Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

38
Rural Grant Writing Teryl Eisinger, MA Director Stephanie Hansen Education Coordinator National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health

description

 

Transcript of Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Page 1: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Rural Grant Writing

Teryl Eisinger, MA

Director

Stephanie Hansen

Education Coordinator

National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health

Page 2: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Why write a grant?

• There’s a lot of grant money out there – you might as well have some too!

• You need the money to pay salaries or buy equipment or make sure your program doesn’t shut down!

• Only one GOOD REASON

Page 3: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

“There is a problem and you have a passion, a plan and some existing capacity to fix that problem.”

Be a M.O.M!

Page 4: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Getting organized

• 13 Questions to ask yourself

• The concept

• Organizing your consortium/team

Page 5: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Getting organized to write a grant

• Have a concept – What is the problem?– What do you want to do about it?

Services to be provided

– Who will do it with?Structure, responsibilities,expertise

– When will you do it?Steps to be taken

– How will you track your victory?– How much will it cost?

Page 6: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Concept paper

The job isn’t

started

until the

paperwork is done!

Page 7: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Organizing the team

• Players know the objective• Know the rules • Everyone has a position

– Conductor/Editor– Writer(s)– Support staff– Accountant– Evaluator– Reader– Sender

Page 8: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

A word about consortiums

Time and commitment

Distinct roles

fiscal

service provider

target population

All participate and benefit

Page 9: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Talk to the funder

• Find the right contact

• Overview your concept

• Given this concept AND our background does this sound like a fundable project?

• Listen

Page 10: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Building Block #1 Statement of need

• You MUST be able to state your need …

Page 11: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Statement of need – what is the problem?

• Target population– General demographics community description

• What is their need?– Health status, incidence etc…

• What is the cause?– Risk factors

Page 12: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Sources of data

Needs assesments

Federal, state and county data

Provider data

Interviews

Focus groups

Community meeting

Literature review

Steal other people’s stuff - and credit them!

data, model programs, policy briefs, bibliographies, funded projects etc…

Page 13: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Budget Plan for how you will spend money to address the need.

• What is a budget? • Reviewers should be able to read the budget and

know what you plan to do and that you have the project management capacity to do it.

• Two parts– Budget form – rows and columns of numbers– Narrative or justification

• What will funds be used for • How was the cost calculated• What is important about funding this expense

Page 14: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Basic budget components

• Personnel– Salary and fringe

• Contractual– What – where will you “farm out”?– Partner deliverables?– How will contractor be selected if not “named”?

• Travel – cite your travel policy or gsa • Equipment – is it allowed – how is it defined?• Supplies – things that are expendable• Operating - routine expenses to operating the project• Other – be cautious about catch all

Page 15: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Additional budget components

• Indirect• “Match”

In – kind

Cash • Administrative

Page 16: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Budget narrative

• Lead sentences“Funds of ___ are requested to support a .50 FTE program

manager to oversee all aspects of the program including service delivery, consortium relations and ensuring all reporting requirements are met.”

“$___ in matching funds for personnel is provided by an in-kind contribution from the Smith county public health department. “

Page 17: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Budget strategy

• Check in with partners early!• How much detail is necessary?• Can you request equipment? • What about indirect? • What are your administrative costs?• Can I/should I pad the budget?

Page 18: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Project Plan What are you going to do to address the need?

“Goals and objectives”

“Timeline”

“Methodology”

“Logic model “

Page 19: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Writing Goals & Objectives

• Get ready – Review your problem statement

• Get set – Review your “solution”

• Go – Write what you want the results to be

Page 20: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Goals and objectives

• Goals are “General”

• Objectives tell about the “Operation”

Page 21: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

SMART objectives

Specific – Is it clear?

Measurable – What can you measure/observe?

Achievable – Is it doable?

Relevant – Will it do what we think we should accomplish

Time frame – In what time period will the objective be accomplished?

Page 22: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Goals, Objectives, Timelines & Methodology

Goal: To disseminate information to policy makers, practitioners and community leaders on key rural health issues.

Objective: Plan and convene an annual “day at the legislature” for state of Michigan in January 2012.

Methodology: 1. Select and convene planning committee partners by June 2011.2. Confirm budget and other resources by July 2011.3. Draft agenda approved by September 2011.

Page 23: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics
Page 24: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics
Page 25: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Project Evaluation

“A systemic approach of social research procedures”

“To ascertain or fix the value”

OR

SO WHAT?

Page 26: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Project evaluation – key questions

• What is required?

• What is budgeted?

• What do we want to know then that we don’t have now?

Page 27: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

3 focus areas of a simple evaluation plan

• Did you do what you said you were going to do? (process)

• What can you count? (outcomes)

• So what? (impact)

Page 28: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Begin with the end in mind

Goal: To disseminate information to policy makers, practioners and community leaders on key rural health issues.

Objectives:

Process Outcome Impact

Page 29: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Project evaluation plan narrative

• Who’s responsible – data collection, reporting, monitoring?

• Data collection – what, how, when?• Monitoring/correction

– Reporting– Information dissemination– Decision making

Page 30: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Evaluation – lead sentence

“The project will be evaluated by systematically examining and collecting data on process, outcomes and impacts of the project activities.”

Page 31: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Project narrative – pulling all the pieces together for success!

• Write for the reviewers

• Writing – right

• Important pieces

Page 32: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Project narrative – write for the reviewers!

• What is an “ORC”

• Reviewers are people with history, background, personalities and opinions

• Don’t make your reviewer work too hard to read your grant!

Page 33: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Writing – right!

• Write fast – revise later• Use their outline• Lead sentences to every paragraph• Transitions from one paragraph to the next• Use the same tense throughout • Use their language• Not just the facts – rationale, benefits, models• Format to use white space • Format to put your application at the top of the pile

Page 34: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

How to find grants - Types of grants

• Challenge grants• Demonstration grants• Planning grants• Program development grants• General purpose or operational grants• Capital grants

Page 35: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

How to find grant funds

• Read - periodicals and the news

• Network - with other organizations

• Search and re-search - Federal Office of Rural Health Policy- Rural Assistance Center

- Guidestar

Page 36: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

What to do after you write the application

• Write thank you notes!

• Look for other sources of funds.

• Build your grant library.

Page 37: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Next steps

• What will you do when you get home?

• Consider the NOSORH Grant Writing Institute

• Stay in touch!

Page 38: Welcome to Grant Writing Basics

Teryl Eisinger, MA Director

[email protected]

Stephanie Hansen, Education Coordinator

[email protected]