Grow Grants!
Free Grantwriting Resources
Here are some no-cost resources to help you find funders and write great grants.
Learn online and on your schedule.
- Our learning modules include free, streamable content that you can access whenever you want.
Use templates to create compelling language for your proposals.
- Use our online templates, including a Master Proposal Template and Program Budget to articulate your impact.
Talk with leaders and peers in your field.
- Regional Community Foundation – Ask for an informational meeting with the grantmaking program officer at your local community foundation (here’s a map to find yours) to discuss how you might build grants capacity (and also to let their donors know about your work: sometimes they have a form to fill out). Be sure to look at their website first, to make sure they fund your type of work. Use this resource wisely.
- Follow the leaders – Get to know the program officers at foundations that are a good fit with your mission and see what topics they cover. Add a comment to one of their articles!
- Look for issue-focused networks – A quick Google search will help you find professional networks in your issue area. Attend a meeting to connect with and learn from your peers.
- Join fundraising networks – Development Executives Roundtable is a great regional network. Association of Fundraising Professionals is national. Grant Professionals Association has a specialized focus. All have affordable online learning, membership, events, and the chance to get to know others working at nonprofits. Fundraising can feel lonely, but you’re not alone!
- Use LinkedIn to connect with colleagues and potential funders – Be respectful, honest and always “add a note” to your request to connect so they have some context. Remember that old adage: When you ask for money, you get advice; when you ask for advice, you get money. So ask for advice!
Recruit a volunteer grantwriter.
Grantwriting is a virtual opportunity where you can attract talent beyond your local area. Here’s how:
- Create a sentence or two “job description.” What kind of help do you need? You can cut-and-paste from another nonprofit’s listing for a grantwriter on one of the sites listed in Step 3 below. Include a link to…
- Gather replies online. Direct interested volunteers to a (free) Google form that you create to get additional info (name and contact info, why they’re interested, availability, projects where they’ve written grants; you can even have them upload a work sample or send an automated reply). Then you’re not bombarded by emails or calls. Better yet, have a board member check responses and follow up. Include a link to this form wherever you post the job description. (See Step 3.)
- Post the volunteer job listing on volunteer sites. Catch-a-Fire* and Volunteer Match are national listings, and Volunteer Now is a regional example (northern California). *Ask the local community foundation if they will pay for your nonprofit’s Catch-a-Fire registration fee; they often do!
- (Optional) Add the volunteer job to your website. Consider cutting and pasting that job listing into a page on your website, so you can link to the volunteer “job” listing anytime you want to share it.
- Promote in your social media. Send a simple eNews to your list, post on Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram. You can add an eye-catching free graphic from Canva, Unsplash, Pixabay or MyStock. (Include that link to the application form you created in Step 2.)
- Review, interview, select, start and train! You will need to spend some time here to get the right person and get them up to speed. Have a shared folder with any information they’ll need to learn about your work or see past proposals you’ve written. This can be a very rewarding role for a volunteer, if given proper guidance and direction.
Can you promote from within? Is there a part-time or administrative staff member who could learn grantwriting. Use our resource! A newsletter editor or staff member with excellent communication and project management skills can be a great grantwriter.