Increasing Your Chances for Grantseeking Success
When you’re ready to start your grantfunding research, keep your funding plan template close at hand. You’re likely to find a lot of potential funding opportunities, so reading the opportunity and then perusing the plan to make sure the opportunity fits is a smart move. You’re searching for perfect fits between what you need and what the funder wants to fund.
In the sections that follow, I explain what you need to know to find a broad range of potential funding sources.
Looking for needles in a haystack
To identify as many potential grantfunding sources as possible for your organization, you need to carefully research the primary sources of funding: the public sector (federal, state, and local government) and the private sector (foundations and corporations).
As you read information on each funder, you see few, if any, funders want to receive a grant proposal without any warning from the applicant. For many, you need to, in a sense, be invited to submit a full grant request after you’ve met each funder’s initial contact requirements. That’s why your initial approach (your first contact with the funder) is so important.
Review each funder’s initial approach preference using their website or funding database subscription to find what initial contact or approach document they require. In Chapter 6, I tell you how to find private-sector funders and mine the right information. You can find more information regarding these documents in the later section “Using a letter of inquiry or intent to comply with pre-application guidelines.”
Illustration by Ryan Sneed
FIGURE 2-2: Make a chart to track multiple potential funders for one program.
Conducting a federal funding search
Thankfully, the federal government aids your federal funding search with its one-stop grant opportunity information website, Grants.gov (www.grants.gov
). Visiting this site is the quickest way to conduct a federal funding search.
After you log on to Grants.gov, choose Grant Opportunities from the Search drop-down. Then type your search terms in the Keyword(s) Search field. Sample keywords include “after school,” “capacity building,” “rural telecommunications,” and “prevention.” Your search should produce a list of federal grant opportunity announcements that contain your keyword(s). Simply click each one to read the announcement and determine whether it fits your specific funding needs.
Performing a foundation or corporate funding search
When you’re ready to conduct a foundation or corporate funding search, the place to turn to is Candid (https://candid.org/
). This center's resources and online grant-research database (Foundation Directory Online by Candid) provide grantseekers, grantmakers, researchers, policymakers, the media, and the general public with up-to-date information on grant funding and other nonprofit-related issues.
Through the Foundation Directory Online by Candid, you can download profiles of foundations whose interests, priorities, and types of funding support match your funding needs. These profiles include the foundation’s address, website, contact person, funding priorities, award range, preferred method of initial approach, and much more. To conduct your search, you can either subscribe to the directory (varying levels of subscriptions are available, beginning at as little as $31.58 per month for a locked-in, two-year contract) or use Candid’s website to locate a Funding Information Network (FIN) near you that has a subscription to the directory.