Corporate Foundation Relations · Team Grant $7 million LOI: 12/1/2016. Click here for information...
Transcript of Corporate Foundation Relations · Team Grant $7 million LOI: 12/1/2016. Click here for information...
Corporate and Foundation Relations at UTHSC is a part of the Office of Development and Alumni Affairs, which strives to create and maintain a culture of philanthropy across the institution by engaging philanthropic partners and communicating the importance of charitable giving at all levels.
The Corporate and Foundation Relations team provides a strategic and coordinated approach to building relationships with private foundations, corporations, funds, trusts and private grantmakers whose programmatic initiatives align with UTHSC’s ongoing education and research. As your partners, we:
• Strategize to attain optimum grantmaker support • Identify corporate, foundation, agency, and association funding opportunities • Research and communicate with potential supporters • Connect prospective grantmakers with UTHSC • Assist with proposal development and facilitate grant submissions • Steward institutional relationships with current and prospective grantmakers
To help further your research, outreach, and teaching efforts, we:
• Serve as a central clearance point for philanthropic requests by faculty to funding agencies • Build, maintain, and strengthen key internal relationships across the university• Profile the goals and interests of potential funding partners• Strengthen current funding relationships and cultivate new ones• Connect funding partners with dynamic opportunities at the university • Match UTHSC needs with funding interests • Coordinate and communicate inquiries from funding agencies for UTHSC grant support
MISSIONUnite private foundation and corporate enthusiasm for providing grant support with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center through relationship building.
VISIONFacilitate grant award support via internal and external collaborative connections among senior leadership,
faculty, staff, alumni, and the community.
CorporateFoundation RelationsSERVICE•TEAMWORK•INTEGRITY•DEDICATION•STEWARDSHIP•EXCELLENCE•TENACITY&
Contact us to discuss funding opportunities. Denise Z. Rivers, Director
[email protected] • (901) 448-2089
CFR CONNECT E-BLAST CFR Grant Opportunities for Faculty and Staff
ALL INVESTIGATORS
As part of the Office of Development and Alumni Affairs, Corporate and Foundation Relations (CFR), researches private grantmaker funding opportunities for faculty and staff. This service is one of many provided to faculty and staff seeking private grantmaker support.
CFR grantmaker support focuses on funding opportunities from all private and corporate/corporate-sponsored foundations, funds, charitable trusts, alliances, corporate giving programs, and other private grantmaking organizations. Below is a list of our latest grant opportunities.
If you are interested in any of these opportunities, please e-mail Denise Rivers, Corporate and Foundation Relations Director, at [email protected] of your intent to apply for any of these grants. Ms. Rivers will then contact you to discuss and/or set up a meeting regarding that opportunity. Please respond by close of business Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2016. Thoroughly read all instructions, including any FAQs, to determine your eligibility to apply. If you are unable to determine your eligibility, please contact Denise Rivers, Corporate and Foundation Relations Director, at [email protected]. GRANTMAKER NAME GRANTMAKER WEBSITE PROGRAM MAXIMUM AWARD DEADLINES
LINKS TO INSTRUCTIONS
Cancer
American Association for Cancer Research
SU2C Colorectal Cancer Dream Team Grant
$7 million LOI: 12/1/2016 Click here for information
Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation
Damon Runyon Physician-Scientist Training Award
$460,000 /4yrs. 12/1/2016 Click here for information
Neuroscience
Epilepsy Foundation Sixth Annual Shark Tank Competition
$200,000
LOI: 11/28/2016 Click here for information
Aging
American Federation for Aging Research
Glenn/AFAR Breakthroughs in Gerontology Award
$200,000 /2yrs. 12/15/2016 Click here for information
The Retirement Research Foundation
Responsive Grants Professional Education and Training
$50,000 LOI: 12/21/2016 FP: 2/1/2017
Click here for information
Responsive Grants Research $50,000 LOI: 12/21/2016 FP: 2/1/2017
Click here for information
Orthopaedic and Spine Research
Orthopaedic Research and Education Foundation and the Orthopaedic Trauma Association
Trauma Research Grant $289,000 /2yrs 12/15/2016 Click here for information
Dentistry
International Association for Dental Research
IADR Innovation in Oral Care Awards
$50,000 12/9/2016 Click here for information
American Association of Orthodontists
Post-doctoral Fellowship Award $50,000 /2-3yrs
12/15/2016 Click here for information
Biomedical Research Award $30,000 12/15/2016 Click here for information
