PROPOSALS
FOR FUNDING
Reference Document
How
to get money out of donor organizations
A proposal is a request for financial
assistance to implement a project. For a community project, it may be used to
seek approval from the community members (the community itself being the most
important donor). You may use these guidelines to seek project funding from any
donor. We recommend that you aim for multiple sources of funding. If you have
only one source of funding, you may become dependent upon that one source.
A proposal is not just a "shopping
list" of things you want. A proposal must justify each item in the list of
things you want, so that a donor agency can decide if it wants to provide some
or all of those things. You must know (and be able to communicate) exactly what
you want to do with these things, and that is why you should design a project
to carry out what you want to achieve.
It is important to carefully formulate
and design your project. It is equally important to write a proposal which will
attract the necessary funding. Proposal writing is a skill which requires some
knowledge and practice.
Your project proposal should be an
honest "sales" document. It's job is to inform and to convince. It is
not a place to preach, boast or to deceive. If you are convinced it is a good
idea and should be supported, your project proposal should honestly report it
to decision makers who weigh its merits against other donation commitments. It
should clearly indicate how and when the project will end, or become self
supporting. Proposals should be neat and tidy, preferably typewritten, and
without any extraneous or unnecessary information.
How elaborate your proposal is should
depend upon the amount of resources being requested and how big the total
project is. Modify these guidelines to fit the project and proposed donor.
The project proposal must reflect the
background work you have already done and should be logically set out. It is
not enough to write a letter stating your request. You have to demonstrate the
need and prove that the project is worthy of funding. Remember that there will
be many other organizations and individuals competing for the funds.
Use clear concise and simple language
which says exactly what is meant. If necessary use diagrams or charts to
illustrate key points. Use appendices to avoid crowding the body of the
proposal and the flow of the narrative. Tailor your presentation to the agency
approached. Express a willingness to be interviewed personally by the funding
agency once they receive and read your proposal request.
And, especially . . .
Do not be discouraged if your proposal is not accepted. Find out why, and try another agency.
Do not be discouraged if your proposal is not accepted. Find out why, and try another agency.
Perhaps you and your associates have
many ideas of things you want to do; you see a need to reduce illiteracy, to
reduce poverty, to provide safe drinking water, to improve the level of health,
to provide training for disabled persons, and many other things. You must,
however, choose a project that is very specific; limit your goal to a single
desired solution to the highest priority problem.
Involve the whole community. In
choosing your project, call a meeting and do not neglect to include the people
who have been often neglected in the past, women, disabled, the very poor,
those who have no voice in the way things are decided in the community. Make
sure that the people who are supposed to benefiting your project feel that this
is their project, for their benefit, and that they may contribute to it because
it is theirs.
It is not enough, however, to choose
your goal. Good planning is needed, identifying your available or potential
resources, generating several strategies and choosing the most viable one, deciding
how you are going to monitor (watch) the project to ensure that it stays on
track (i.e. it continues to be consistent with your original desires) ,
ensuring that the accounting is both transparent and accurate, and deciding
what is to be done when (a schedule) . A bit of research about the location,
the population characteristics, the situation, the existing facilities, is
needed in order to objectively describe the background to the project.
Involving the community and the beneficiaries in this research is the best way
to ensure that it is valid.
With the community or target group, use
Brainstorming Principles and
Procedures
to outline a Plan or Project Design. Without allowing
criticism, ask group members to contribute to each step of a brainstorming
group process: what is the priority problem (list all, even the foolish
statements; then rank them in order of priority) , facilitate the group to
understand, therefore, that the goal is the solution to that identified
problem. Help them to generate objectives (finite, verifiable, specific) from
that general goal. Identify resources and constraints, then generate several
alternative solutions, choosing the most viable. Other documents are available
to explain the brainstorming process in more detail but this was a brief
sketch.
With your background work behind you,
you will want to start drafting your proposal. We highly recommend that you
obtain resources (funds) from several sources. Do not let your organization or
group become dependent upon a single donor.
Before
you begin to write your proposal, keep in mind the following points:
- It
is necessary to find out in advance what sources of funding are available,
through governments, United Nations agencies, some international NGOs or
private foundations.
