Title: Six Easy Pieces Basic Grantsmanship
1Six Easy PiecesBasic Grantsmanship
www.colostate.edu/Depts/Entomology/sixeasypieces.p
pt
Lou Bjostad Professor of Entomology Colorado
State University Fort Collins, Colorado louis.bjos
tad_at_colostate.edu
2Square Pegs and Round Holes
- Government grant programs really do want to give
money away, and try hard (e.g., workshops) to
remove obstacles - The saddest rejections are those due to simple
misunderstandings about the mechanics of
decision-making by grant panels
3Mechanics of Grant Decisions
- SPEED
- Discussion and ranking is thorough but VERY FAST
- The fast pace tends to punish vague or bland
writing styles
- RANKING
- All the 100 proposals discussed by a grant panel
are ranked from 1 to 100 by the last day of the
panel meeting - Only the top 15-20 of the proposals are given
funding
4Pre-Game
- A grant panel has about 12 panelists, who are
invited about 6 months before the grant panel
meets - About 100 proposals in all are reviewed by the
panel, but to keep the workload reasonable for
each person, only 30 proposals are assigned to
each panelist - Each proposal is about 30 pages in all, a total
of about 1000 pages of difficult reading for each
panelist - Dirty little secret - some panelists are still
reading some of their 30 proposals at the last
minute, struggling to understand them - Panelists can be pretty tired and cranky by the
time they climb on the airplane to fly to
Washington
5Psychopathology of Grant Panels
- Everyone on the panel is excited to do the work,
but often tired from weeks of difficult reading - The panel is under pressure to discuss and rank
35 proposals every day, to finish by the end of
the week - Each proposal can receive no more than 10 minutes
discussion, to allow 35 proposals a day to be
done - Take home lesson - things are happening very fast
6Ranking Your Proposal
- The entire wall in front of the room is covered
with yellow sticky notes, a flexible way to rank
proposals - Each yellow sticky note represents one proposal
- Only 3 people on the panel have read your
proposal, but they also summarize 3 ad hoc
reviews - After your proposal has been discussed for its 10
minutes of fame, panel manager stands up - Panelist leading the discussion for your proposal
suggests a position for your yellow sticky note - The 2 other readers suggest moving it up or down,
reaching consensus usually within one minute
71. Get a copy of a grant proposal that was
recently funded
- BY FAR THE GREATEST PRIORITY
- Much easier to write a successful grant proposal
if you have examples of all details - Graduate students who join lab groups with a long
history of successful grants have an enormous
advantage in learning this - The most important thing in life is to choose
your parents wisely
82. The one-page Project Summary should be a work
of art
- Your one-page Project Summary must be exciting
and also specific about the new things you plan
to show - Panel members fight polite but very quick little
battles to move your proposal up or down a ranked
list of 100 - If it is difficult for a panelist to find or
remember your main points, it is difficult for
them to fight those battles - Your one-page Project Summary is the only part of
your proposal that every panel member gets to
read, yet all panel members participate in
ranking all the proposals
93. Clarity is everything
- Panelists are very enthusiastic about the best
proposals they read, and eagerly fight to get
them a high ranking - Even an enthusiastic panelist eventually has to
compare your proposal to all the other proposals,
apples oranges - If your proposal is well-organized, your
supporters can more quickly think of arguments to
move you up the list - Clarity is everything for the success of your
proposal, because panelists make ranking
decisions in seconds - Use journalistic style, presenting your main
points first and your lesser points later - If your main point doesnt appear until page 3,
you run a great risk that a reviewer may miss it
altogether
104. Who am I allowed to pester?
- Program Director for your grant area
- Permanent USDA employee, mainly office decisions
- Email is best, but brief phone calls are OK
- Is this panel the best choice for my interests?
- Panel Manager for the year that you submit
- University professor or USDA-ARS scientist
- Chooses about 12 panel members (and ad hocs)
- Please choose inorganic chemists as reviewers?
115. Send a list of suggested reviewers
- Include the name and area of expertise (in one
sentence) of each suggested reviewer (and
address, phone, email) - Perfectly acceptable for you to do, and helps the
panel manager and the program director with a
major difficulty - One of the most time-consuming jobs they do is to
find enough ad hoc reviewers for all the
proposals, considering each reviewer carefully
for integrity and expertise - They need 6 prospective reviewers for each
proposal, and 100 proposals require 600 names
(fewer are actually needed, because one reviewer
can be sent up to 3 grants) - Many of the reviewers they think of cannot be
used, because those people are on your Conflict
of Interest list
126. What if I get rejected?
- Rejected proposals are often funded the next
year, and are not considered tainted somehow - Extremely important to respond carefully to every
criticism of every reviewer when you resubmit - Panels have 30 overlap of panel members from one
year to the next, to promote fairness to
resubmittals - Perseverance - even well-known scientists get
rejected occasionally, but they keep submitting - However, if a grant has been rejected by the same
program 3 times, very unlikely it will be funded
13A Simple Game Plan
- Let the Project Summary be the part that sells
the proposal, with clear and exciting claims - Let the body of the proposal justify in detail
each claim in the Project Summary - Include a list of suggested reviewers with your
proposal
14Is the grant panel rigged?
- The agency says its all done fairly, but isnt
it really an old boy network that only gives
money to veteran scientists and their friends? - No, Ive been on 7 NRI grant panels, and they are
the fairest (and fastest) decision-making groups
I know - Best proposals are funded, even if PI is
completely unknown to all the panel members - Removing conflict of interest reviewers is a
main job for Program Director and Panel Manager - Panel members must physically leave the room
during discussion of any proposal from their own
institution
15The Grant PanelWho are those guys?
- University professors or USDA-ARS scientists
(occasionally corporate scientists) - With rare exception, the panelists have
previously had proposals of their own funded by
NRI, NSF, or NIH - However, most panelists have been rejected for
funding at one time or another, and will be
rejected again - Panelists know exactly how much it hurts to put
months of work into writing a proposal, and get
rejected - The panelists mantra is Help us to help you