APPENDIX A THE BASIC DOS AND DON’TS OF WRITING AN
EFFECTIVE PROPOSAL
There is no magic in writing an effective proposal
for funding, nor are there any guarantees in any single
method. The process of funding may appear at times
arbitrary, even capricious. In any event, it is indeed a
human one. This suggests that there may be a number of
aspects to grantmaking and grantseeking beyond
submitting written proposals. As true as your experience
may demonstrate this to be, a written proposal is
usually essential, especially if you visualize it as a
plan of action.
While some funding sources do reach out to get
additional information from organizations seeking their
money, you will never go wrong by putting your energy
into presenting a solid, detailed case in your funding
proposals. From a funder’s perspective, a complete,
thoroughly developed proposal resulting in a minimum of
questions is a joy to behold.
Acting on the suggestions that follow will not
necessarily get you what you want, but it should help
you avoid traps in which proposal writers may find
themselves stuck. It seems often enough that the basis
for funding refusals comes from factors that could and
should have been seen in advance of the bad
news.
Assume that the people who review your proposal are
of good will and looking for quality in nonprofit
organizations. If they are accessible, and you have
reasonable questions about preparing your proposal, ask
your questions. Remember that everybody is trying to get
to accessible funders’ representatives, so use your time
well and efficiently and make a good impression. (Access
seems to be a function of whether a funder is staffed.
Unstaffed foundations, for instance, tend to be
difficult to contact in person.)
Many protocols exist within potential funding
organizations when it comes to dealing with your
proposal, once received. If you learn that a given
protocol allows for a face-to-face meeting, for
instance, take advantage of this. A site visit also
offers the opportunity to show a prospective funder your
clients or participants, board members, other
volunteers, and facilities. Any meeting offers you the
occasion to listen to what the representative of a
funder has to say. Listen.
In the proposal itself, be thorough, reasonable and
positive. Don’t be hesitant or quarrelsome. If you are
unsuccessful, find out from the funder why you were
turned down. You don’t have to enjoy turndowns, of which
there are many more than funded proposals; you do have
to learn from them.
When preparing a proposal, DO:
- Know your funding source. They all have biases:
some favor research, others favor action; some support
specific projects, others like general support grants.
Almost all will have some kind of funding track
record. Study it, and tailor your proposal accordingly
if it makes sense. Look for written materials about
potential funding sources.
- Know your turf. Find out who else in the community
is concerned about and working on the problem you’re
addressing, and find out what other approaches have
been tried. Wherever feasible, form coalitions with
other organizations. Treat the emphasis funders place
on program coordination with the utmost
seriousness.
- Follow the format. When an outline or format is
suggested or required by a funder, use it, even if you
think the one you like to use is better. Improving a
funder’s format courts a charge of being
unresponsive.
- Write clearly. Proposal reviewers usually have to
read dozens, if not dozens and dozens, of proposals in
a short period. They appreciate direct statements;
they are exasperated by cleverness or needless
repetition. If you take five pages to say what can be
said adequately in one, reviewers will remember your
proposal for something other than positive
reasons.
- Be logical and balanced. The proposal should flow,
and conclusions should be reached, not jumped at. The
length of sections may well reflect your assessment of
their importance.
- Be specific. Specify numbers, sequences and
outcomes as appropriate. Include time/flow charts,
allowing for start-up and phase-in of your
project.
- Be thorough, especially in detailing program
administration, supervision and monitoring. Funders
like to know that their money is going to
conscientious and capable agencies.
- Critique your own proposal before a funder does.
Proposal writers, even those good at the business,
have two common failings: they become enamored of
their product without reference to outside counsel,
and they “get too close to the trees to see the
forest.” Your proposal should be intelligible to any
reader, especially one not familiar with your field of
interest. Test yours on co-workers or friends, set
aside your ego, and heed their comments.