- Most
donors look for the degree of local initiative in the project proposal,
the utilization of the available resources within the country itself and
the plans for the project to be self-supporting once the initial funding
has been spent.
- Your
project should be practical, not too costly, and have the potential for
being repeated in other situations.
- Increasingly,
funding agencies are looking for integrated approaches to development
projects. This means that you will want to see to what extent your project
supports and supplements existing activities, and is designed to overcome
identified problems.
- Almost
all UN and government agencies, foundations and private voluntary agencies
have their own proposal format that they will want you to follow. If you
are not in contact with a local or regional representative, write a letter
requesting information as to proper procedures, application format and
funding requirements. While format varies, the same information is asked
for by all agencies and foundations.
- Find
out the budgeting cycle of the agency, whether annual, quarterly or
ongoing. Check to see if there is a closing date for application.
These (structure) guidelines are not
intended to tell you what to write, but rather how to write the proposal. If
you are responsible for writing the proposal, then it is because you are the
"expert" (in the best sense of the word). If you are responsible,
then you know what you want to achieve and the best way to achieve it. In any
event, don't panic at the prospect and don't be put off by the technical jargon
that unfortunately is frequently used.
Do not try to write the proposal by
yourself. Ask for help from your friends and colleagues, programmer, manager,
staff and those who can assist in either concepts or in style. Think of
preparing a proposal as a written form of "dialogue" in which each
successive draft is a continuation of the process.
The chapters of your proposal do not
necessarily have to be written in the order presented here, but what is written
in each chapter must relate in specific ways to what is written in the other
chapters. Make sure that you put the right content in the right chapter. Make
sure that each topic relates to the others and to the proposal as a whole.
This
is a single page; the front cover of the proposal. It should include:
§ Date;
§ Project title;
§ Locations of the
project;
§ Name of the organization;
and
§ Any other necessary
single line information.
The abstract or executive summary
follows the title page, but the proposers should not think about that now, read
on about the other sections of the proposal first.
This section is expected to answer why
your project is needed. Here you will want to give a description of the
situation and focus on factors which prompted the formulation of your proposed
project. Tell how the need for this project was identified and who was involved
in developing the project. Explain your project's origin or context.
It is most advisable to involve the
whole community in identifying priority problems; that is called
"participatory research."
The first thing the background does is
to identify the problem. That means it must name the problem and locate the
problem. It indicates the target group (beneficiaries), the sector, the
magnitude, and other actors who are working to solve that problem. It also
indicates the extent to which the problem has been solved by the other actors,
and what has been so far accomplished by your group.
While examining the problem(s) to be
addressed, several questions should arise here. What is the condition of the
target group to justify the donor donating money and perhaps seconded staff? A
history of the community, your group, or the project is not essential, but a
brief outline can be useful. More importantly, what conditions, or what changes
in conditions, are envisaged that would lead to any donor agreeing to fund your
project?
You
may wish to include:
§ Project area (Issues
and problems, not descriptions);
§ Reasons for making
this proposal;
§ Circumstances leading
up to the project; and
§ Broader plans or
strategies of which it is a part.
If yours is a project that is not
starting fresh, the background will also indicate any changes in your project
since it began.
Remember that the background chapter
describes the factors leading to the problem that your project intends to
solve. Everything in this section should be justification to approve the
project and the requested funding assistance. Long histories and analyses would
be detrimental here.
The goal of your project should be to
solve the problem or problems described in the background. Goals and objectives
must relate to the previous chapter, by stating what is the solution to those
above problems. You need a set of (general) goals, and sets of (specific)
objectives.
Start with "goals" which are
general, long term, broad desires. From those goals generate specific "objectives" which are verifiable,
measurable, finite, and have specific dates of achievement. For example:
"To reduce illiteracy," is a goal; while "To teach basic
literacy skills to 20 clients by March 2," is an objective.
You will want to be as specific as
possible in stating the objectives of your project. They should be written in
terms of the end results you expect in the project, not how you will achieve
these results. Those results must be verifiable (i.e. you can clearly show that
they have been achieved, and they can be confirmed by outside observers).
