Title: Proposal Review
1 Proposal Review Analysis A Workshop for
Better Grantmaking
Presented by Louis J. Beccaria, Ph.D. President/
CEO Phoenixville Community Health Foundation
2Guidelines You Get What You Ask For!
3Guidelines You Get What You Ask For!
Why Have Guidelines?
- Improves the foundations stewardship
- Enables more efficient proposal evaluation
- Promotes more fairness in proposal evaluation
- Allows for exceptions, when required
- Promotes grantmaking impact and effectiveness
- Protects trustee/directors and staff from
inappropriate requests - Projects an image of professionalism and
organization
4Guidelines You Get What You Ask For!
- Components For Guidelines
- Geography
- Primary area
- Secondary area
- Whats IN Whats OUT You decide
- Founding principles of your foundation
- Changing needs of the community
- Foundations asset size
- Fields of interest of the foundation
5Guidelines You Get What You Ask For!
- Components For Guidelines (cont.)
- Whats IN Whats OUT You decide
- Types of grants awarded/not entertained
- multi-year
- matching/challenges
- capital
- program specific
- general operations
- capacity building
- other
6Guidelines You Get What You Ask For!
- Components For Guidelines (cont.)
- Grantmaking Process
- frequency of distribution meetings determines
deadlines - by invitation or open-access
- letter of intent or full proposal
- common application form or not
- phone calls/office visits/site visits
- frequency of grant request submissions
- turndowns
- decision making process
- grant agreements
7Analyzing the Proposal
8Components of a Good Cover Letter
- Should be properly addressed
- Can serve as transmittal letter or proposal
summary - Summary should include brief statement of
- identifying organization and its credibility
- problem(s) to be addressed
- goal(s) and objective(s)
- program approach/length
- amount requested
- number of people served
-
9Components of a Good Cover Letter (cont.)
- Should be asking for something within the realm
of possibility from your foundation - type of grant
- size of grant
- area of interest
- Should be signed by the top authority the
Executive Director, President, or Chairman of the
Board - Should be brief (1 page)
10Components of a Good Introduction Section
- Should contain the organizations brief mission
statement - Should have a brief history of the organization
- how, why, and when it was started
- Should contain information that enhances the
organizations credibility - activities
- accomplishments
- credible people associated with the organization
- Should point out the organizations niche or
special place in the service delivery network - Should point out briefly how clients/community
benefit from the organizations work
11Components of a Good Need or Problem Statement
- Should make a connection to the previously
explained organizational history - Should define the problem locally as well as
nationally, if relevant - Should support the existence of the problem
with evidence both statistical and anecdotal - why the funds are needed
- Should note the community assets upon which
solutions to the problem(s) can be built - Should be capable of being addressed within the
resource constraints (time, money, staffing,
available expertise) of the organization and the
funder
12Components of a Good Program Goals and Objectives
Section
- Should answer the questions
- What is the solution to the problem you have
just explained (goal)? - Is the problem, as outlined, being addressed in
full? - How will we know if you have addressed the
problem (objective)? - Goals should be broad (e.g., promote physical,
emotional, social, and spiritual wholeness for
homeless families) - Objectives should be specific, measurable and
time-limited (by June 30, 2008 provide services
to 12 homeless mothers with 3 to 6
childrenincluding case management, rental
assistance and a parenting program for 12 to 18
months) - what you are going to do
- Both goals and objectives should be realistic,
attainable, and worthy of your money
13Components of a Good Strategy/Methodology
Approach Section
- Should describe the specific activities taking
place - Should give you a clear idea of how the
activities will produce the desired result - Should be specific about what staff or
volunteers are doing with clients and when - Should be realistic
- show how this approach can be less time
consuming, less costly, and more effective
14Components of a Good Strategy/Methodology
Approach Section (cont.)
