Effective Agreements produces professional grant proposals that will aid any non-profit or for-profit organization in achieving its funding goals. In doing so, Effective Agreements' personnel draw on formal training in grant writing plus many years of producing business plans for venture capital rounds and preparing offering memoranda for mergers and acquisitions. Grant writing services are offered to non profit organizations, primarily the 501(c)(3), and for-profit companies alike. Both private and public funding sources are addressed.
In writing grants, Effective Agreements' writers cover all of the required areas:
- Needs are assessed and a need statement drafted based on a period of rigorous research.
- The funding agency is contacted for clarification of parameters.
- Goals and objectives are set out in a manner that allows impartial measurement by the funding agency.
- Methods for achieving goals and objectives are clearly delineated so they may be observed over time.
- Quantitative and qualitative evaluation criteria for the grant proposal are prepared with reliance upon provable statements.
- A budget that is in lock-step with the methodology is calculated.
- A clear, concise and understandable summary is drafted to serve as the introduction to the grant for the initial evaluation by the funding agency.
The result is a professional grant request that adheres to the requirements of the funding agency and that can be presented with a high probability of success.
For more on Effective Agreements' grant writing services, click here.
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Effective Agreements Can Help Your Organization Create a Stronger Grant Proposal
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Effective Agreements Helps Your Company Avoid the Most Common Errors in Grant Writing:
Promoting the lack of something as a provable need;
Promoting the need and direction of the organization as the need of the community;
Incorporating non-provable goals - "Two lives will be saved per month through the program of giving fireproof clothing to firemen." (Who is going to volunteer to be the test case?);
Lengthy, convoluted summaries that fail to pass the first reading by the funding agency "gatekeepers."
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