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Finding Funding 101

Finding Funding 101. Answers to the Questions You Are Asking and Those You Should Be Asking ResearchChannel Sixth Annual Meeting Los Angeles, California October 27, 2002. How to Work With a Grant Writer or Become One. What Grant Writers Are and Are Not

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Finding Funding 101

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  1. Finding Funding 101 Answers to the Questions You Are Asking and Those You Should Be Asking ResearchChannel Sixth Annual Meeting Los Angeles, California October 27, 2002

  2. How to Work With a Grant Writer or Become One • What Grant Writers Are and Are Not • Different Levels/Types of Grants and Assistance • Grant Basics and Proposal Outlines • Obstacles • Funding Trends

  3. Grant Writers Are Not: • Genies • Mystical Beings from a Parallel Universe Filled with Money • Mind Readers • Fortune Tellers • Experts in All Disciplines (Via Osmosis, of course)

  4. Grant Writers Are: • Communicators • Strategists • Researchers • Interviewers • Teachers • Busy People Always Working on a Deadline

  5. What are the Types of Support? • Public (federal, state, local governments) • Private (Foundations) • Equipment Donations • In-Kind (space, supplies, employee time, equipment use, advertising)

  6. What are the Different Types of Grant Assistance? • Prospect Research • Prospect Wooing • Project Design • Grant Writing • Grant Editing (Content and/or Grammar) • Budget and Justification • Evaluation/Assessment

  7. Where To Begin: The Basics • Planning • Writing • Approval • Administration

  8. Grant Planning • Need • Goals • Areas/Disciplines Served • Innovation • Collaborators • Organizational Status and Support • Sustainability

  9. What are the Elements of a Grant? • Problem Statement • Project Summary • Goals and Objectives • Timeline and Methods • Budget and Justification • Evaluation • Organizational Information • Sustainability/Future Funding

  10. What are the Most Common Reasons Proposals are Rejected? • Submission is late • Applicant did not follow instructions. • Failure to demonstrate a clear understanding of the problem • Project is not feasible (lack of qualified staff, equipment, budget unrealistic, scope too broad or too narrow)

  11. Rejection Reasons (Continued) • Goals and Objectives are unclear or missing • Project is not sustainable (no future funding) • Proposal is poorly organized and/or poorly written (clichés are not your friends)

  12. What are the Primary Obstacles to Attracting Funding? • Failure to Understand the Funding Process. • Limited or Unrealistic View of Project. • Failure to Communicate with Funder • Failure to Communicate with Colleagues and Other Organizational Departments. • Weak Proposal

  13. What Obstacles are Unique to IT and Video Projects? • Once Considered “fluff” or Catering to “too specialized” an Audience” • Wider Scope: Diverse Levels of Technical Savvy and Learning Curves within Audiences Served • Requires Larger Initial Institutional Investment in Infrastructure and Support • Continuing Sustainability is More Important

  14. Is There Any Good News for IT/Video Funding? • Web is now considered primary information source • Funding agencies use electronic methods for proposal advertisement and submission • Funders “demand” innovation, not recycled ideas

  15. What Do Funders Look for in a Proposal? • Collaborations (public/private, industry/education) • K-12 and Community Service Projects • Research and Service (theory and practical application) • Innovation • Universality (Models) • Bridging geographic and other barriers (stronger after 9/11)

  16. What is the “Real Secret” to Getting Funding? • Communicating what is unique about your project: Your passion and commitment to it.

  17. Closing Thought • The easiest writing is on subjects about which you feel passionately. ---Pauline Stieff, September 2002

  18. Contact Information Pauline Stieff Tufts University Academic Technology 617-627-3369 pauline.stieff@tufts.edu

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