When selecting the goals and objectives
for the project, remember the nature of the donor you ask; what kinds of
solutions are sought? The donor does not want to contribute to dependency, so
is not interested in funding charitable services which may take the pressure of
obligation off those authorities who should look after the rights of the local
people. Most donors are not simply a source of funds for carrying out routine
"operations." They are interested in supporting activities which
highlight the needs of the most vulnerable and distressed, and promote self
reliance, ethnic harmony and development.
In this chapter you describe the
beneficiaries or target groups in some detail. You may also add indirect or
secondary beneficiaries (eg people trained to help the primary beneficiaries).
This can be an expansion of the topic mentioned in your background section;
indicate their number, characteristics, reasons for vulnerability, locations,
and so on.
Most donor agencies will be more
predisposed towards your project if you can demonstrate that the beneficiaries
have participated in the choice and design of the project. (An appendix can
list meetings of beneficiaries, listing details such as dates, locations,
times, topics discussed, speakers, and lists of beneficiary group members who
attended. Refer to the appendix in this chapter; do not include it here; put it
at the end of your proposal).
This chapter identifies the inputs in
your project, i.e. what resources (cash, personnel and actions) will be put
into your project.
First, start with examining possible
strategies to reach the objectives mentioned above. In each case you have to
link with the previous chapter. The best project proposal lists two, three or
four different strategies and discards or rejects all but one of these, and
says why. Then it goes on to say, "Given the objectives and strategies,
what activities must be implemented or started to use that strategy and reach
the objectives?"
Target means, "How much, to whom,
where and by whom?" – In other words, "Who does what?" For
example, what kind of training will you provide, for how long, and how many
people will be involved? What specific skills will be taught and what kind of
follow up activities are planned?
Indicate what kinds of jobs are being
done in the project. Refer to your appendix for key job descriptions. Always
refer those activities to how they will achieve the objectives mentioned above.
Even the activities of the support staff must be justified in that they must be
employed so as to allow the operational staff to reach their targets.
In this section you describe in
sequence the activities you plan in order to achieve your objectives.
If you can be so specific as to give
dates, even if approximate, the entire better. You may wish to use a diagram or
bar chart to mark out the calendar events.
Include in the work plan the phasing of
the project; how one stage of the project leads to the next.
How long will support
be needed?
(When will the project end, or when will the project be locally self supporting?)
(When will the project end, or when will the project be locally self supporting?)
This section describes the (perhaps
changing) organization and management structure needed to carry out the
activities described above. The "O" in "CBO." Diagrams are
very useful in this.
Describe briefly your organization's
goals and activities. Be specific about its experience in working with problems
of a similar nature, what its capabilities and resources are in undertaking a
project of this nature.
The abilities and experience of your organization's
members, your human resources, may well be your greatest asset. Indicate the
kind of assistance your organization expects to receive from possible
collaborating agencies. Attach additional organizational information, such as
an annual report, if available.
Explain:
§ How will it be done?
§ Who is responsible
for the project?
§ Who will implement
(who will do it)? and
§ Who will direct the
implementation of the project?
Who runs the project? Who is in charge
of the overall organization? Who is responsible for its overall implementation
(in contrast with responsibility for its design and its monitoring, and in
contrast with the separate actors, separate agencies, and separate locations)? Will
that change? These can be spelled out in the proposal. See Organizing by Training for participatory methods of
developing the organization.
Do not overlook the activities (labor)
of volunteers who contribute to the project. Although they might not be paid
staff, they are resources, and contribute resources to the project.
In a proposal, the chapter called costs
and benefits is not the same thing as a line by line budget with numbers
indicating amounts of money. (The line by line budget should be put as an
appendix at the end of the document, not in the text).
Here in the text of your project
proposal, the chapter on costs and benefits should be analytical and narrative,
and relate to the previous chapters. It should discuss those budget lines that
may need explanation (e.g. purchases, expenses or needs which are not
immediately apparent or self explanatory).
You should try to make a cost benefit
analysis, ie relate the quantity of the objectives reached, to the total costs,
and calculate a per unit cost (e.g. the total cost divided by the number of
children taught literacy will be the per unit cost of teaching literacy) .
Summaries or totals
of the following information may help some donors to decide:
§ local costs;
§ external costs;
§ methods of financing;
§ local versus foreign
exchange needed;
§ all non-financial
contributions by the local community (each coasted with a money equivalent);
§ methods to obtain
supplies (where and how purchased); and
§ Proportion of total
costs requested in this proposal.