- Should be within your guidelines
- Should be directly related to all aspects of
the need/problem statement - Should directly address the goals and
objectives developed in the proposal - Should be practical/reasonable/doable
- Should be based upon sound and accepted service
delivery principles or model
15Components of a Good Evaluation Section
- Assessment measures should be built into the
program at the program design stage - Evaluation measures should be directly related
to each objective noted in the proposal - Evaluation measures should be
outcome/results/product-oriented not just
process-oriented - Ideally, evaluation should address qualitative
as well as quantitative aspects of the program - General concepts being evaluated (e.g.,
self-esteem, independence, respect for authority,
cleaner environment) should be addressed via
specific social indicators of the concept - Should demonstrate some prospect for meaningful
practical impact on the problem(s) being
addressed - Should indicate how the results will be
disseminated in some way
16Components of a Good Budget Section
- Should contain two major sections
- salaries/benefits
- operating expenses
- Should be as specific as possible
- Should include any in-kind contributions
involved in the program - Should contain an allocation of expenses across
the line item - total cost
- amount requested of funder
- in-kind contributions from other sources
- amount of dollars from other sources
- in-kind contribution from requesting
organization
17Components of a Good Budget Section (cont.)
- Questions the funder should be able to answer
in the affirmative - Will this be a good social investment?
- Is there a leveraging opportunity here?
- Is a match or challenge grant appropriate for
this grant request? - Reasons for a match/challenge
requirement - broaden funding base
- encourage funding stream diversity
- encourage community support
- save fdn./corp. funding dollars
- test organizations fund development capability
- Is this a good opportunity for financial
partnership with other public or private funders?
18Components of a Good Budget Section (cont.)
- Should include a budget narrative as an
attachment to explain difficult-to-understand or
red-flag items - Should reflect reasonable costs in your market
area - Should be realistic in addressing the stated
problems and objectives - Should contain a reasonable amount (e.g.,
10-15) for administrative overhead expense
19Components of a Good Future Funding Section
- Should demonstrate some strategic and creative
thinking for the programs future financial
sustainability - Should include, if possible, mention of
self-generated income e.g., fees, special event
income, annual fund allocation - Should include, if practical, mention of
contract-related future income from public sector
or third-party groups - Should include some thought about efficiencies
that have been realized after the start-up cost
are no longer a factor
20Components of Attachments Section
21Components of Attachments Section
- Statement that the IRS public charity
tax-exemption is still in effect (IRS letter) - Should expand upon issues mentioned in other
sections (studies supporting claims made,
additional statistics, previous reports produced
by agency, critical reviews on organizations
productions, samples of publications - Should include support letters from other
agencies indicating plans to cooperate (if
applicable) - List of board of directors and their community
function
22Components of Attachments Section (cont.)
- Copy of organizational budget
- Copy of project budget (if applicable)
- Articles of incorporation and by-laws
- Copy of most recent independent audit and 990
form - List of public/private funding sources in past
fiscal year - Copy of strategic plan (if available)
- Copy of PA Charitable organizations
registration certificate (if applicable)
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25Looking at the Whole Organization
Governance
26Components of a Good Board Governance Structure
- Should demonstrate indicators of organizational
strength (choose those with which you are
comfortable) - e.g., diverse, active, structured/organized
- Diversity indicators of board strength
- age
- race
- gender
- available professional expertise
- appropriate board size
27Components of a Good Board Governance Structure
(cont.)
- Indicators of having an active board
- have standing committees
- each board person serves on at least one
committee - frequency with which board meets
- frequency with which committees meet
- support by board members
- donating money
- cultivating fundraising contacts
- providing in-kind gifts/services
28Components of a Good Board Governance Structure
(cont.)
- Indicators of having an organized board
- written mission statement
- written vision statement
- written values statement
- written conflict of interest policy
- written strategic plan for organization
- written whistle blower policy
29Looking at the Whole Organization
Fiscal Health
30Indicators of Strong Organizational Fiscal Health
Structure
- Should have diversified funding streams, e.g.,
-
federal annual giving
state endowment income
local investment income
corporate fees
foundation contracts
special events other
- Should demonstrate efficiency in the use of
financial resources (i.e., program expense ratio
percentage of 70-75 or more) - Should demonstrate a good degree of asset
liquidity - current ratio (current assets current
liabilities) ( gt/ 1) - investment ratio (long term investments total
assets) ( gt/ 25)
31Indicators of Strong Organizational Fiscal Health
Structure (cont.)
