your Overview - not the entire proposal). Be
specific and concise. Do not go into detail on aspects of your proposal that
are further clarified at a later point in your proposal.
The
Project Overview should "paint a picture" of your proposal in the mind of
the reader. It should establish the framework so that the rest of the
proposal has a frame of reference.
Use
the Project Overview to begin to show your knowledge of the organization
from which you are requesting funds. Key concerns of the funding
organization can be briefly identified in relation to your proposed project.
If
you will be collaborating with other organizations make sure some of their
interests are also highlighted in the Project Overview. This can assist in
strengthening the collaboration by recognizing them at the very beginning of
your proposal.
The
best time to prepare the Project Overview is after you have completed the
entire proposal (and you understand all aspects of your proposal very well).
Let the Overview be your last piece of writing and then insert it at the
beginning of your proposal.
Try
to keep in mind that someone will be reviewing your proposal and you would
like to have this person be very positive about what you have written. The
Project Overview will probably form a strong impression in the mind of the
reviewer. Work on your Project Overview so that you can avoid giving this
person the opportunity to say things like:
Not
an original idea
Rationale
is weak
Writing
is vague
Uncertain
outcomes
Does
not have relevant experience
Problem
is not important
Proposal
is unfocused
Project
is too large.
It
may be easier to think of this section as a review of Relevant Literature."
Cite previous projects and studies that are similar to what you are
proposing. Show the funding agency that you know what you are proposing
because you are familiar with what has preceded you.
Try
to be careful in your use of language. It can very helpful to have a friend,
outside of your area of focus/expertise, read your proposal to make sure
that the language is readable and minimizes the use of:
jargon
trendy or "in" words
abbreviations
colloquial expressions
redundant phrases
confusing language
Position
your project in relation to other efforts and show how your project:
a) will extend the work that has been previously done,
b) will avoid the mistakes and/or errors that have been previously made,
c) will serve to develop stronger collaboration between existing
initiatives, or
d) is unique since it does not follow the same path as previously
followed.
Use
the statement of the problem to show that your proposed project is
definitely needed and should be funded.
It
is essential to include a well documented statement of the need/problem that
is the basis for your project. What are the pressing problems that you want
to address? How do you know these problems are important? What other
sources/programs similarly support these needs as major needs?
Check
to see that the potential funding agency is committed to the same
needs/problems that your proposal addresses. Clearly indicate how the
problems that will be addressed in your project will help the potential
funding agency in fulfilling their own goals and objectives. As you write,
keep the funding agency in your mind as a "cooperating partner" committed to
the same concerns that you are.
Is
there a special reason why you and/or your organization are uniquely suited
to conduct the project? (Geographic location, language expertise, prior
involvements in this area, close relationship to the project clientele,
etc.)
When
you get to the Methods Section of your proposal it will be important to
refer back to the needs you've identified in this section (and show how your
methods will respond to these needs).
It
can really help gain funding support for your project if you have already
taken some small steps to begin your project. An excellent small step that
can occur prior to requesting funding is a need assessment that you conduct
(survey, interviews, focus groups, etc.). Write up your need assessment as a
short Report, cite the Report in your proposal, and include a copy with the
proposal.
This
is an excellent section to have the reader begin to understand that an
ongoing approach to the problem is essential (assuming that you are
proposing a project that is ongoing in nature) and that short term responses
may have negligible effect. This can begin to establish a rationale for why
your project needs external funding - it seeks to provide a long term
response.
Try
and differentiate between your goals and your objectives - and include both.
Goals
are the large statements of what you hope to accomplish but usually aren't
very measurable. They create the setting for what you are proposing.
Objectives
are operational, tell specific things you will be accomplishing in your
project, and are very measurable.
Your
objectives will form the basis for the activites of your project and will
also serve as the basis for the evaluation of your project.
Try
to insure that there is considerable overlap between the goals and
objectives for your proposal and the goals and objectives of the funding
organization. If there is not a strong overlap of goals and objectives then
it might be best to identify a different funding organization.
Present
measurable objectives for your project. If you are dealing with "things" it
is easier for them to be measured than if you are dealing with abstract
ideas. Your proposal is easier for a prospective funding organization to
understand (and the outcomes are much more clear) if you describe your
objectives in measurable ways.
Include
specific information on the population or clientele that your project is
focused on.
