21 Tips on How to Write Grant Proposals
- Don’t use a committee
- The fewer writers involved, the better the proposal
- Preferable, the project innovator should be the author, with editorial assistance by a grant coordinator
- Aim your "pitch" at one individual
- Try to visualize that person
- Write in third person
- It’s easier to brag about "they" than "I"
- Select an appropriate (and interesting) title of 10 words or less
- If the proposal is a long one (of 10 pages or more), prepare a table of contents
- Be liberal with spacing, sub-heading and underlines, to make it easy to read and to emphasize important points
- Try to limit each sentence to 15 words or less
- Try to limit yourself to 2 commas per sentence
- This keeps you from saying more than one thing at a time
- Keep your paragraphs short, and present only one thought per paragraph
- Use contractions freely. That’s the way you talk, isn’t it? It’s the key to more effective, personal writing
- Use quick openers – like good newspaper openers
- Catch the reader’s attention early, and keep it
- Don’t make a mystery out of your proposal
- Start right in with the mot important point
- Accentuate the positive
- Emphasize "opportunities", rather than "needs"
- Donors would rather know "where it’s at" than "where it isn’t"
- Beware of "ify" and "hopeful" statements
- Don’t overkill
- Remember you are dealing with sophisticated customers
- Too much sugar can sour the wine
- Use nickel and dime words, but don’t insult the reader’s intelligence
- Beware of professional jargon, abbreviations and vague references
- If you have trouble getting started, begin with the budget
- Money has a strange way of defining our methods and objectives
- Ask for the order
- There’s no need to be sly with granting agencies
- Literally "come in the front door", "make the pitch" and "close the sale"
- KISS - - Keep It Short and Simple
- Break the rules!
- Writing is an individual matter
- So don’t get hung-up on someone else’s writing rules
- The main thing is to make yourself clear
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