Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com
 

Playing the grants game: experts tell about money for the asking.

By Kilcup, Jodi
Publication: Alaska Business Monthly
Date: Thursday, October 1 1992

Anyone who has applied for a loan knows it's not easy to ask for money -- even when the amount will be repaid, along with accrued interest. The rigors of that soul-bearing process may explain why many grant administrators have trouble drumming up applicants. How many hoops, one wonders, will I

have to squeeze through to get someone to give me thousands of dollars?

"It's unbelievable," says Mike Sims, Director of Business Development for the non-profit Kenai Peninsula Borough Economic Development District, Inc. (EDD). "There are millions and millions of dollars people never ask for. They don't realize money isn't that hard to get if you know how to ask for it. First," he explains, "you've got to have a good premise, a sound need. And second, you have to know where to go to get the money."

Grant writers agree that there are three arenas to explore for grant opportunities. Currently, federal agencies and private foundations offer the most potential. In state government programs, the third arena, many grant budgets have been pared to the bone. Like most recession-hit states, Alaska can no longer match the largesse of past years' grant programs. Even so, the state continues to offer important business assistance through regional economic development centers. What follows is a brief tour of grant sources and effective grant writing techniques recommended by professional fundraisers and economic development experts.

The Prime Sources

Federal grants. For listings of current federal grant opportunities, Sims refers frequently to the annual Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, and the federal newspaper, Commerce Daily.

Diedre L. Bailey, Director of Grants and Sponsored Research for Alaska Pacific University, and owner of Resource Associates, a business specializing in grant writing seminars and consulting, combs through each day's issue of the Federal Register, looking for appropriate grant opportunities. An exhaustive record of the federal government's day-to-day business, the Register also lists every grant opportunity in the federal domain, from the Department of Commerce to the National Science Foundation.

Subscribers to the Federal Register can opt either for second-class delivery ($340 a year) or first-class delivery ($1,000 a year), Bailey notes. For some grant writers, an investment in speed may be worthwhile, considering the time it takes to deliver second-class mail to Alaska. "The difference may mean gaining a couple more weeks to prepare your proposal," she says.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • National Institute of Allergy and Infectious...
  • Business Editors/Health and Medical Writers OKLAHOMA CITY--(BW HealthWire)--July 27, 2000 Awards Fund Viral Therapeutics and Diagnostics Research Initiatives ZymeTx, Inc. (Nasdaq/NM:ZMTX), The Viral Disease Management ......
  • Jack Brown An Economic Edge: this business manager...
  • With nearly a year behind him, Jack Brown, business manager for the Kenai Peninsula Borough's Community and Economic Development Division, is surrounded by projects that ......
  • Seward seeks to expand tourism, attract year-round...
  • An economic development contingent in Seward aims to boost year-round jobs in the seaside town. During summer months, though, residents thoughts typically turn to tourism....
  • Unocal plans 5-7 Kenai wells
  • Unocal Corp. is continuing its aggressive exploration program for natural gas on the Kenai Peninsula, with plans for five to seven new wells in the ......
  • Alaska: Private prison plan draws objection
  • Corrections Commissioner Margaret Pugh said a legislative proposal to allow construction of a private prison in Kenai would force the state to pay for all ......
  • Brady & Co. (Right Moves).
  • Nancy Boardman joined Brady & Co. as a senior loss control consultant and will provide loss control, risk management and safety services to the company's ......
  • 'Kenai Wild' branding program in 2nd year
  • KENAI - Cook Inlet Salmon Branding Inc. escaped the sophomore jinx in superior fashion, increasing its reach and its production significantly over firstyear numbers. The ......
  • Economic forum: Success lies in peninusla...
  • The same message was stressed over and over again April 16 at the Kenai Peninsula Economic Opportunities Forum: Home is where the money is. The ......
  • Central Peninsula Hospital returns to...
  • KENAI - Central Peninsula General Hospital Inc. is back in black, according to official reports released earlier this month. According to preliminary figures, the nonprofit ......
  • What ever happened to SARA?
  • SARA Title III is the Emergency planning and Community Right-to-Know section of the Superfund Amendment and Reauthorization Act (SARA). SARA, an Epa-generated federal standard, was ......
  • Construction, pipeline, API bills move as...
  • Several bills of interest to the state's business community were in advanced stages of consideration in the Legislature as the 2001 session entered its final ......
  • Unocal plans pipeline extension next year
  • Unocal Corp. plans to begin construction of a 14-mile extension of the Kenai-Kachemak pipeline early next summer, with plans to have the project completed by ......
  • Two Polls Show Most Alaskans Oppose Pebble Mine.
  • ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Two new public opinion polls show that Alaskans statewide, and particularly those who live in Bristol Bay and the Lake and Peninsula ......
presented by