Exactly
who are the clientele? Who is included in the clientele group?
In
what ways have you already had contact with the clientele group?
Can
you show that you have the support of the clientele group to move ahead
with the project?
In
what ways have members of the clientele group been involved in the
preparation of the proposal?
What
other agencies are involved with this clientele group (and have these
other agencies been included in your proposed project)?
It's
important for the funding agency to see how much the clientele group has
been involved with the project and the preparation of the proposal.
(Sometimes a project is funded and then the director finds that the
clientele group does not want to be involved!! Don't let that happen to
you.)
Be
sure to clarify why it is important for the funding organization to be
concerned about your clientele. Your proposal should clearly indicate how
assisting your clientele is in the best interests of the funding
organization.
There
should be a very clear link between the methods you describe in this section
and the objectives you have previously defined. Be explicit in your writing
and state exactly how the methods you have chosen will fulfill your
project's objectives and help deal with the needs/problems on which your
proposal is focused.
The
prospective funding agency will be looking at your methods to see what it is
that you are proposing that will be new, unique or innovative. Make sure you
clearly present the innovative aspects of your idea.
Are
the specific methods you are proposing for your project very important to
your unique clientele? Make sure you clarify this for the funding
organization.
Do
not forget to include the collaborative relationships your project will be
developing with other cooperating groups. A good way to show collaboration
is in the methods that you will be using. How will the methods for your
project encourage groups to join together in dealing with the
issues/concerns your project addresses?
Your
Methods section should clearly indicate how the methods that will be used
will allow the outcomes of your project to have value for others beyond your
project. (This can also tie into your Dissemination Plan - see the
Appendices
section for more hints on dissemination.)
Use
this section to describe the roles of the different people associated with
your project and the importance of each.
Make
sure to clarify how each of the roles are essential to the success of the
project and each role clearly relates to operationalizing the methods you
have described.
So
what do you say about your key people? To start, make sure you include name,
title, experience, and qualifications. Include other information if you feel
it's important to the success of your project.
The
descriptions of your personnel should let the funding agency know that you
have excellent people who are committed to the project. You are not asking
the funding agency to "trust" you. The validity for what you are proposing
is directly related to the people that will work with the project.
Working
together as a part of a team is something that funding agencies often like
to see. Try making your project a team effort.
If
you will be using a Steering Committee (Advisory Committee, Governing Board,
etc.) to assist in your project, this is a good place to describe how it
will be organized and who will be included.
A
Steering Committee can be politically very helpful to you and your
project. You can enlist the support of a variety of other
agencies/organizations by placing a representative of these
agencies/organizations on your Steering Committee.
Make
sure you define the length of service for the members of the Steering
Committee (so that membership can rotate and you can minimize the length
of service of someone who may not be helpful!).
A
Steering Committee can greatly help in identifying and linking to other
resources.
A
viable Steering Committee can suggest to a funding agency that the project
has strong links to the local situation and the project has a good chance
of continuing after the funding period is over.
Collaborative
efforts (an important project resource) are usually considered very
favorably! Many funding agencies like to see cooperative ventures as the
basis for local action. In other words, the funding agency's dollars are
being brought together with other existing organizations that are already
committed and involved in dealing with the needs that the project is
responding to.
Sometimes
local resources go unnoticed and are difficult to see. Look carefully around
you because there are certain to be resources that you have available that
you may not be noticing (time that volunteers donate to your project,
materials that local merchants may provide, local experts who can provide
help/advise when needed, a friend who is willing to do some word processing,
etc.). Such in-kind resources can show a potential funding agency that you
are strongly rooted in your community.
It
is very impressive to a prospective funding agency if local resources have
already been contacted and plans to include them in the project have already
been made. Letters from local resources supporting the project (included in
the Appendix) are an excellent addition to the proposal.
Refer
back to your Staff/Administration section and identify those people who will
actually be paid from the grant - these are the ones to be identified in
this section
Include
short descriptions of each of the people who will be involved in your
project and supported by the funding. The descriptions should clarify in the
mind of the potential funding agency that these people are ideally suited to
conduct the project.
Instead
of having all full-time staff on the project, consider having a number of
part-time staff - especially if the part-time staff currently work with
other cooperating organizations. This is a good way to show inter-agency
collaboration.
