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The Fountain of Funding: Strategies for Securing Financial Support for your Project

The Fountain of Funding: Strategies for Securing Financial Support for your Project. February 22, 2012 Sarah Jennings, Director of Development for Corporations & Foundations Pamela M. Salela , Associate Professor, Director of Central Illinois Nonprofit Resource Center, Brookens Library

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The Fountain of Funding: Strategies for Securing Financial Support for your Project

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  1. The Fountain of Funding: Strategies for Securing Financial Support for your Project February 22, 2012 Sarah Jennings, Director of Development for Corporations & Foundations Pamela M. Salela, Associate Professor, Director of Central Illinois Nonprofit Resource Center, Brookens Library Don Long, Grants & Contracts Coordinator, VC Academic Affairs William Kline, Assistant Professor, Liberal & Integrative Studies University of Illinois at Springfield

  2. Central Illinois Nonprofit Resource Centerhttp://library.uis.edu/cinrc Pamela M. Salela, Associate Professor CINRC Coordinator BrookensLibrary psale2@uis.edu217-206-6783 University of Illinois at Springfield

  3. Affiliations • Foundation Centerhttp://foundationcenter.org • Publications & Training • Reference Guide for Researchershttp://foundationcenter.org/getstarted/guides/research.html • Webinars (live as well as archived)http://foundationcenter.org/events/archive/webinars.html • Donors Forum of Illinoishttp://donorsforum.org • Publications • Workshops (Chicago) • GoodWorksConnect.org • Community resources including Land of Lincoln…

  4. Resources • Databases • Foundation Directory Online http://fconline.fdncenter.org/ipl.pl • Foundation Grants to Individuals Online http://gtionline.fdncenter.org/ipl.php • Print Materials • Directories • Manuals • Budget tools

  5. Select Bibliography of Directories • Directory of Research GrantsAS911 .A2 D5 2008 • Annual Register of Grant Support: A Directory of Funding Sources AS911 .A2 A67 2008 • The Grants Register: The Complete Guide to Postgraduate Funding WorldwideAS911 .A2 G734 2009 DirectoryHV7 .I56 2005 • Grants for Higher EducationAS911 .A2 G7247 2007

  6. Workshops • Faculty/Staff • Course specific • Online • Community

  7. Office of Developmenthttp://www.uis.edu/development Sarah Jennings, Director Development for Corporations and Foundations sjenn02s@uis.edu 217-206-7389 University of Illinois at Springfield

  8. Corporate and Foundation Relations • Help you find private funding sources • Prospect research • Initial conversations and meetings w/funders • Help you develop your proposals • Internal and external procedures • Grant seeking basics and guides http://www.uis.edu/development/audiences/facultystaff/cfgrantmaking.html • Proposal Development form

  9. Corporate Giving • Corporations provide around 5% of total private giving • Various pockets • In-kind, Sponsorship, Grants, Gifts • Most follow strict giving guidelines • Many link giving with talent acquisition • Senior management may influence • May allocate based upon market

  10. Foundation Grant Making • Foundations provide around 14% of total private giving • Fit their mission; Follow their guidelines • Engage in pre-proposal discussions • RFPs, Guidelines, Invitations • Letters of Interest/Intent • No assumptions • Research each Foundation (4 general types) • Be clear about your project

  11. Getting Funded • Reviewers need convincing • Reviewers may not be experts • Show benefits beyond the classroom • A new way of solving a problem- Innovation • Data supports your idea • ‘Intend’ vs. ‘will’ • Listen to colleagues • Rejection is okay? • The national success rate is… • Reviewer notes are your map to success

  12. Grants & Contracts Officehttp://www.uis.edu/grants Donald Long, Coordinator Grants & Contracts Office of the Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs dlong7@uis.edu 206-7409 University of Illinois at Springfield

  13. Assistance provided by G&C Office • Identification of external funding sources • Interpretation of sponsor guidelines and requirements • Assistance with all stages of proposal development • Official submission of proposals to outside sponsors, including electronic submissions through grants.gov, Fastlane, etc. • Assistance with protocols for research involving human and/or animal subjects • Assistance with intellectual property issues • Assistance with export issues • Assistance with conflict of interest issues • A webpage with links to relevant information, and downloadable forms www.uis.edu/grants

  14. Where to look for funding • IRIS www.library.uiuc.edu/iriscampus only! • Google • Association listserves, funder newsletters, etc. • Grants.gov • Colleagues • Council on Undergraduate Research www.cur.org

  15. UIS Provost Funding • Summer Competitive Scholarly Research Grant Program (SCRGP) • Strategic Academic Initiatives Grant (SAIG) Program • Scholarly Presentation Support Program • Federal agency home pages (ed.gov) • State agency home pages www.uis.edu/academicaffairs/faculty/index.html

  16. UIS requirements for proposals & awards All proposals submitted to external sponsors by UIS faculty, staff and students require internal approval using the UIS Internal Clearance Form. (may take 3 or 4 days to process after it is submitted to the grants office depending on signature requirements) All awards must be officially accepted by the campus, and must be signed by the proper authority.

  17. Proposal Writing Tips DO: • Follow directions • Read and follow the format and assembly instructions • Learn as much about your funder as you can, including what they funded in the past • Use language that is simple and direct • Repeat the funder’s language back to them • Include tables, flowcharts and diagrams when they are useful • Check for modifications to the RFP often • Assemble required addendums and forms early

  18. Tips continued … • Consider including a logic model • Proofread • Have someone not familiar with your work read your proposal • Prepare a detailed and justifiable budget • Align budget with objectives and measurable outcomes • Talk to staff at the funding agency • Ask for reviewer comments • Volunteer to serve as a proposal reviewer

  19. Tips continued… DO NOT: • Go over the number of pages allotted • Pad your budget with items that can’t be justified • Assume that reviewers are experts in your field • Wait until the last minute – to write or to submit • Wait until the “perfect time” to submit • Send the same proposal off to multiple funders • Get discouraged!!

  20. Suggestions for Success • Establish a track record with peer reviewed publications • Do your research. Know current “best practice” related to your grant topic • Show institutional support • List all available resources even if you haven’t tapped into them yet • Find collaborators • Colleagues down the hall, at another campus • Attend professional conferences

  21. Resources for Grant Writing • Kellogg Foundation Logic Model Development Guide www.wkkf.org • Grant Experts Nonprofit Website • www.grantexperts.info • US Dept. of Health & Human Services • http://grants.nih.gov/grants/grant_tips.htm • NSF Publications • http://www.nsf.gov/publications/ • Thompson Publishing www.thom • Winning Strategies for Developing Proposals and Managing Grants, 3rd Edition

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