As
well as the costs (including the amounts asked for in the proposal), you should
make some comparison between the costs (inputs) and the value of benefits
(outputs). The following could be answered:
§ Who benefits?
§ How do they benefit?
§ Justifications for
the project?
§ What are the specific
outputs of the project?
§ What is the average
total cost per beneficiary?
§ Will value of
benefits exceed costs of inputs (or vice versa)? By how much?
When the objectives are qualitatively
different from each other (e.g. number of new parent committees formed and the
number of children taught literacy) , then some arbitrary but reasonable
division of "per unit" cost must be calculated.
The budget totals should be indicated
in this section, then refer to appendix for the detailed budget. Other sources
(donors and the amounts) must be mentioned. The total amount requested should
appear here in narrative text.
Monitoring should be done by:
- the
affected community, represented by the local committee;
- Your
agency or organization (specify who in it) ; and
- Your
donors.
How will achievements
be measured?
How will they be verified?
How will they be verified?
Monitoring and follow-up should be
built into the project activities. Part should be continuous self evaluation by
you (the implementing agency).
The monitoring and receiving of reports
from the project to the donor must be worked out and put into your project
proposal. The monthly reports should be designed and reviewed as to
usefulness to the donor for its ongoing planning and programming for the whole
country.
One thing is for sure; there should be
emphasis in reporting the results, or outputs, ie the effects of the project on
the target group or beneficiaries. There is no harm in also reporting
activities if the reports are brief. The reporting of achieved results, as
compared to planned objectives as defined in your project proposal, is
essential.
In any agency-funded project,
accounting and accountability are very important. This applies to most donor
agencies, UN, governmental or NGO.
In your proposal, your reporting
procedures should describe: "how often, to whom, including what?" You
may want to discuss this with the prospective funding agency since reporting
and evaluation requirements vary among agencies, and are dependent upon type of
project.
Evaluating your own project while it is
under way will help you and your donors see your progress and accomplishments
and the choices available for future action. Careful reporting of your project
in progress is an invaluable resource for others who attempt projects of a
similar nature.
Your proposal should indicate what
reports will be submitted. These include regular ongoing reports, and a final
report. Short, frequent reports (eg weekly sitreps) may include only events and
activities. Longer reports should indicate the results of the project
activities (not just activities) , an evaluation or assessment of how far the
objectives were reached, reasons why they were not, and the impact or effect on
the beneficiaries (target group) .
Reports should be prepared and submitted
optimally every month. The proposal should indicate what reports are to be
submitted and with what frequency and content. Each project (if your group is
proposing more than one project) requires a separate report (two or three pages
of text plus needed appendices).
A detailed monthly narrative report
should include how far each of the intended objectives has been reached, what
were the reasons they were not fully reached, and suggestions and reasons about
changing the objectives if they were found to need changing. The narrative
report can include information about events and inputs (what actions were
undertaken, see below) , but should emphasize outputs (the results of those
actions in so much as they lead to achieving the stated objectives) . Attention
should be paid to the number and location of beneficiaries. The monthly report
would best be organized into sections corresponding to the sections of your
proposal.
A detailed monthly financial report
should include what moneys were received and from where, what moneys were
expended, listed line by line according to the budget categories in the
proposal, reasons for over- or under- spending, and an assessment of how well
the expenditures contributed to reaching the stated objectives of the project.
The final report should include the
same topics as the monthly reports, plus a section called "Lessons
Learned," and a section indicating the impact of the project on the target
community and surrounding areas. The report should be concise (brief but
complete).
The same principles and guidelines for
narrative reports should apply to the financial reports. The monthly budget
outcomes of the project are as important to programming as the statements are
to the accounting. Explanations of deviations from planned expenditures should
accompany the budget outcomes.
The text of your proposal should be a
single, brief yet complete argument from beginning to end ─
easy to read. Because many important details will make the text too convoluted
and difficult to read, they should be put into appendixes at the end.
Typical
of documents to put in appendices are:
§ lists;
§ diagrams;
§ detailed budget;
§ job descriptions; and
§ Any other necessary
detailed documents.
