You are Here:
Home > Grants
For Women > How to Write a Grant Proposal

How to Write a Grant Proposal
Government
Grants for Women - Click Here!
Free Government Grant Money For Women Only! Grant money for Business, Education,
and Personal Needs! Apply Today!
Finding the right grant is only the first step in the process. The
second part is the killer and where most grant seekers fail.
Here are a few tips for writing your grant proposal:
1. You may understand your business or concept inside out - but
the person reading your proposal doesn't. Explain your idea clearly
and in detail. Have at least two other people OUTSIDE of your organization
read the proposal and then ask them questions about your concept.
If they cannot explain what you are trying to do - chances are the
grants committee won't either. And they won't fund what they can't
comprehend.
2. The proposal must flow smoothly from beginning to end. As a result,
the proposal just doesn't make sense. To avoid this situation, start
with an outline that clearly follows each step of your plan...then
expand each point as needed to fully explain your business plan.
Then - give the finished proposal to someone outside the field of
education to read before you submit it. This will help you to identify
parts that needed to be clarified.
3. If you want your proposal to be taken seriously - show the funding
commitee that YOU take it seriously by carefully proofing it for
spelling, typing and grammatical errors. Take time to have at least
two people proofread your proposal before you submit it - and then
read it again yourself to make sure!
4. Don't estimate costs and funding needs for
the proposal rather than taking the time to research and evaluate
the actual expenses. In a grant proposal, guesses just won’t
make it. If a grant reviewer suspects that your financial sheet
is not accurate - you just lost the grant. Find out exactly what
kind of computer system you are going to need and exactly what
the cost will be, then spell it out in the proposal exactly!
5. Make sure that your goals and objectives
are clearly laid out and specific. If you say "I want this grant so that I can help
the community" you won't get nearly the credibility as you would
by saying "This grant will allow us to buy 2 new computers,
and create 2 part-time paid staff positions in an area where jobs
for high school students are very diffcult to find."
6. Give yourself enough time! Don't throw the proposal together
in order to meet the deadline.... it shows. A good proposal package
takes time to assemble and research properly. If you really want
the money - then spend the time to put it together correctly, without
shortcuts.
7. Every grant has rules and directions that
must be followed EXACTLY! If you want your proposal to be read
and considered, read and re-read the directions. If it says that
the grant MUST be submitted via the online form - don't even bother
to ask if you can fax it in. Unlike employment applications where
it sometimes pays to be "original",
grant committees have rules in place for a specific reason, and they
expect them to be followed to the letter. To do otherwise may mean
that your application will be disqualified before it ever gets read.
8. Make sure that your proposal is what the
funder actually finds! Don't assume that just because there is
a significant amount of money available, that they will fund just
anything - the truth is that funders are often VERY specific in
what they are looking for (and sometimes a bit odd, but that's
their choice!) and will rarely deviate from their "category".
You may have the very best purple widget in the world - but if
the grant is only for the producers of RED WIDGETS - you won't
get the grant!
Grants are hard to find and competitive - so put together the very
best proposal possible and prove that you are the one that should
get the money!
To Apply for the Amber Grant - Click
Here! |