1 / 22

Foundation Grants – LS&A Strategies

Foundation Grants – LS&A Strategies. Maureen S. Martin Senior Director, Foundation Relations Office of University Development November 17, 2010. Agenda – November 17, 2010. Introduction – definitions & quick overview What are independent foundations?

yadid
Download Presentation

Foundation Grants – LS&A Strategies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Foundation Grants –LS&A Strategies Maureen S. Martin Senior Director, Foundation Relations Office of University Development November 17, 2010

  2. Agenda – November 17, 2010 Introduction – definitions & quick overview • What are independent foundations? • Role of foundations in philanthropy in the US • Role of foundations in giving at U-M What foundations might fund • Top foundation funders to LSA • Top prospects • Foundation agendas & rhetoric Identifying opportunities & next steps • Foundation Center – strategic use • Other resources to call upon

  3. Foundations – Some Basics • What is an independent foundation? • Private charity established to make grants that meet a mission created in the chartering • Distinctions between independent, corporate, community and operating foundations • Internal U-M distinctions between professional and family independent foundations • Why do I care? • Foundations accounted for $38 billion in giving in 2009 – much of that to higher education • At U-M, in fiscal 2010, foundations provided some $40 million (nearly half of that in sponsored projects). • On average, 2.3% of research expenditures at U-M are funded by independent foundations.

  4. 2009 US charitable giving Total = $303.75 billion

  5. Types of recipients of contributions, 2009 Total = $303.75 billion

  6. AT U-M, FOUNDATION GIFTS AND GRANTS ARE 15% OF PRIVATE FUNDS RECEIVED $38.1 Foundations (15%) $18.2 Corporations (7%) $15.3 Associations/Others (6%) $32.1 Realized Bequests (13%) $151.8 Living Individuals (59%) Dollar Amounts in Millions

  7. FOUNDATION GIVING AT U-M Total Gifts

  8. UM: TOP 10 FOUNDATION DONORS IN FY10

  9. Top Foundation Donors to LSA 2006- present (Cumulative) (italic = Social Sciences)

  10. Sloan Foundation Fellowships – UM$50k awards. Dept Chairs may nominate 3 scholars/year.

  11. Foundations with Social Science Funding Interests The Starr Foundation Ford Foundation Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation James S. McDonnell Foundation Wm & Flora Hewlett Foundation Freeman Foundation Andrew W. Mellon Foundation John A. Hartford Foundation John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation W. K. Kellogg Foundation Foundation Center Rockefeller Foundation Carnegie Corporation David & Lucile Packard Foundation Annie E. Casey Foundation Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Lynde & Harry Bradley Foundation Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Sarah Scaife Foundation Henry Luce Foundation Charles Stewart Mott Foundation

  12. So what…. Steps to take • Check Foundation Center online • Grants, first • Grantmakers, second • Check SAW • On campus relationships • Current scale of support • Check foundation website and links to 990s • Priorities • Language, philosophy • Scale of giving • Process – RFPs, Deadlines, LOIs • Or ask us….

  13. MacArthur Foundation - Potential International ProgramConservation & Sustainable DevelopmentGlobal Migration & Human MobilityHigher Education in Russia & NigeriaHuman Rights and International JusticeInternational Peace and SecurityPopulation and Reproductive Health Domestic ProgramAffordable HousingCommunity & Economic DevelopmentDigital Media & LearningJuvenile JusticeMental HealthPolicy ResearchProgram-Related Investments

  14. Gates Foundation - Potential Global Development • Agricultural Development • Emergency Response • Financial Services for the Poor • Global Libraries • Urban Poverty • Water, Sanitation, & Hygiene  Global Health • Diarrhea • HIV/AIDS • Malaria • Maternal, Newborn, & Child Health • Neglected Diseases • Nutrition • Pneumonia & Flu • Polio • Tobacco • Tuberculosis • Vaccines

  15. Sarah Scaife Foundation – Potential? “The Sarah Scaife Foundation’s grant program is primarily directed toward public policy programs that address major domestic and international issues. There are no geographical restrictions.” So let’s look http://fconline.foundationcenter.org/welcome.php?fpc=1

  16. Sarah Scaife Foundation – Potential? Year ended 12/31/09: Assets: $243,990,427 (market value) Total giving: $14,099,500 grants descriptions very weak – general operating support. web site very weak – ‘horoscope’ description

  17. Michigan foundations of interest W. K. Kellogg Foundation - children, poverty, race Kresge Foundation - Detroit, health, access C. S. Mott Foundation - Flint, river ecosystems Skillman Foundation - Detroit, neighborhoods McGregor Fund - Detroit, human services Erb Family Foundation - Detroit, rivers, climate New Economy Initiative (CFSEM) - entrepreneurship Nearby: MacArthur, Joyce, Spencer

  18. How are foundations most different from Federal Agencies? Most are not “peer-reviewed” Less work, quicker response Average foundation grant is less than $100K – a niche, seed or supplemental source Budgets are a bit different lower, or no indirect cost recovery can budget administrative and space costs

  19. Key themes of social-justice foundation grants (eg, Ford, Kresge) • Focus on under-represented/under-resourced populations • Access to college, jobs, healthcare, early childhood education, self-determination, justice • Long term partnerships – ‘engagement’ • Some ability to bring a solution • Commitment to solving a problem • “Sustainability” • A vision of how this continues over the long haul (eg, embedded in schools, or government support, or individual giving – or solves the problem in X years) • In other words – what is the foundation’s exit strategy

  20. Key Themes in the Math/Science Spaces (eg, Sloan, Packard) • Well written grant proposals matter – • This work is put in the context of the field • Articulates *why* the work is creative and unusual • Offers ‘lay’ explanation before the deep science • References are high caliber • Plays to investigator’s and UM’s strong suits – • *why* this investigator • *why* Michigan (legacy, mentor, environment, or…)

  21. What can we Do for Your Departments? • Advise you and your faculty on potential foundation funders for your research • Read and edit drafts • Advise on scale and fit • Notify you when opportunities arise that match interests • How else can we help?

  22. Concluding Thoughts on the Foundation ‘Approach’ • There is a role for foundations in your departments. • This skill set will be useful in the private and the public sectors. • New focus at OUD and OVPR in increasing our foundation funded research • Resources are available to you – call us • Library and DRDA support • Julie Feldkamp, Foundation’s Project Representative • Karen Downing, Grant Seeking Databases, Harlan Hatcher Library • Maureen Martin & Ann Verhey-Henke • Office of University Development, Foundation Relations • Peggy Westrick, LSA, Research Administration

More Related