Make
sure you notify people who you identify in your Personnel section and
receive their approval before you send in your proposal.
Though
you may not be requesting funds for the purchase or rental of facilities, it
can be helpful to provide a brief description of the facilities that will be
used for the project.
Consider
describing existing facilities that will be used for the project as
in-kind contributions to the project. Even if you have free access to
classrooms at a local school, meeting space at a shopping mall or a project
room in a local office building, it can be helpful to indicate how much
additional money the prospective funding agency would have to provide if
these facilities were not donated.
Be
careful in listing the equipment that will be needed for your project.
Funding sources are usually much more willing to provide funds for the
support of personnel than they are to support the purchase of equipment
(that may or may not directly benefit the funded project).
The
following are the types of equipment that may be needed for a funded
project:
It
will help if you've really done some research on the actual cost of the
equipment you specify. This is much better than "guessing" at the cost and
then to be challenged on your estimates by the potential funding agency.
It
is easy to overlook many of the office supplies that will be needed for your
project. Will you be needing printed letterhead stationery? And, if you will
be mailing many letters, have you considered the current cost of postage
(and possible increases in cost)? Do you have a good idea how much paper is
needed to support the use of a computer word processor? Have you recently
checked the price on such things as sticky notes, paper clips, or
pencils/pens? A trip to a local office supply store could be most
appropriate.
Coffee,
cups, donuts or other "supplies" for morning and afternoon breaks are
usually not included in the proposal. These are personal (not project)
expenses.
How
will you be sharing information about your project with others? Will your
project include a Newsletter? How about a website? The more open you are and
willing to help others learn from your experiences the more likely a funding
agency will be interested in assisting.
Consider
including in your proposal additional funds for hosting some form of
workshop or institute where you can bring together other professionals who
are interested in conducting a similar type of project in their area. This
would be a good way to publicly recognize your funding organization. Invite
someone from the funding organization to attend the workshop so they can
hear what others think about the investment they have made.
Make
your budget realistic. Carefully think through exactly what you will
need from the funding agency to carry out the project and establish your
budget around this amount. (Do not forget, funding agencies receive lots of
requests for funding. They can easily tell when someone has inflated a
budget in order to procure funds for other purposes. Don't get caught in
this situation.)
Have
someone else in your organization review your budget to see how realistic
you are.
Do
you really need a large amount of funding at the beginning of the project or
will your project be "phased up" over a period of time? Sometimes it's not
very realistic to expect a new project to be able to be up and operating
(and spending large amounts of money) during the first 6 months or year of
operation.
A
good strategy to use with a potential funding agency is to ask for a small
amount of funding for the first phase of the project. Specify in your
proposal what you expect to achieve during this "minimal funding phase" and
when you will be returning to the funding agency to ask for funds for the
next phase. This can suggest to the funding agency that they can terminate
the relationship easily if your project is not successful (and then it is
essential for you to make sure the first phase IS successful).
Check
with the agency to see if they have suggested/required budget categories
that they want you to use.
If
the potential funding agency doesn't have any suggested/required budget
categories, organize your budget around a set of meaningful categories that
work for the project you are proposing. Categories that you may want to
consider for itemizing your budget are:
Personnel (salary and benefits)
Consultants (salary)
Instruction
Equipment
Supplies
Communication (telephone/postage)
Materials preparation
Travel
Rental of facilities
Evaluation
Other expenses
Indirect costs (costs that your organization requires that you
include)
A
suggested budget format for a three year funding proposal:
| Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | |
| PERSONNEL | . | . | . |
| Person #1 | . | . | . |
| Person #1 | . | . | . |
| Person #3 | . | . | . |
| Sub-Total | . | . | . |
| FACILITIES (list) | . | . | . |
| Sub-Total | . | . | . |
| EQUIPMENT (list) | . | . | . |
| Sub-Total | . | . | . |
| SUPPLIES (list) | . | . | . |
| Sub-Total | . | . | . |
| COMMUNICATION (list) | . | . | . |
| Telephone | . | . | . |
| Postage | . | . | . |
| Sub-Total | . | . | . |
| TRAVEL (list) | . | . | . |
| Fuel | . | . | . |
| Vehicle Rental | . | . | . |
| Rail Tickets | . | . | . |
| Sub-Total | . | . | . |
| . | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 |
| TOTAL | . | . | . |
| SUM TOTAL | . |
It's
important to describe in your proposal exactly how you will decide whether
or not your project has been successful, achieved its objectives, etc. The
Evaluation Plan will tell the prospective funding agency how you will be
going about showing them at the end of the project that their investment in
you was a good one.
