The
Truth About Grants
by Jillian Coleman
I
don't know about you, but hardly a day
goes by I don't receive spam emails about grants.
Spam that absolutely promises me I can buy a book
and get a $30,000 grant, just for being alive
on the planet. Spam that assures me there are
grants available to pay my credit card bills,
start any kind of business, or buy a shiny new
car.
To
some degree, those spam emails are why I established
my online business, www.GrantMeRich.com. Because
I have been a grants consultant for thirty years.
I know the truth about grants, and I want to share
that truth with you.
The
truth about grants is a good news/bad news proposition.
Let's get the bad news out of the way first:
Nobody
is going to award you a grant of $20,000 or $30,000
to spend at Saks, or pay your bills. Nobody is
going to give you cash to start a network marketing
business. Nobody is going to buy you a new Mercedes
to drive around the neighborhood.
But
really, in your heart of hearts, you already knew
that - right?
Now
for the good news about grants…and
there is some very, very good news indeed:
Every
year in the United States alone, $360
Billion is available in grant funding
for individuals, businesses, and non-profit organizations.
This is the real thing, money that is genuinely
available from solid, dependable funding organizations.
There
are grants for college, grants to pay for medical
care and drugs, and grants to support research
and study projects. There are grants for a wide
variety of established businesses, and a more
limited number of grants to start new businesses.
There
are grants for women and for minorities, grants
to buy homes, grants to acquire and repair rental
properties, and grants to develop new products
that will help the environment. There are grants
to fund a virtually unlimited number of community
projects. If you have a project that offers some
social value, there is probably a funder who has
a grant for which you can apply.
Government
agencies, foundations, and corporations all make
grants. Almost universally, grants do not need
to be repaid, and grants are tax-free.
Are
you beginning to see the scope of this?
To
help people understand just how much potential
there is in grants, I often describe grants funding
as a "parallel economy". There is the
standard economy, where goods and services are
bought and sold, and taxes paid. Then there is
the parallel economy of grants, where gifts are
requested and received.
Not just a few gifts. Three hundred sixty billion
dollars in gifts.
So
is there a trick involved in getting grants? No.
But, as is true in any situation in life, there
is a framework within which the successful grantseeker
must operate. If you want to profit from grants,
you must put forth the time and effort to learn
how this parallel economy operates, and how to
play by its rules.
First,
grants are all about purpose. Every grant
is offered and awarded in order to accomplish
a specific purpose. Every funding agency has a
mission it wants to carry out, and grants are
given to further that mission. So if you want
to start a children's orchestra in your town,
you must find the funder who considers musical
programs for children part of its mission. If
you have invented a better trash compactor, then
you are looking for a funder with an environmental
mission.
Second,
there are a host of resources for finding
and identifying grants. You must learn about the
types of grants, who is making them, and how to
locate them. You must learn how to tailor your
project to potential funders.
Third,
there is a specific format for requesting grants,
called a grant proposal. Although there are many
different types of grants, the basic grant proposal
format can be adapted to all of them. You must
learn how to write a good proposal, and assemble
all the information a funder will want to see.
This
all sounds a bit more complicated than just buying
a book, right? So the question becomes, is it
worth the effort?
Well,
I've raised millions of dollars in grant funds
for my clients, and for myself. I bought
an apartment complex free and clear, without a
penny of my own money, with a grant. I absolutely
believe it's worth the time and effort involved.
Where else but in the parallel economy of grants,
can you ask for what you need, and receive it
as a gift?
Jillian
Coleman is a consultant to
businesses and non-profit organizations.
Her website, www.GrantMeRich.com,
is a resource site for entrepreneurs,
grant writers and consultants, and
offers online training for grantseekers
and grants consultants. |
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