Welcome to Grant Writer
USA
There are many issues that plague
our society, from the injustices of the poor and underserved
communities to health, education and environmental concerns of
our planet. Many non-profit organizations are tackling these
ills with moderate success. However, many new and existing
non-profits stumble after beginning their programs and
initiatives because defining the proper course of action and
understanding the correct mechanism to undertake has been
blurred by their passion and desire to make an immediate
impact. It is essential that non-profits clearly realize to be
successful in this highly competitive world of grant
seeking--an aggressive step in realizing its potential is to
make an investment in your
organization first.
Leaders and staff of
smaller foundations work in a fragile environment, with
distinctive challenges to their success as grant seekers for
our communities. Smaller foundations are defined as those with
minimal or no professional staff resources. Many of us know the
stories about wonderful non-profits who lost their way after
the excitement of forming their organization. By comparison we
also know non-profits who have found their way through all the
obstacles and have thrived and have even went beyond grant
seekers to become grant makers and become philanthropic
community leaders. There are smaller foundations like these all
of us can identify. These foundations perceptively recognize
and communicate the problems we all want to rally around and
solve. Their leaders are the colleagues who seek assistance and
advice from professionals and from whom we seek advice, and who
attract many of us to join with them on a philanthropic
initiative.
What’s needed to become
one of those leading smaller foundations, and to sustain that
success? It’s not a requirement to have an enormous staff, or
to have vast financial assets, to become a philanthropic leader
for our community and its causes. Smaller foundations, in a
similar way to what many larger foundations do, can build up
their strengths and capabilities to provide greater levels of
grant seeking impact for society. It is the developing and
rounding out of these attributes that have a label of “capacity
community leader.” By becoming better equipped with the tools
and knowledge of “grant seeking”, we increase our “capacity”
and we receive better grants for our communities and causes.
Serving as staff of a private foundation means that we must
approach capacity building attentively with our communities as
well as our board members.
We must know how and where to effectively
search for the bountiful resources that are available.
Small non-profit organizations without unrestricted funds
to hire a qualified grant writer must decide whether to
instruct current staff in proposal development, enlist a
local volunteer with sound writing skills, or hire a
professional fundraising consultant.
At all costs hiring or
employing a professional grant writer is an investment that
must be done. If you are in need of a grant writer
you must first have a focused vision for what
you want to become and what role the grant writer will play in
that vision. An experienced or successful grant writer is
necessary to achieve these goals. A successful grant
writer must have:
o
Superior Research Skills
o
Excellent Writing Skills
o
Salesmanship Ability
o
Hard Work Ethic
o
Diligence
o
Originality and Flexibility
o
Commitment
o
Political Consciousness
o
Communication Skills
o
Administrative Proficiency
o
Persistence
o
Integrity and Reliability
In addition,
GrantWriter USA will develop careful proposal
preparations, establish and develop in-depth research of
targeted funders critical for success. We begin with
funder mega-lists on the web, printed foundation and corporate
directories, electronic databases, and have access to a
specialized fundraising library
collection.
As well, we have leads
that identify additional prospective funders; enable you to
discover details about grantmaker priorities, and determine the
most competitive project for a given grantmaker. Every
hour invested in research
increases your chance of success.
Additionally, the
success of grant proposals depends on five factors: (1)
The distinction of the non-profit organization. (2) The unique
nature or critical importance of the projected initiative or
program. (3) The up-and-coming priorities of a funding source
or the competition level in a particular grantmaking cycle. (4)
The skills of the grantwriter in building a persuasive case.
(5) The active participation of the non-profit in the entire
grantwriting process, i.e. one or two representatives of the
non-profit to infuse and demonstrate its passion for
philanthropy to the grant writer. No matter how carefully and
strategically we prepare a proposal, these other factors
impact the outcome. As a result, grantwriters deserve
compensation for their many hours of research and writing
skills.
On occasion, we
have new non-profits request a commissioned arrangement,
wherein the grantwriter receives a percentage compensation
based only when a grant is awarded.
Unfortunately this request is considered highly unethical and
is considered amateurish. Most grantwriters require hourly or
per diem compensation, rather than deferred pay contingent on
grants received. Furthermore, the "Code of Ethical
Principles and Standards of Professional Practice" of the
National Society of Fund Raising Executives opposes deferred
payment: They declare, “members shall work for a salary or
fee, not percentage-based compensation or a commission. Members
shall not pay, seek or accept finder's fees, commissions or
percentage compensation based on charitable contributions
raised, and shall, to the best of their ability, discourage
their organizations from making such payments based on
charitable contributions."
(AFP)
Since we depend on
non-profits for our career and because every charity that we
work for is equally deserving of a discount, very few
professional grant writers can "donate" their services beyond a
small number of special projects. In fact, we volunteer
for one cherished local charity, but cannot make any further
exceptions.
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