Monday, 28 March 2022

PROPOSAL WRITING COMPONENTS - HOW TO WRITE "PERSONNEL” SECTION

The personnel section of a proposal should show that the persons who will be assigned or hired to implement project activities have the skills and experience necessary for a successful program. 

The proposal should summarize the project manager’s qualifications for leadership, focusing on experiences and skills pertinent to the project. 

It should cite other projects the project manager has operated successfully, and any specific training he or she has had that is relevant to the project’s goals. 

The proposal also should profile other project staff members, offering brief sketches of their relevant experience. 

These profiles should be shorter than that of the project manager and should highlight only the education and experience that qualifies each candidate. 

If staff have not been designated, the proposal should describe the process for hiring per- sonnel. 

The goal is to convince the reader that the project will recruit and hire highly qualified persons to staff the project. 

Therefore, the proposal should: 

1. Briefly describe positions, including job qualifications, roles and responsibilities, and the education level required (i.e., high school, college, graduate level). Full job descriptions can be placed in the appendix. 

2. Outline plans for advertising positions.The outline should specify publications, letters, and other postings for the jobs. 

3. If applicable, identify two or three recruitment strategies such as interagency advertisements, conferences, or personnel recruiters.

4. Identify the team that will conduct interviews.The interview team should be composed of individuals with expertise in the area addressed by the project.

5. Explain how the final hiring decision will be made and by whom. 



Monday, 21 March 2022

PROPOSAL WRITING COMPONENTS - HOW TO WRITE "ACTIVITIES” SECTION

The activity section in the proposal is the methodology section that explains how the project will reach its objectives. 

The description of activities should focus on the aspects of the project that will resolve or prevent the problems identified in the need statement by obtaining the results promised in the objectives

Activities necessary to the success of the project (success being the ability to reach all of the objectives) should be fully described in the proposal. 

The funder wants to know exactly how objectives will be met, so give exact descriptions. Be specific and give enough detail to justify each activity. 


You can break the activities down into the following elements. 

a) Program Description 

This is the explanation of what the project will do and should describe and justify the approach to be used to attack the problem. 

Cite any relevant research on the approach and discuss other situations in which it has worked. Convince the funder of the validity of your methods. 

The program description should also identify the human resources used in the project and explain the importance of each staff position to its success. 

In this section, justify each personnel position that will show up in the budget of the proposal, showing how that staff member will help the project meet its objectives. This is critical. If there is no relation (or only peripheral relation) between the position and project success, delete it from the proposal. 

b) Management Plan 

The proposal should explain how the project will be managed, including outlining the project director’s role. 

It should show what authority the director will have, what staff members he or she will supervise, and who will supervise the director. 

The management plan should also include a timeline for implementing the project. 

The timeline should identify major milestones, target dates for meeting milestones, and the person or persons responsible for ensuring that milestones are met. 

Construct a simple table which lists the project’s major milestones in chronological order. Complete the timeline with target dates for reaching each milestone and information on staff members responsible for each task. 

When the grant is received, this table can be converted into a simple checklist that can be a valuable tool in monitoring project performance. 

As with all charts, the proposal should include narrative explanations for readers who do not know how to interpret charts or do not like them. 

c) Use of Resources 

The activities section of the proposal also should give a clear idea of what nonpersonnel resources are necessary and how the project will use them. 

A useful rule of thumb is that any item noted in the proposal budget should be described in this section. 

The description should focus on the resource’s relevance to achieving project goals. 

Items that cannot be shown as important to the success of the project should not appear in the proposal. 

d) Training 

Often, implementing a project requires new techniques, procedures, equipment, and protocols in which project and nonproject staff need training. 

The proposal should detail any training necessary for the implementation of the project. 

This description should include: 

Who will conduct the training; 

The content of the training; 

Who will be trained; 

The cost of training; and 

The training schedule. 

e) Facilities 

The activities section should include a description of the facilities the project will use, including any changes or modifications needed. 

If new facilities must be rented or purchased, they should be described and justified. 




Monday, 14 March 2022

10 MOST COMMON GRANT WRITING MISTAKES

 https://www.grantadviser.com/10-most-common-grant-writing-mistak




PROPOSAL CONTENT EXPLAINED (PHASE ONE)

NEED STATEMENT 

The need statement is the most important part of any proposal. Unfortunately, it is also often the most poorly written section. 

The need statement has two purposes:

1. To explain how your needs meet the funder’s interests and priorities; and 

2. To establish the specific problem the proposed project will address. 

Base your need statement on the funder’s RFP or guidelines, establishing your eligibility to apply and identifying which of the funder’s interests you are attempting to address. 

OBJECTIVES 

Objectives are simply the intent of the project. They indicate what the project will achieve and the time it will need to reach its goals. 

Objectives should be concise, specific, measurable, and relate directly to the need. In fact, the objectives should be an extension of the need statement. In the need statement, we described the current situation. Now, in the objectives statement, we must describe what the situation will be after we implement our project. 

The whole point of setting objectives is to show the funder—whose purpose in awarding grants is to help resolve problems—how the project will meet your particular needs and improve your situation if you have the funds to carry it out. 

Next, we'll discuss ACTIVITIES as a content in the Proposal.




FAIL FAIRE: THE MISTAKES PEOPLE MAKE - SERIES 1 ~ EP.4: DON’T BE OBSTINATE, PIVOT!

“Blind stubbornness, in the face of impossibility, is not persistence, it is simply dumb” ~ Anonymous.  In just six months, my business was ...