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Tips on Getting Grants (Sharing a Life Time of Rejection). Mary Gilhooly Executive Director Brunel Institute for Ageing Studies British Society of Gerontology Pre-conference Early Career Workshop ‘Writing Successful Research Proposals in Ageing Studies’ Brunel University July 5, 2010.
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Tips on Getting Grants(Sharing a Life Time of Rejection) Mary Gilhooly Executive Director Brunel Institute for Ageing Studies British Society of Gerontology Pre-conference Early Career Workshop ‘Writing Successful Research Proposals in Ageing Studies’ Brunel University July 5, 2010
Get used to rejections • 9/10 of your grant applications, possibly more, will be rejected • A really thick skin is needed in this game • If it irritates you to spend a lot of time writing a grant, only to have it rejected....... • Learn how to write grants quickly!
Get used to negative feedback • Feedback, no matter how offensive, helps you to learn what makes for a good grant. • Ignore it at your peril • Never take it personally • Do not assume that reviewers are idiots
Ask yourself...Do you love writing grants? If not, you have four choices • Learn to love grant writing • Get chummy with people who do • Find ways to do research and publish without a grant • Become an epidemiologist • Use secondary data sets that are freely available • Get another job
Find a chum who likes writing grants “Coat-tailing” is a great way to • learn how to write successful grants • learn how to manage a grant when successful • learn how to successfully network • learn how to maximize your publication rate
Put someone famous as PI on your grant applications • Maybe not famous, but someone more experienced or with a track record in the field
Ensure a very strong team • Funding bodies are risk aversive • They need to know that experienced people are on the team • Why? So that when things go wrong, there will be someone on the team who knows what to do • There is nothing that will kill a grant application faster than having referees say they have never heard of any of the applicants.
If applying to a ‘programme’ • Pay attention to the guidance • This will mean using precious space addressing issues that you think are unimportant • Find out the background to the programme
Write simply • For 10 year olds • Like a journalist • Assume that the reviewers have about 30 minutes to read your application • Assume the reviewer is tired and grumpy • Always write less rather than more • A long literature review will so bore the reviewer that he or she may never bother with the important bits
Problem size will not get YOU a grant • No matter how important (or big) the problem, you still have to persuade the funding body to give funding to you (and your team) rather than someone else.
Use research questions • Not objectives • Referees like questions • And using questions will (or should) force you to ask the question of whether or not your proposed methods can answer the questions
Emphasize methods • Most grant applications fall down over methods • Poor description of sampling • Inadequate description of analysis • Study overambitious
Be concrete • Clear ‘deliverables’ • When describing dissemination plans name the journals to be targeted • When describing management structures name the chair of your advisory committee, numbers of members, etc • List who on the team is to be responsible for what • Use diagrammes
Big grants with work packages • Ensure there is a management and knowledge transfer WP (this is where you can roll in the big guns. • Ensure there is some kind of theoretical underpinning linking the WPs together • No matter how flimsy
Be original • Not too far out, but certainly different • Put different topics or areas of research together • Decision making and elder abuse
Career Success: • Neurotic /Pathological wish to succeed. • Willingness to work 12 hour days • Sacrifice family and friends • Marry a man/woman who is prepared to put his/her career on hold so you can progress your career
If you are a woman have no children or at best one. • Change jobs often – promotion is much easier if you apply for a promoted post. • Be nice to everyone – no matter how annoyed you might be, try and be jolly.
Learn from your mistakes • Think long-term, i.e. at least 7 years • Have a vision/learn about the ‘vision thing’. • Take up opportunities that arise. • Network continuously • Share – your time, your ideas.
If all goes well you will • Get grants • Publish a lot • Become famous • Do lots of radio interviews • Frequently appear on television
Thank YouTips on Getting Grantsand Career Success Mary Gilhooly Executive Director Brunel Institute for Ageing Studies British Society of Gerontology Pre-conference Early Career Workshop ‘Writing Successful Research Proposals in Ageing Studies’ Brunel University July 5, 2010