Title: Beginning Before You Begin
1Beginning Before You Begin
- Secrets to Increased Funding by Building
Relationships with Program Officers BEFORE the
Proposal is Written
2Some people believe that
- if you just write just a great proposal, that is
THE key to getting funding. - program officers are trained professionals in
the art of grant giving. - program officers are objective in their decision
making.
3That is the
4What is a Program Officer Thinking?
- Grant Makers on Their Role
5Why should you build a relationship with a
program officer first?
- The sooner you establish a relationship with the
program officer, the better your chances for
obtaining funding. - You will find out immediately if your proposal is
right for their organization.
6Why continued
- If it isnt, you have saved yourself a tremendous
amount of proposal writing time. - If it is, you can often receive up-to-date,
insider information on the application process. - Proposal submission is not a one-shot deal.
Sometimes three or four submissions to the same
foundation are needed.
7Why continued
- You have taken the first step in developing a
long-term relationship with the program office
and the funding agency. - If the program officer likes your project, he or
she may champion its funding. - The program office will be more willing to answer
questions during the proposal process.
8Jump Through
A Few Hoops
First We Must
9Before you contact the program manager
- Remember that although they want to have
communication with you, they are busy people.
Dont waste their time. - Do your homework, read their website, look at all
guidelines, previous projects funded, everything
in print before you call them. Do not ask them
thing that are available otherwise.
10Before you contact the program manager continued
- If there are still questions that have not been
answered, write them down. - Make sure you have a clear idea of the proposal
written down so that you can articulate it
succinctly.
11The initial contact.
- You should begin with an email first, asking to
set a time to speak with them. Always suggest a
few dates and times. - In this email you should also outline the
questions you would like to discuss so that they
are better able to prepare themselves.
12Here are some suggestions as to other
information you want to share
- Why you have contacted them in particular about
your project. What was it in there request for
proposal or website that suggested they would be
interested? - Explain the bottom-line objective of your project
(not too much detail) and why you feel it fits
within their guidelines and funding interests.
13Other information you want to share continued
- Ask if your idea is one in which the funder might
be interested. - If the answer is no, thank them for their help
because they just saved you a lot of time. - If they say yes, then you have the opportunity to
ask a few questions.
14Some questions you might want to ask or verify
if it is stated in their materials and website
- What specific program area should you address
your project? (Health, Social Services, the Art
they all have different program areas). - What kind of funding are they most interested in
(i.e., program expenses, operations expenses,
scholarships, assistantships, endowment, etc.)
and what type of funding might apply to your
project?
15Some questions you might want to ask continued
- What is their funding range for such grants?
- Who makes the funding decision (i.e., is it a
board of directors, a group of scientists,
volunteer evaluators)? This will dictate how the
proposal is written so that it appeals to that
particular audience. - Should a pre-proposal or letter of intent be sent
first? (This is being required by more funders).
16Some questions you might want to ask continued
- What is the grant deadline?
- Does the funder support indirect costs (costs
incurred by the university office space,
supplies, phone, etc.). Some will and some wont,
but if they do it can be included in the
proposal. Government grants usually have a
pre-negotiated rate with the university.
17After the initial contact
- Try to get a telephone conference scheduled (if
it is a team project do a conference call). - Follow up with a WRITTEN thank you note.
18After the initial contact continued
- Invite the program officer to your college or
university. - Bring the program officers to your college or
university. (NSF Day)
19After the initial contact continued
- Send the faculty member to the program officer.
- Invite the program officer to see your programs
or research. - Interview with Paul Tarini - Ruckus Nation Grand
Prize Event
20Final tips
- Every time you talk to them, thanks them.
- If you get funded, thank them.
- If you get rejected for the grant, thank them.
21Contact Info
- Marc Hardy
- Manager of Proposal Development
- Butler Institute for Research and Scholarship
- Butler University
- 4600 Sunset Ave.
- Indianapolis, IN, 46208
- http//www.butler.edu/BIRS
- mhardy_at_butler.edu
- (317) 940-6140