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Last month, our fundraising article was an introduction to developing your fundraising strategy. A fundraising strategy is a living document that sets out your organisation’s approach to fundraising for the coming years, identifying clear and realistic goals, and mapping a pathway to achieving them.
They align your organisation’s mission and charity objects with your business objectives and is essential to financial sustainability to keep your organisation on track with its fundraising goals. A long term, strategic approach will help you deliver the most efficient and effective fundraising programme.
This month, we are going to help you develop that strategy even further by identifying your need as an organisation and collecting evidence to use when it comes to your grant applications.
When it comes to your grant applications, evidence is crucial. It illustrates the problem you’re tackling with real life examples, it strengthens your argument and compels the reader to accept your point.
Evidence in the form of facts and statistics are required for any successful grant application. When writing it, it is important to back up what you’re saying with hard evidence and be specific. Define the problem in words that the funder understands and in a way that makes them want to do something about it. As you are probably aware, there is a lot of competition for grants and a high demand for limited resources.
Evidence will prove:
Evidence also importantly reassures the funder that they will not waste their money by giving it to your organisation.
How did your project/organisation start? Who decided that it needs to happen? Why did they think the project/organisation was needed?
Your organisation works with beneficiaries and in your community. You are the best people to identify the gap in provision and demonstrate the need.
Use statistics and not vague assertions from your own research but also research the national need from academic and reputable sources.
There are a few sources for the statistics you can use to help identify and articulate your need:
Some useful websites you can use:
Consider the following:
Why is the project important?
Stress why you’re project is needed now and what will happen if nothing is done.
Is the problem your focusing on increasing?
Are there trends that might make the problem worse in the future if your project is not undertaken? Here, you can use statistics to back up any asserting you make about the future. If you have a waiting list, for example, is it growing month on month?
Have you done similar work already?
Can you demonstrate that your project builds on work you have already carried out? Can you find a successful similar project elsewhere? Could you share their findings and project and are you doing a smaller version of the same thing?
Get evidence of your competence:
Collect case studies from your beneficiaries and tell the funders who you are and who you help. Get letters of support from service users, professionals working with your organisation, MPs, local councillors or other important decision-makers or organisations that make referrals to your organisation. Support from public sector agencies/staff often have a stronger influence on funders, such as a CCG, social workers or the police, for example.
A good way of answering some of these questions when it comes to establishing and demonstrating your need in the community is to use the P.E.E method.
Point
Evidence
Explain
Using this method when completing your application can help you keep focused on your point. Any statement or point you make should then be followed with evidence such as facts or stats. Then, once you have provided that evidence, you can explain how it’s relevant and why you’ve included it. This can help you in your bid for funding.
If you have found these articles helpful, we regularly run a training session on Grants and Trusts Fundraising Applications. Our next session takes place in July where we cover your fundraising plan, identifying your need as an organisation and much more! You can book your place on that session here.
You can also sign up to our monthly fundraising newsletter. This newsletter contains fundraising news, information, resources, event details and the latest funds for you to explore. To sign up to any of our newsletters, you can click here.
Finally, you can request one-to-one support and we’d be more than happy to help. Simply give us a call on 01932 571122.
Find out about local volunteering opportunities and keep up to date with local events & fundraising news by subscribing to one of our bulletins.