When you have written your first draft
of the project proposal, go through it and look for any descriptions of details
in your text that may draw the reader away from the smooth flow of the
argument. Move them to an appendix and in their place put a brief note about
them and ask the reader to look in the appendix for the details.
Now read the document again. With those
details tucked away in an appendix, does the flow of argument become smoother,
yet not weakened by their absence in the text? Yes? Good! You've just found
another way to make use of the appendices.
Appendices can include any other
material that will allow officers of donor agencies to decide whether or not to
approve funds. The purpose of the appendices is to be able to include all the
necessary and important details (which the meticulous reader will examine), but
not in the text of your document where you want a smooth flowing, brief
argument. It tucks those details away for use when wanted.
The line-by-line budget should be put
in an appendix. Each line on your detailed budget should have the total costs
for one budget category. The lines should be grouped into similar kinds of
costs (e.g. salaries, vehicles, communications, fuels, transport).
If you can, distinguish between non
expendable items (i.e. equipment that can be used again later) and expendable (i.e.
supplies that get used up).
The budget should be a realistic
estimate of all costs involved in implementing and operating the project. If
possible demonstrate the potential for eventual self support, or support from
other resources other than the one to which you are applying. Costs estimates
should be broken down in to logical categories (line items) such as: salaries;
supplies and materials; equipment; travel and per diem; rent; telephone.
Voluntary contributions made to the
project by you and members of your organization should be listed and estimated
as closely as possible in cash terms, or shown as "no charge."
Specify physical facilities that are available or, are to be made available for
the project. Specify your organization's existing equipment and supplies that
will be used for this project. Include any other inputs to be used for this
project from government or from other organizations.
Often, funding agencies prefer to match
grants, or assist with part of the total budget rather than give the entire
sum. Therefore it is suggested that you show the total budget when applying,
and indicate when you expect or hope to get other funding assistance.
Write this part last. This is the
section on which a potential donor will read and make that vital preliminary
decision: whether or not to seriously consider assisting.
This should not be written, or even
contemplated, until all above sections are written. Avoid writing it as an
introduction. Think of it as a concise summary and conclusion.
The optimum size is half a page; the absolute
maximum size is one page. Any longer and it is in danger of not being read or
considered. It should summarize only the key recommendations and be written for
busy board members or executives who may read up to fifty of them and may not
initially read anything more than the executive summary for each proposed
project.
Ironically, while you write the
abstract last, you then put it directly after the front or title page of your
proposal.
and when you finish writing it: . . .
Now that you have written your draft
proposal, hand it around for comments and suggestions. View the proposal
critically and be prepared to do some rewriting and rethinking if necessary.
The most likely projects to be funded
will be rapid, sustainable, small scale, low budget interventions for the most
pressing needs identified by the communities.
Often proposals will be evaluated as to
how they will contribute to wider, integrated sustainable development of the
geographical area.
Active participation of women in
identification, implementation and monitoring of a proposed project should be
encouraged. The proposal should clearly describe the number of women involved
in project design and implementation, and as beneficiaries.
Any projects that are part of larger or
longer term plans must indicate other (preferably secured) funding sources to
ensure continuity and sustainability.
Projects which are developmental,
promote self reliance, and are ultimately locally sustainable have a higher
chance of being funded. Your estimate of when the project could be self
sustaining should be indicated in your proposal.
The success of projects requires the
co-operation of all segments of the target community. There must be a sense of
community "ownership" of the projects (including both local residents
and displaced persons affected) . That means there should be some initial
activity of "community development mobilization," "social
animation" or similar community facilitation to ensure all members of the
affected community participate in decisions concerning the proposed project.
Active participation of the community as a whole (all members) in
identification, assessment and implementation of the project is usually a
prerequisite for approval.
A good project should be replicable.
That means it should be possible to implement the same project in other
communities.
Accounting and accountability are very
important.
Many of the resources of those
beneficiaries can be hidden by the concern we may have for their plight, but this
can be deceptive. The hidden resources of your target group usually include
skills and wisdom, and surprisingly many material resources, both capital and
supplies. Your objective as a mobilizer and trainer should be to stimulate a
process of uncovering hidden resources among the beneficiaries and encourage a
social process of reducing dependencies and increasing self reliance.
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