Center Awards $75,000 /3yrs 12/15/2016 Click here for information
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
The Plastic Surgery Foundation
National Endowment for Plastic Surgery Grant
$50,000 /2yrs 12/1/2016 Click here for information
PSF/MTF Allograft Tissue Research Grant
$50,000 /2yrs 12/1/2016 Click here for information
Research Fellowship $50,000 /1yr 12/1/2016 Click here for information
American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Foundation
Research Scholar Award $90,000 /3yrs LOI: 12/15/2016 FP: 1/15/2017
Click here for information
Bernstein Grant $25,000 /1yr LOI: 12/15/2016 FP: 1/15/2017
Click here for information
Sleep Research
ResMed Foundation
Physician and Public Awareness Proposals
$250,000 12/15/2016 Click here for information
Faculty or staff submitting letters of intent (LOIs), concept papers or pre-proposals that require a signature and/or a budget need to follow the Office of Research, Grants and Research Agreements (GRA) policies and procedures, including the requirement to complete a PAMS record for their submission at least five business days in advance of the external due date. It is also recommended that you contact Grants and Research Agreements (GRA) in advance of completing either your LOI or full proposal submission, and a PAMS entry, to verify that the sponsor’s terms and conditions are acceptable to UTHSC to allow for awarding of the grant. Please note that grant amounts are shown as total maximum award. Terms vary. Refer to the guidelines for specifics. Also, please use Google Chrome or Firefox to open links.
www.uthsc.edu
The University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC) was founded in 1911. Our vision is to be the preeminent public research and teaching university linking the people of Tennessee to the nation and the world. UTHSC improves human health through education, research, clinical care and public service. Offering a broad range of postgraduate and selected baccalaureate training opportunities, the main campus is located in the heart of the Memphis medical district and includes six colleges – Dentistry, Graduate Health Sciences, Health Professions, Medicine, Nursing and Pharmacy. UTHSC educates and trains cohorts of medicine, pharmacy and health professions students – in addition to medical residents and fellows – at its campuses in Knoxville, Chattanooga and Nashville. Patient care, professional education and research also are carried out at more than 100 clinical and educational sites across Tennessee.
The University of Tennessee is an EEO/AA/Title VI/Title IX/Section 504/ADA/ADEA/V institution in the provision of its education and employment programs and services. Publication number - E070401(2016-006wo#160823)
UTHSC Office of Development and Alumni Affairs Corporate and Foundation Relations
FOR PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS OR PROJECT DIRECTORS
Grantmaker Finder Worksheet
Corporate and Foundation Relations
You May Answer the Questions Below OR Attach a Lay Abstract And Then Fill in any Questions
Below that are Not Answered in the Abstract
Date Submitted:__________________ 1. What is the project research area? Describe in one or two sentences.
2. What are you trying to accomplish?
3. How are you going to accomplish it?
4. What stage are you at now, and how long will it take you?
5. Who will benefit from your project?
UTHSC Office of Development and Alumni Affairs Corporate and Foundation Relations
6. Provide an estimate of the total grant dollars needed.
7. Provide keywords that would capture the essence of your research project.
8. How does the project fit UTHSC’s, your College, and/or your Department’s Strategic Plan?
9. Contact Information (Name, E-Mail)
UTFI/UTHSC Corporate and Foundation Relations
GRANTMAKER FINDER PROJECT/PROGRAMWORKSHEET
NON‐RESEARCH PROJECT/PROGRAM
1. IN ONE SENTENCE, describe the project. What will it do? Where? With whom? When? And Why?
2. What broad categories of community needs or opportunities does will the project address?
3. Describe the specific need or issue in that the project will address.
4. What specific impacts, changes or outcomes will the project achieve?
5. What are the major steps will be needed to make above changes, impacts or outcomes happen?
6. What resources will be needed to accomplish these steps? (People, equipment, materials, training, etc.)
7. Approximate total cost:
$
8. Who else has a vested interest in working with you as partners on this problem or opportunity?
9. What information, tools, data, etc. will be used to determine whether the project succeeded?
10. How will the project be sustained after grant funding ends?
Submitted By (Name/Department): Phone/Email: Date:
HOW TO
Write BetterRIGHT NOW
Do I sound like a real person? How can I make my writing voice more natural?
How do I know what I know? Why am I a credible source?
Who am I writing to? Why should they care about my topic?
