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Essential Ingredients for Acquiring Resources

Essential Ingredients for Acquiring Resources. Jennifer Downey The University of Southern Mississippi College of Health Dean’s Office. Where Do You Start?. Clearly define what it is you want. Where Do You Start?. Clearly define what it is you want

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Essential Ingredients for Acquiring Resources

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  1. Essential Ingredients for Acquiring Resources Jennifer Downey The University of Southern Mississippi College of Health Dean’s Office

  2. Where Do You Start? • Clearly define what it is you want

  3. Where Do You Start? • Clearly define what it is you want • Research and cultivate appropriate funders

  4. Funding Sources • Public • Federal • State

  5. Funding Sources • Public • Federal • State • Private • Private foundations • Corporate grantmakers • Public charities • Community foundations

  6. Public Funding Resources Grants.gov www.grants.gov Code of Federal Domestic Assistance http://www.cfda.gov/cfda/cfda.html Federal Register http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/ index.html

  7. Private Funding Resources • Annual Register of Grant Support • The Foundation Center (http://fdncenter.org/pnd/rfp/) • The Foundation Directory (http://fconline.fdncenter.org/) • Hoover’s Online (www.hoovers.com)

  8. Approaches to Research • Subject approach

  9. Approaches to Research • Subject approach • Geographic approach

  10. Approaches to Research • Subject approach • Geographic approach • Type of support approach

  11. Funding Source Research • Assess expectations and requirements

  12. Funding Source Research • Assess expectations and requirements • Application deadlines

  13. Funding Source Research • Assess expectations and requirements • Application deadlines • Eligibility

  14. Funding Source Research • Assess expectations and requirements • Application deadlines • Eligibility • Funding restrictions

  15. Funding Source Research • Assess expectations and requirements • Application deadlines • Eligibility • Funding restrictions • Types of projects

  16. Details, details • Register with grants.gov http://www.grants.gov/ applicants/get_registered.jsp

  17. Details, details • DUNS number http://fedgov.dnb.com/webform/ displayHomePage.do • The information you will need: • Name of organization • Organization address • Name of the CEO/organization owner • Legal structure of the organization (corporation, partnership, proprietorship) • Year the organization started • Primary type of business • Total number of employees (full and part time)

  18. Details, details • Central Contractor Registration http://www.ccr.gov/Start.aspx

  19. Details, details • EIN number http://www.irs.gov/businesses/ small/article/0,,id=98350,00.html

  20. Details, details • Download electronic application from grants.gov

  21. Details, details • State Single Point of Contact • http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/spoc.html • MISSISSIPPIJanet RiddellClearinghouse Officer Dept. of Finance and Administration 1301 Woolfolk Building, Suite E 501 North West Street Jackson, Mississippi 39201 Telephone:  (601) 359-6762 Fax:  (601) 359-6758JRiddell@dfa.state.ms.us

  22. Preparing to Write

  23. Writing Stage • Cover letter • Summary/Abstract • Introduction • Goals and Objectives • Budget • Evaluation • Significance

  24. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead

  25. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead • Avoid jargon

  26. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead • Avoid jargon • Provide reason for writing

  27. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead • Avoid jargon • Provide reason for writing • Establish credibility

  28. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead • Avoid jargon • Provide reason for writing • Establish credibility • Define problem or need

  29. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead • Avoid jargon • Provide reason for writing • Establish credibility • Define problem or need • Request the funds

  30. The Cover Letter • Use letterhead • Avoid jargon • Provide reason for writing • Establish credibility • Define problem or need • Request the funds • Close with desire to discuss

  31. The Title • Should convey the main idea of the proposal

  32. The Title • Should convey the main idea of the proposal • Should follow any guidelines regarding length

  33. The Title • Should convey the main idea of the proposal • Should follow any guidelines regarding length • Should be succinct but clear

  34. The Summary or Abstract • Be brief—guidelines may limit the length

  35. The Summary or Abstract • Be brief—guidelines may limit the length • Clearly indicate project purpose and methodology

  36. The Summary or Abstract • Be brief—guidelines may limit the length • Clearly indicate project purpose and methodology • Show potential impact and how it will be measured

  37. The Summary or Abstract • Be brief—guidelines may limit the length • Clearly indicate project purpose and methodology • Show potential impact and how it will be measured • Close with a strong summary statement

  38. The Introduction • Present an overview of the project’s main goal and why that’s important

  39. The Introduction • Present an overview of the project’s main goal and why that’s important • Briefly describe objectives

  40. The Introduction • Present an overview of the project’s main goal and why that’s important • Briefly describe objectives • Include available data, especially area-specific data

  41. The Introduction • Present an overview of the project’s main goal and why that’s important • Briefly describe objectives • Include available data, especially area-specific data • Give sources of data (footnote or reference in the text)

  42. The Goals and Objectives • Show what will be accomplished, stated in measurable terms

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