A Proposal-Writing Outline: Abstract
A Proposal-Writing Outline: Abstract
A Proposal-Writing Outline: Abstract
A Proposal-writing Outline
The following outline is to assist you in writing a grant proposal and
implementation plan. This was created in association with the Taos, New Mexico
community and the Kellogg MIRA project (Managing Information for Rural
America, www.wkkf.org)
Abstract:
In 500 words, or less, give the essence of your proposal so the reviewer understands
your implementation plan. As a rule, if the grant reviewer can get their minds around
what you hope to accomplish, and how, from reading just your abstract, and it’s a
workable plan, you’ve got a good chance of being funded. If the reviewer is still
confused after reading your abstract about what you plan to accomplish and how,
you’re at risk of not getting funded. The abstract is the most important part of your
entire grant!
Assume the grant reviewer has seen so many poor grants that people threw together
without thinking them through, that the reviewer already assumes you may not have
not invested the effort to think through your implementation plan. The reviewer wants
to give you money, that’s what they do. They love well-written grants that are easy to
fund because they are easy to understand and the reviewers look good when they fund
good projects! Really good projects are hard to find among the many inadequately
planned projects.
Who will benefit, how many, and how? (Your Best Guess)
What partners does your project include? What did they contribute?
How will you measure what you’ve achieved once your project has ended?
Example Abstract:
To raise the multimedia authoring skills of Taos youth, and to provide a quality
alternative for how they spend their time after school, the Chamisa Mesa School will
host three 3 hour workshops to teach youth how to create Ecommerce websites from
June-August, 2000 while maintaining an open lab 2 hours/day MTWTH and all day
Friday from June 10th 2000 – June 10th 2001. Over 300 youth are expected to benefit
directly, daily logs will be kept on who participates and the number of hours they
spend in the lab.
Youth will create one CDROM project, 12 local Ecommerce sites to showcase their
multimedia authoring skills, and create a directory of Taos Ecommerce Web Pages for
the Chamber web site. Partners contributing are the Chamber of Commerce (providing
project promotion assistance to attract as many youth as possible), and La Plaza
(providing Wireless Internet Access). $15,000 will be spent on high speed access and
contract services to provide lab training and supervision during the one year period of
the grant.
June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June
Housing x------------------------------------------------------------x
Evaluations x------------------------------------------------------------------------x
June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June
Linear Timeline with Phases:
Phase One: June, 10th , 2000-April 10, 2001:
Housing will be secured for a minimum of 12 youth
Partners:
Who have you taken the time to include in your project? Are you including people
and organizations in your goals or are you going it alone? Grant reviewers prefer
projects who bring lots of partners to the table, for sustainability reasons, particularly.
Projects without partners generally fail, so reviewers will be reluctant to fund projects
whose leaders have shown they have not make the effort to create important
partnerships. Who are your contributing partners and what do they bring to your
project to make it better? Partners can donate money, or "in-kind" services such as
staff time, web space, office space, advertising and marketing assistance, expert
advice, etc.
Media Exposure:
Grant-givers love to be acknowledged for being the good guys who help make good
things happen. How will you use the media to get the word out about your project, and
to attract more partners and participants?
Once you receive the money, will you ever be heard from again? You want the grant
reviewer to know how you intend to promote and grow your project! You want them
to know how you’ll make them look great for funding your project!
Your Media and Promotion Timeline:
2000 2001
June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June
Radio
Newspaper
Brochures
TV
Web
Other
Budget:
How will you conduct your project to make most effective use of the requested
funding? Do your expenses match up with the phases and goals of the grant? Have
you shown where ALL the resources will come from for each component of your
grant? Would you fund a project that promises the world on a shoestring budget?
A small project successfully implemented is better than a grand project that is poorly
implemented. Remember that above all else, foundations don’t want to be
embarrassed!! Are you a risky bet, or a safe one?
Presuming you’ll have $15,000, list as closely as you can guess how much you’ll
spend for what.
List all Project Staff: Who is a volunteer? Who will be paid; How many hours per day/week
and at what cost per hour?
Other costs?
Evaluation:
How will you measure your success, exactly? If your great project model may require
more funding, you’ll need to carefully document what you’ve accomplished after
spending $15,000! Before you even begin your project, you’ll need a tight plan for
exactly how you’re going to measure the outstanding impact your project has made on
your community. What will you measure, when, and how will you measure it? To put
it another way, how will you prove you didn’t waste the money? This should
influence your overall project design!
Press Release Announcement
This is your promise as to what you will actually deliver. Using what you’ve
learned from all six MIRA workshops, make sure everyone on your team is
ready to share the following on what your team intends to make happen. Keep in
mind having your "story" ready for the media is vitally important.
What partners will you include in conducting your project and what will
they contribute?
What strategies will you use to educate and involve community members?