What’s the most important point? Is it in the title and first paragraph?
Is this context really necessary?
What can I tell the reader that they don’t already know? What’s the conventional wisdom? Why is it wrong?
Could this [sentence, paragraph, chapter, book] be shorter?
Can I relate what I’ve written to something urgent or newsy?
Would my [sibling, parent, spouse] understand what I’ve written? How would I explain it to them?
What do I want readers to do? Have I tried hard enough to convince them?
Could a [story, quotation, statistic, image, photo] bring this to life?
As a result of → Because
Despite the fact that → Despite
Due to the fact that → Due to, because
Every single → Every
For the purpose of → For, to
In accordance with → By, under
In addition → Also, too
In advance of → Before
In an effort to → To
Inasmuch as → Since
In a timely manner → Promptly, on time
Incumbent upon → Must
In order that → For, so
In regard to → About, concerning
QUESTIONS to ask yourself
YOU’RE WRITINGWHEN
In the event that → If
It is requested that → Please
Leverage → Use
Limited number → Few
Majority → Most
Necessitate → Need
Numerous → Many
On a regular basis → Regularly
Pertaining to → About
Provided that → If
Provides guidance for → Guides
Time period → Time, period
Utilize → Use
With reference to → About
With the exception of → Except for
In order to → To
© 2014 The Advisory Board Company • 28456
AVOID ANDbUsINEss jARGONclichés
MORE TIPS
2
3
1Get someone else to read it
Read it out loudUse active verbs 4
Delete meaningless adjectives like “key,”
“exciting,” or “leading”
UNNECEssARY WORDs
SIMPLIFYphrases
AND CUT
Reinvent the wheel
Boil the ocean
Robust
Leverage
Buy-in
Dog and pony show
Deep dive
Drill down
Core competency
by using stale metaphors, similes, and idioms, you save much mental effort, at the cost of leaving your meaning vague, not only for your reader but for yourself.
George Orwell
20 Things to Never Write in a Grant Proposal by Lauren Brownstein, President, PITCH: Fundraising and Philanthropy Consulting www.pitchconsulting.com
1. Innovative: Whatever you are doing, I promise you that it is not as innovative as you think it is. This word is so overused in grant proposals that it has started to lose its meaning. Find another way to say this. Or, better yet, if what you are doing is truly innovative, don’t just declare it – describe how it is innovative.
2. Unique: See #1, above. 3. Cutting-edge: See #1, above. 4. Etc./Etcetera: If you want a foundation to fund something, you need to spell it out for them. 5. Miscellaneous expenses: A donor doesn’t want to fund your miscellaneous anything. Tell them how
you are going to use their money. 6. Other expenses: See #5, above. 7. Descriptions of your organization’s needs in lieu of descriptions of your clients’ needs: Instead of
saying “we need 5 computers, we need a dedicated phone line, we need 2 job trainers...” you should say something like, “our clients need job training and job search resources, in order to address the issue of chronic underemployment...” It’s not about your organization; it’s about the work that your organization is undertaking in support of your mission.
8. Anything with grammar or punctuation errors. 9. A specific dollar amount that only appears on the last page of the proposal: Tell the foundation or
donor what you are asking for up-front and early. Waiting until the last page to ask for a dollar amount doesn’t soften the blow – it raises the donor’s level of irritation.
10. References to your professional staff by first name only: Please. This isn’t an Evite or a Facebook shout-out. This is a grant proposal. Professional demeanor applies.
11. Alot: This is not a word. 12. Research shows: If research does, in fact, prove your point, cite and/or footnote some research from
credible sources. 13. Dear Sir or Madame: It’s easy to find a contact person’s name. If they don’t have a web site, you can
use Guidestar.org to look up a foundation’s IRS Form 990, which lists staff and trustees. 14. Jargon: If you are using “insider speak” from your industry or service area, explain what it means
before using it repeatedly. 15. Mathematical errors: We are living in the Age of the Calculator. Check your math. 16. Mismatched budget and narrative: If you have an expense listed in your budget, make sure that the
expense item is described in the proposal narrative (or in the budget narrative). 17. Anything that does not meet a foundation’s proposal submission guidelines: If a foundation says that
proposals may not exceed five pages, do not send them a six-page proposal. If a foundation gives you a specific set of questions that you must answer, answer all of them (even if some of your answers simply say “not applicable”).