- Should demonstrate long-term financial
viability - equity ratio (net assets total assets) (
gt/ 2.0) - long-term debt ratio (long term debt total
net assets) ( lt/ 50) - fixed asset ratio (property, plant equipment
total assets) - ( lt/ 50)
- Should show indication of financial
sustainability via - operating reserve fund of at least six months
(goal) - operating surplus at year-end
- net margin ratio (net surplus total revenue)
( gt/ annual cpi) - Should demonstrate manageable debt service that
is not a financial drain on operating budget
32Indicators of Strong Organizational Fiscal Health
Structure (cont.)
- Should demonstrate an increase in net assets
from previous year - net asset growth ratio
- Should not have significant litigation as a
financial drain on the operating budget - Should have an independent audit that is recent
and clean - Should have an auditors management letter
included with audit - Should not have an inordinate amount of
financial dependence on any one funding source or
source category - overall source dependence ratio
- (largest revenue source total revenues) (
lt/ 65 of total - revenues)
33Indicators of Strong Organizational Fiscal Health
Structure (cont.)
- Ideally, should not have an inordinate reliance
on charitable giving - contributions ratio (contributions grants
total revenues) - ( lt/ 70)
- Should have reasonable expenditures for
administration - administration ratio (e.g., up to 25)
- (administrative expenses total expenses)
( lt/ 25) - Should have a reasonable amount of dollars
devoted to salaries, benefits and taxes - not too little/not too much reflect the local
non-profit market - compensation ratio (salaries, benefits taxes
total expenses) - ( lt/ 70)
34Red Flags in Financial Statements
- Decrease in annual revenue
- Rising expenses
- Operating deficit
- Cash flow problems on a regular basis
- Lack of diversity in revenue large and
dependent on one funder - Late audits no more than 6 months after the
close of the fiscal year - Recent changes in management no ED for a period
of time - Decrease client demand for services
- Gaps in financial reporting
- Unusual delays in providing requested information
35Red Flags in Financial Statements (cont.)
- Unwillingness of management to allow an
- independent review of financial data
- Inadequate information regarding financial
performance - Key ratio deterioration
- Unexplained variances from the budget
- Resignation of key staff or directors
- Low employee morale and high turnover
- Donor complaints, vendor complaints, member
complaints
36Looking at the Whole Organization
Site Visits
37Components for Conducting a Good Site Visit
- Say how much time youll have when you set up
the visit - Come prepared with questions
- Move around as you talk, see as much as
possible beyond the directors office - Check out seemingly unrelated physical
aspects - is the place clean, well lit, graffiti free?
(this indicates, attention to detail, pride in
work) - does there seem to be an underlying
organization to the physical plant? - does the space function appropriately? (this
indicates thoroughness in planning)
38Components for Conducting a Good Site Visit
(cont.)
- Check out relationships between and among staff
and clients - does the boss pass the ball and encourage staff
to speak? (this indicates appropriate delegation
of duties as well as trust) - do the staff know each other and clients? (this
indicates good morale and, probably, good working
relations) - look for body language messages
- Check out connections between what people wrote
to you in the proposal and what they say - are the staff who will carry out the work
described in the proposal familiar with it? - does the written description match what you are
seeing and hearing?
39Components for Conducting a Good Site Visit
(cont.)
- Do you detect the presence of plants, i.e.
people placed in your path specifically to say
wonderful things? - Is your visit overly scripted or under planned?
- Be prepared to give credit to the FEELING you
get on the visit. Such feelings are often more
reliable than the statistics or words in the
written materials. - At the end of the visit, after leaving,
immediately take notes. Come to a conclusion did
the visit inspire more confidence or did it
diminish confidence and raise more questions?
40Applicant Feedback Sample Report Guidelines