320 likes | 429 Views
Understanding Grantseeking Presented by the Grant Center and the Latino Public Radio Consortium. Presenters . Amie Klempnauer Miller, DEI Foundation Development Advisor Hugo Morales, Executive Director, Radio Bilingüe. The Grant Center. A Partnership of:. Funded by:. The Grant Center.
E N D
Understanding Grantseeking Presented by the Grant Center and the Latino Public Radio Consortium
Presenters • Amie Klempnauer Miller, DEI Foundation Development Advisor • Hugo Morales, Executive Director, Radio Bilingüe
The Grant Center A Partnership of: Funded by:
The Grant Center Public Broadcasting’s Premier Source for Grantseekers Our mission is to connect public broadcasting stations with federal and foundation funding opportunities.
The Big Picture • 78,000 foundations nationwide • 2000 – 2010: foundation giving up overall by 31% • 2008: 17% decline in assets • 2010: $45.7B in total giving • 2011: flat to modest growth projected (2-4%)
Foundation Priorities Top giving priorities by $ invested (2009): • Education: 23% • Health: 23% • Human Services: 13% • Public Affairs/Society Benefit: 12% • Arts/Culture: 11%
Kinds of Support • Project/program • Capacity-building/technical • Capital and equipment • Start-up • Operating (< 25% of giving)
Why Foundations Fund Media • Support local information needs • Advance understanding of key issues • Dissemination: reach and engage lots of people • Promote the arts • Give voice to the unheard • Educate policymakers • Promote direct change
Good Reasons A new initiative or specific project A project with clear community impact A one-time need A project that will expand your capacity Convergence between your work and foundation’s goals Not So Good Reasons A hole in your operating budget An emergency need (some exceptions) You met someone who sits on a foundation board Because the money’s there To Seek a Grant or Not to Seek a Grant
“To convince someone to give you money, you have to tell them a good story.” - Mapping Public Radio’s Independent Landscape
Step 1: Define Your Project • What will you do? • Why do you want to do it? What is the need? • How will you do it? Will you partner with anyone? • Roughly how much will it cost? • How will it make the world (or your community) a better place? • How will you know it worked?
Step 2: Look for Funders • Who makes grants into your area? • Who has funded similar projects? • Who funds “like-minded” organizations? • Who’s funding other media?
Resources • Foundation Directories • Local Foundation Center collections (at the library) • Local Councils of Nonprofits • The Grant Center: free foundation prospect research customized to your needs
Step 3: Do Your Homework Learn about: • Stated interests • Total assets and distributions • Board and staff information • Sample grants • Regional focus • Whether unsolicited applications are accepted • Initial approach preference
A little gossip goes a long way • Screen foundation board members • Get to know client advisors at local banks • Find specialized or donor-advised funds at community foundations • Look for connectors
What you really need to know • What does the foundation really fund? • Is there a match in mission, action and spirit? • Are we “like” organizations? • Is there an open door? Or window? • How does the foundation describe itself and its work? • What’s our past history, if any? • Do we have a connection?
Some Rules of Thumb • Like usually funds like • Look for opportunities among smaller foundations: • Least likely to receive 100+ proposals; • Most likely to fund 50%+ of proposals received • More likely to give general support • Look for match in mission, action and spirit
Step 4: Introduce yourself -- person to person • Leverage an introduction • Engage in an event • Request advice • Build on common ties • Make an introductory phone call (or e-mail), if permitted • Request a meeting, if appropriate
Introduce yourself -- the letter • 2-3 pages • Summarize: • Project and ask • Need for project • Implementation plan • Impact • Your experience/expertise • Overall budget and other funders • Your follow-up plan
Step 5: Prepare a Proposal • Statement of Need: Why? • Description of Project: What? • Implementation Plan: How? • Key Partners and Personnel: Who? • Evaluation/Impact Plan: What difference does it make? • Budget: How much? Look at sample proposals on the Grant Center
Do this. . . • Describe how your project will help your community, not how it will help you. • Tell a story. • Think like the foundation: how will this grant make a difference? • Be open to foundation input. • Follow directions. • Answer questions promptly and completely. • Ask for feedback from experienced grantwriters and/or the foundation. • Proofread.
Don’t do this. . . • Ignore guidelines. • Use a generic proposal. • Send a laundry list instead of a proposal. • Play “inside baseball.” • Miss deadlines. • Give up after one ‘no.’
Before, During and After: Cultivate, Cultivate, Cultivate, Cultivate. . . • Ideally, before and after making a request • Be creative: • Seek advice and expertise • Invite to events • Request informal meetings • Seek out speaker opportunities • Use on-air opportunities • Leverage community-building opportunities • Network
Take the relationship to the next level • One size does not fit all • Leverage any (positive) relationship • Customize your communications (no “template”) • Develop a cultivation plan for each prospect • Get to know people, not just prospects • Treat foundations like major donors
The Grant Center: Your Resource • Online clearinghouse with searchable database of 300+ funding opportunities • Funding alerts, policy updates and forecasting • Monthly webinars/conference calls connecting you with funders and peers • Custom prospect research • Success stories
Search by Topic Arts and Humanities K-12 Education Digital Transition Literacy Digitization News Disability Outreach Diversity Rural Development Early Childhood Education Science and Technology Environment Teacher Training Health Workforce Development Homeland Security Youth Journalist Training . . . and more
Custom Research • Who funds equipment in my state? • Who might fund health content? • Who funds coverage of aging issues? • Who provides general operating support in my region? • Which funders are interested in dropout prevention? • Who could help fund local news reporting?
Recent Webinar Topics • Unlocking Foundation Grants through Partnership: One station’s Story • Expanded Learning Opportunities…Expanded Opportunities for Public Media • USDA’s “Rural Digital” grant program • Federal Funding Prospects and the President’s Budget • Meet the Knight Foundation • Models for Funding Local News
Thank you! www.apts.org/grantcenter @aptsgrantcenter Amie Miller DEI 612-203-8911 amie0422@comcast.net