18. I: First person singular is acceptable in a cover letter, but the proposal is not a letter from you. It is a document that represents your entire organization. Writing in third person will sound more professional (“the organization will...”), but it is acceptable to use the first person plural (“we will...”).
19. Declarative statements that cannot be backed up by data: Rather than writing “we are the best job training program in the county,” write something like “our program is the most effective job training
program in the county, placing more than 80% of our graduates in jobs within three months of graduation, with a 90% retention rate in those jobs after 12 months.”
20. Anything that sounds like a demand, not a request: Asking a foundation to support your cause is something that should be approached with professionalism, grace, and respect. Anything less is not worthy of a philanthropic commitment.
Do you want more tips, ideas, and strategies to help your organization submit grant proposals that stand out from the pack? Check out Grant Writing Quick Tips, your one-stop-shop for grant proposal greatness!
UTHSC: Office of Development and Alumni Affairs: Corporate and Foundation Relations
1
Grant Development Project/Program Planning Worksheet
Project / Program Title: ______________________________________ PI/PD: ________________________________Date: _____________________
Project/Program Purpose: _____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Start here and work to the left or right. Use bullets and quantify information where possible.
Project/Program Planning Section Evaluation Section
Inputs
Ingredients needed to conduct the activities and accomplish the outcomes. (Examples:
participants, staff, volunteers, materials,
equipment, $$)
Activities
How, or, the methods and
actions undertaken to achieve the outcomes.
Outcomes
The benefits, changes or improvements that will
result from your implemented program or
project.
Targets or Objectives
Projected level of success or result you hope to achieve.
Indicators
The way change is observed and the data you will collect to measure the
progression towards the outcome.
Methods/Tools
The way in which you will collect the indicator data.
How?
Timeline
When will you measure the target(s) or objectives?
Who
Persons responsible for evaluation.
1
UTHSC Office of Development and Alumni Affairs: CORPORATE & FOUNDATION RELATIONS
CONTACT INFORMATION:
Name:
E-Mail:
College/Department Date
Fill in the form as much as you can to help us with our research
Name of Foundation, Corporation, and/or Non-Governmental Organization to be researched, plus City and State (if available).
Provide a short paragraph as to why you want this private grantmaker researched.
PRIVATE
PROFILEREQUEST
2
Provide a brief lay abstract or summary of the project for which funding is needed (you may attach the summary or abstract in your e-mail request).
In one sentence describe the project audience (e.g., is the project directed toward a specific population)?
Provide keywords that describe the project and total estimated request amount.
Indicate any other information that you would like to share that will help us research and make a connection with this private grantmaker.
The CFR Private Grantseeker
Relationship Protocol presented
by Denise Rivers, CFR Director
Private Grantmakers are Not ATMs
Relationships
Do Not Start with the Submission
CFR Private Grantseeker
Relationship Protocol Tool: The R
Connect with CFR:
Meet or Call
Project Abstract or Grantmaker
GrantmakerResearch or Pre-Screen
Website or RFP In-Depth
Grantmakeror
A List
Funder Relationship
Building
Who Do You Know that
Knows
Leverage, Talk,
Question, Target & Go
SUBMIT
The Office of Alumni Affairs strives to help alumni maintain a lifelong, informed and
meaningful involvement with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center.
Alumni are offered opportunities to remain in touch with the University and with each
other through Alumni Weekends, Alumni Receptions, and Alumni Board/Council
Meetings.
Our office serves more than 32,000 UTHSC graduates. Approximately 50 programs,
reunions and special events are organized annually for UTHSC alumni. We work to re-
engage alumni with UTHSC, reconnect graduates with their classmates, and provide
meaningful interaction between current students and alumni.
In addition, we offer the following services to you as a faculty member:
Provide information (# of alumni in a particular college or geographic distribution, for example) which may be helpful for research, accreditation, etc.
Send surveys to a specific alumni group (for research, etc.) – you create the survey, send us a link and we can distribute – results come back to you
Share information with UTHSC alumni through Vital Signs, our quarterly online newsletter and alumni magazines
+ Any information, survey, etc. sent to a group of alumni must be reviewed and
approved by the Office of Alumni Affairs, as well as your department chair and/or dean,
in advance of distribution.
++ We CANNOT share names, addresses, e-mails, etc. of our alumni per UT policy.
Any e-mails, mailings, etc. must be sent directly from the Office of Alumni Affairs.
Contact Information:
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 901-448-5516
Web: www.uthscalumni.com