If
you plan to use a survey or questionnaire to help in evaluating the success
of your project you may want to include in the
Appendices
a draft of what you are considering for the questionnaire/survey.
Your
evaluation plan does not have to be elaborate but it is important to
indicate to the prospective funding agency that you have not forgotten this
important step.
Try
to include both a concern for formative evaluation/process evaluation
(ways to gain feedback on the project while it is being conducted) and
summative evaluation/product evaluation (ways to show that the project
fulfilled that which was originally proposed). Another way of
conceptualizing this is that formative evaluation/process evaluation is
concerned with the activities of the project. On the other hand, summative
evaluation/product evaluation is concerned with the stated objectives of the
project.
It
is easy to create a summative evaluation/product evaluation plan if you have
done a good job of clearly stating your project objectives or expected
outcomes.
Make
direct reference to your objectives in your evaluation plan. This creates a
strong sense of integration/consistency within your proposal. The reader of
your proposal will now be hearing the same message repeated in different
sections of your proposal.
Try
creating two separate evaluation plans - one for formative evaluation and
the other for summative evaluation.
A
good evaluation plan should include some sense of concern for what goes on
following the conclusion of the funding period. How will the initiatives
that have been started under the project be sustained? Have new things
occurred that will be continued in the future? How will other cooperating
agencies assist in continuing the project after the conclusion of the
funding period? These and other areas should be included in a viable
evaluation plan.
Appendices
should be devoted to those aspects of your project that are of secondary
interest to the reader. Begin by assuming that the reader will only have a
short time to read your proposal and it will only be the main body of your
proposal (not the Appendices). Then, assume that you have gotten the
attention of the reader who would now like some additional information. This
is the purpose of the Appendices.
Here are some possible sections to include in the Appendices:
Dissemination
Plan - An important aspect of your proposal will be the plan for
disseminating information of/from the project to other audiences. Most
funding agencies are interested in seeing how their financial support of
your project will extend to other audiences. This may include newsletters,
workshops, radio broadcasts, presentations, printed handouts, slide shows,
training programs, etc. If you have an advisory group involved with your
project they can be very helpful in disseminating project information to
other audiences.
Time
Line - A clear indication of the time frame for the project and the
times when each aspect of the project will be implemented. Try creating
the time line as a graphic representation (not too many words). If done
well, it will help demonstrate the feasibility of the project in a very
visible way.
Letters
of Support - Funding agencies would like to know that others feel
strongly enough about your project that they are willing to write a letter
in support of the project. Talk through with the potential letter writers
the sort of focus that you think will be important for their letter. (Try
and draw on the reputation of the letter writing group.) Do not get pushed
into writing the letters for the agencies - they will all sound alike and
will probably defeat your purpose of using them. The letters must be
substantive. If not, do not use them! Have the letters addressed directly
to the funding agency. (Do not use a general "To Whom It May Concern"
letter - it makes it appear that you are applying to many different
potential funding agencies and are using the same letter for each. This
may really be the case, so make sure you personalize each letter to the
specific potential funding agency.)
Cooperating
Agency Descriptions - If you have referenced in your proposal
different cooperating agencies that you will be working with, it is a good
idea to provide a more detailed description of each of these agencies in
the Appendices. Rather than include large descriptions of each cooperating
agency, a single page that gives the name/address of the agency, names of
key personnel, and brief descriptions of the major services provided is
sufficient. Try and prepare each of these single page descriptions so they
follow a similar outline/presentation of information.
Evaluation
Instrument - Include a draft copy of the actual evaluation instrument
you plan to use (survey, questionnaire, interview guide, etc.). This will
let your prospective funding agency know that you are serious about making
evaluation an integral part of your project - and funding agencies like to
hear this! Indicate DRAFT at the top of the instrument and then make it
look as real as possible. Never say things like, "I think I may have a
question that deals with...", or "Four or five questions will be included
that examine the concern of...". If you will be using an interview
procedure or a focus group discussion, include a draft copy of the
specific questions that will actually be used for the
interview/discussion.
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