The Almoner The Almoner
  • The Fundraiser’s Playbook
  • The Best Fundraising Books Ever
  • About
  • Ask the Almoner
Author
The Almoner
Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When…
Categories
  • Annual Campaign (2)
  • Board Fundraising (1)
  • Budgets (1)
  • Capital Campaign (15)
  • Case for Support (5)
  • Charitable Enterprise (8)
  • charity (2)
  • Corporate Giving (5)
  • Direct Mail (6)
  • Disciples and Stewards (13)
  • Donors (11)
  • Email Fundraising (1)
  • Endowment (2)
  • Events (2)
  • Fundraising (47)
  • Grants (11)
  • History (1)
  • Homilies (1)
  • Humility (2)
  • Leadership (8)
  • Letters from the Almoner 2 (3)
  • Major Gifts (18)
  • Matching Gifts (2)
  • Ministry Support Fundraising (10)
  • Offertory (5)
  • Online Giving (11)
  • Personal Support (2)
  • Phone Calls (2)
  • Planned Giving (1)
  • Planning (20)
  • Productivity (1)
  • Prospect Research (2)
  • Recipe for Success (1)
  • Social Teaching (1)
  • Spirituality (6)
  • Stewardship (20)
  • Thank You (6)
  • Theology (20)
  • Time, Talent, Treasure (8)
  • Uncategorized (15)
  • Volunteers (12)
  • Websites (1)
The Almoner The Almoner
  • The Fundraiser’s Playbook
  • The Best Fundraising Books Ever
  • About
  • Ask the Almoner
Grantwriting

How do I write grants?

  • The Almoner
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0

What are you looking for?

  • Main
  • Grantwriting
  • How do I write grants?

Grant writing is a kind of fundraising that focuses on raising money from through a written application.

Grant writing seeks funding from three different types of funding sources: private foundations, corporate foundations, and government grant makers. Each source uses a different application form that a grant writer must fill out to request funding. The forms vary in length based on the grant maker… Government grants are always the longest and most involved.

Each type of funding source has its own reason for being.

Private Foundations

A private foundation manages a pool of funds called a corpus that exists to be given away. They get special tax exempt status in return for giving away 5% of the total net assets annually, or an average of 5% over a period of years. Individuals or groups create foundations because they want to preserve their wealth and support their charitable intentions. They range from small (a few thousand dollars) to medium ($10,000,000 or more) to staggeringly large (more than a $1,000,000,000). The bigger they are, the more professional staff they tend to have and the more strict the requirements for securing funding will be.

Corporate Foundations

Corporations form foundations for marketing reasons. They take advantage of the tax exempt status of a foundation to create a special pool of funding that can be used to support causes that are connected to the company’s primary business. They typically only fund in areas where they have a significant employee presence, and will often fund a few types of programs, like science education, human services, or financial literacy. These foundations often have restrictions in place that prevent them from giving to church related activities.

Government grant makers

When writing government grants, you are actually submitting a bid to enter into a contract with the government agency to perform a specific activity. Agencies fund different types of activity. You will be required to track your activity and spending on a regular calendar. These are grants that you will need paid staff to administer. Catholic institutions are able to access government grants in fields like social service, medicine, and education. You have be careful, though, because the money comes with strings attached. Typically government funding will require that you severely limit the amount of ‘faith based’ content you provide. For example, many government programs will prevent you from requiring clients from attending religious services. So if your mission is evangelism, be very particular about whether a grant is a good fit for you.

A few cautions:

Grant writing takes a lot of time:

  • Putting together a good grant proposal.
  • Hearing back on whether you’ve gotten funding.
  • Submitting the periodic and final reports on whether you’ve accomplished what you’ve set out to do.

The whole process typically takes a year to 18 months. It can take even longer when you consider multi-year grants.

If you’re just building a grant program, expect to hear ‘no’ quite often. Grant funds tend to be more competitive than other sources of funding, because foundations, corporations, and government grant makers make their information publicly available. You are competing with everyone else who needs funding for a limited pool of funds.

Grant seeking can be a very successful type of fundraising program, but you’ll need to commit to investing a significant amount of time and money before you can expect to see much fruit from it. Once you establish a relationship with a grantor, you can often go back again year after year.


Looking for more articles on grant writing? Try these:

  • What do I need to know to start writing grants?
  • How do I write a grant budget narrative?
  • How do I manage my grant deadlines? Build a grant calendar!
  • What on earth is a logic model?
  • How do I write a donation request to a business?
  • Can I find new grant opportunities?
  • How do I get grantors to give again?

Check out The Fundraiser’s Playbook for a full list of fundraising articles.


Would you like to learn more about raising money for Church and Ministry? Check out Letters From The Almoner, now available on Amazon.com.

Image courtesy of Steven Depolo, via Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.

Tags:
  • Grants
  • grantwriting
Previous What fun food drive themes work?
Next What do I need to know to start writing grants?
Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
The Almoner

Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When he discovered that fundraising can make wonderful things happen, his profession became his passion and the Almoner was born. His first book on raising money in the Church, Letters from the Almoner, is now available on Amazon.

You May Also Like
View Post
  • Fundraising
  • Major Gifts
  • Uncategorized

Cheerful Persistence – The Fundraiser’s Super Power

  • Nathan Krupa
  • May 10, 2025
View Post
  • Major Gifts

The Anatomy of the Ask

  • Bryn George
  • January 28, 2025
View Post
  • Productivity

How to Use Obsidian for Creative Writing

  • Nathan Krupa
  • November 28, 2024
Falls of the Big Sioux River
View Post
  • Annual Campaign
  • Fundraising
  • Stewardship

Excellence in Action

  • The Almoner
  • November 11, 2024
View Post
  • Recipe for Success

Recipe for Success #1 – Take Me Out to the Ball Game

  • The Almoner
  • October 28, 2024
View Post
  • Major Gifts

Tee ‘em Up

  • Bryn George
  • February 29, 2024
View Post
  • Online Giving

How to Use Python to Add Tons of Teams to Classy with the API.

  • The Almoner
  • September 21, 2023
View Post
  • Online Giving

How to Use Google Colab to Create Custom QR Codes for Fundraising

  • The Almoner
  • September 18, 2023
Author
The Almoner
Nathan Krupa started raising money professionally for Golden Harvest Food Bank in 2011. When…
About the Almoner.

The Almoner seeks to provide the best practices, fresh ideas, and encouragement you need to raise more money for your church or ministry.

Amazon Affiliate Disclosure

Nathan Krupa / TheAlmoner.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.

Letters from the Almoner – Now available on Amazon.com.

Subscribe

Subscribe now to our newsletter

The Almoner The Almoner
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Amazon Affiliate Disclosure
  • About
Raising Money to Build God's Kingdom.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.