- Be positive. Predicting doom if your program isn’t
funded, or pleading poverty, or heaping guilt on a
prospective funder might work once, but will certainly
be subject to the law of diminishing returns. How
often can you go to the well with the old
if-you-don’t-fund-us-we’re-going-to-go-belly-up
routine? Funders like winners, and evidence of your
organization’s grasp of a situation and how to deal
with it — in effect, a positive attitude — is a
winner’s strategy.
When preparing a proposal, DON’T:
- Argue with a funder’s assumptions. If the funds
are coming through a Request For Proposals (RFP), the
RFP will contain a definition of the problem as the
funder sees it. Funding guidelines may also reveal
perspectives through which a funder operates. Even if
these presentations seem misinformed, don’t take issue
with them. Your real knowledge will not impress the
funder. If you cannot ethically agree with the
funder’s assumptions, avoid going after its money.
Save your reforms for other forums.
- Philosophize. A proposal for a nutrition program
is no place for a speech on hunger in the Third World.
(Avoid the implied charge that a funding refusal would
mean the funder does not care about the problem.) Know
the difference between a proposal for funding and a
polemic.
- Confuse your organization’s needs with those of
your clients. It is understood that you need funds to
keep the doors open. It does not necessarily follow
that this will solve your clients’ problems. Only
their needs offer the rationale for continuing to meet
organizational needs.
- Assume the reviewers know the problem or program.
There are times when reviewers are recruited to read
proposals; they may include academicians, technicians
or just plain folks. Given this mix of possible
readers, it makes sense to avoid unsupported
assumptions, and to specify and document the existence
of needs to be met and the capacity of your program to
meet them. The best way to handle jargon and
specialized acronyms, which arise among old hands
familiar with various program details, is to eliminate
them — at least in proposals.
- Include surprises. Examples are personnel who show
up in an organizational chart or budget, but are not
mentioned in the proposal narrative; or charges in a
budget with no prior references as to purpose or
necessity. A good proposal answers questions; it does
not raise them.
- Promise more than you can deliver. The numbers
game is tempting, especially in a competitive setting
where you might seek to suggest delivering an
unrealistic level of proposed objectives, or a program
plan inconsistent with the amount you have budgeted.
In both cases, you risk your credibility either
through the analysis of an experienced reviewer or by
falling short of your goals should you receive
funds.
Remember, the effective proposal:
- Is in the hands of the right funding source,
because your research was rigorous;
- Gives evidence of careful planning by your
organization in its preparation;
- Conveys the importance of what you propose in a
defined community setting, whether it be a low-income
neighborhood or a school campus;
- Includes evidence of what you are doing to help
yourselves, as well as what you are
requesting.
Recommended Resources for Proposal
Writing
Online
Foundation Center’s Proposal Writing Short
Course http://fdncenter.org/learn/shortcourse/prop1.html Available
free online, this tutorial will give you the basics of
proposal writing and lead you to other resources to help
you continue your study.
Books in the Nonprofit Resource
Library
Call #: 770 CAR Author: Carlson, Mim Title:
Winning Grants Step by Step: The Complete Workbook
for Planning, Developing, Writing Successful
Proposals Publisher: San Francisco, CA:
Jossey-Bass, c2002.
Call #: 770 CLA Author: Clarke, Cheryl Title:
Storytelling for Grantseekers: The Guide to Creative
Nonprofit Fundraising Publisher: San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, c2001.
Call #: 770 GEE Author: Geever, Jane C.
Title: The Foundation Center’s Guide to Proposal
Writing Publisher: New York: Foundation Center,
c2001.
Call #: 770 ROB Author: Robinson, Andy.
Title: Grassroots Grants: An Activist’s Guide to
Proposal Writing Publisher: San Francisco :
Jossey-Bass, 2002, c1996.
Classes on Proposal Writing
The Center for Nonprofit Management teaches classes
in proposal writing on a regular basis. See their
schedule of classes at http://www.cnmsocal.org/Services/profdev.html.
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