Get More Grants
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Transcript of Get More Grants
GET MORE GRANTS (Franklins and Jeffersons too!)
ARE YOU MAXED
OUT? There are some nonprofits who won’t apply for additional grant
funding because they can barely manage the ones they have. One more grant would be the proverbial “straw that breaks the camel’s back”.
The #1 reason you
lose your funding is
inefficiency
Nonprofits that lose funding do so because the accounting department spends too much time trying
to manage the grant restrictions and reporting requirements. Processes are handled manually outside the system and not in a timely fashion.
What should you do about it?
There are plenty of books and articles about applying for grant funding, but very few about what to do once you have the grant in order to
keep it and possibly expand the dollars received from that funder in the future.
THREE WAYS TO BUILD GRANT FUNDING
THAT LASTS
This presentation is designed to give nonprofit accounting departments suggestions to elevate
their role in the process and better manage the financial aspects of grant funding.
1 LEAD
It starts with a change in approach. Rather than wait for the contract to
land on your desk, take the initiative to lead your grant writers and
development staff from the beginning.
Non-finance staff might not see the
whole picture
Internal managers and staff don’t always speak in numbers. So they don’t always understand how their actions affect the organization’s ability to adhere to the grant contract. If the accounting department can educate
the rest of the organization before the first dollar is spent, then the seeds have been sown to renew that funding and increase it in the future.
Partner with grant writers
But to really lead the charge, accounting needs
to partner directly with grant writers. The budget cannot be a surprise, and
grant writers need to work together with
finance when creating budgets. That way the
grant structure fits within the organization’s
financial practices from the very beginning.
CONVEY IMPACT 2
Even if everyone is on the same page internally, keeping your funding isn’t guaranteed. You have to set yourself
apart by demonstrating the value you add to the funds you’ve received.
Understand the value of each dollar
Fundamentally, this means knowing where every dollar goes and understanding the ROI to the funder for each dollar you spend. This isn’t
really the value of the dollar to you, it’s the value you add to every dollar you’re given.
to tell the best story
Blend data from all systems
The best way to show the value you bring is to combine data from your case management or other program management system with your
financial data. That way you can provide a “units delivered per dollar given” ratio. Having this data will set you apart when applying for new grants, and it will give your funders a better reason to
continue to give you money in the future.
OVER communicate!
Even the best data on the impact you have won’t do any good if you don’t tell anyone about it. Not only should you over-communicate with funders,
but you should also stress communication internally and even with the general public.
BE ACCOUNTABLE
3
This is the be-all and end-all of raising more money. You must prove you are doing what you said you could do when you applied for the grant. Put simply, stewardship is doing your job well.
Accountability is being able to prove it.
Know your
funders
inside
and out
In order to demonstrate your commitment to accountability, you need to understand the rules each funder has put in place. Between spending restrictions, reporting requirements, and indirect cost
recovery, each funder is different. You need a way to easily
understand those differences and comply with them without
increasing your administrative burden.
Follow their format
The easiest way to lose funding is to be out of compliance with grant requirements. And this is either a timing issue or a capability issue. It can be hard to mold your existing structure into the
funder’s reporting requirements, but it’s an absolute must in order to demonstrate your commitment to the funder. But it can’t take all of your available hours or require you to add
headcount just to do it or you’ve unnecessarily burdened your funders and your organization.
others accountable
Hold
Accounting alone cannot hold the full responsibility for compliance. The entire organization must be accountable to the funder. This is where leading the process
comes full circle. You can’t hold others accountable if you don’t set the
expectations on the front end. And it takes an organizational commitment to truly be accountable to your funders for
delivering your results.
LET’S REVIEW
LEAD 1
First, you need to be at the table even before the grant has been awarded. You need to help your
grant writers understand the impact of the budgets they are creating – both on the organization and
on the likelihood you’ll be awarded the grant!
LEAD
CONVEY IMPACT
1 2
In order to truly differentiate yourself from the sea of applicants, you need to be better at describing the value your organization adds on top of the dollars. Define exactly why a funder should give you their
money by combining data from various systems. This will also focus your internal efforts around a specific
KPI that will allow you to get more grants.
LEAD
CONVEY IMPACT
BE ACCOUNTABLE
1 2 3
And of course, if you can’t prove you did what you said you were going to do, specific to the way the funder needs to see it, you can’t expect the funder to renew. Just like the neighbor who
returns your tools in better shape than when you lent them, you need to prove you treated the funder’s money like your own.
WHAT QUESTIONS DO YOU HAVE?
Contact me with any questions or comments! Jeff Sobers
Senior Product Marketing Manager Blackbaud, Inc.
[email protected] Twitter: @jeffsobers Slideshare: jsobers1