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    3. How to Win a Business Grant: 4 Entrepreneurs Share Their Tips»
    Entrepreneur getting grant money for his small business

    How to Win a Business Grant: 4 Entrepreneurs Share Their Tips

    Gerri Detweiler
    Starting a BusinessFinancing & Credit

    Small business grants are perhaps the most coveted of all types of small business funding. Grants don’t have to be repaid and, unlike equity funding, you don’t give up any ownership of your company. (The IRS does want its share, though, so be prepared for a tax bill.)

    How do you actually win a business grant, or at least increase your odds of getting one? Here entrepreneurs who collectively won a variety of small business grants share tips for getting one.

    1. Know your numbers

    Grant winner: Chris Ronzio, CEO and founder of Trainual, which provides online training manuals and standard operating procedures for growing businesses.

    Grant won: $150,000 from the Arizona Innovation Challenge (AIC).

    Grant used for: Marketing: Company grew its marketing team from one person to five people, increased monthly ad spend from $30,000 to $100,000 per month, and invested in sponsoring events and podcasts to drive more traffic to its website and fuel growth.

    Top tips:

    Preparing for a grant is like preparing for an investor pitch—likely even harder, because they don't have a stake in your business as the downside protection for the investment.

    • Tip #1: Land your first paying customers before applying. Judges want to see traction, and nothing proves your idea is great like revenue.
    • Tip #2: Build your story. A compelling investment has a story that people can rally behind. This story will be important for the grant judges, but even more so, it will give them confidence that you can recruit employees or raise investment as your business grows.
    • Tip #3: Understand the metrics of your business inside and out. When you compete for a grant, the committee will want to see how you'll use the money to evaluate impact. If you don't know your numbers, you can't share explicitly how the money coming in will impact the money coming out, and that could put you at a serious disadvantage.

    2. Follow directions

    Grant winner: Romy Taormina, CEO & founder of Psi Health Solutions, Inc., the maker of Psi Bands, a clinically-proven, patented medical device for the relief of nausea sold internationally.

    Grants won: $15,000 from Huggies MomInspired Grant and two $3,000 State Trade Expansion Program (STEP) grants.

    Grants used for: Huggies MomInspired Grant allowed Taormina to move out of her home office; STEP grant allowed her to offset the cost of attending international trade shows.

    Top tips:

    • Tip #1: Put yourself “out there.” You have to apply (make the “ask”) to be considered. If you don’t ask, the answer is already “no.”
    • Tip #2: Be articulate, specific, and concise in the grant request. Use proper grammar, spelling and pay attention to formatting.
    • Tip #3: Follow directions. Seems like such a basic tip, and yet people do not follow directions. If it asks for X, provide X. Don’t give Y & Z. Example: if word count is a criteria, stick to the word count. Don’t eliminate yourself from the pool because you didn’t follow directions.

    3. Get help writing your grant

    Businessman writing many drafts of a grant

    Grant winner: Brady Granier, CEO of BioCorRx, Inc. (OTC: BICX), an addiction solutions company located in Southern California that has developed a medication-assisted therapy that combines proprietary behavioral therapy and a sustained-release naltrexone abdominal pellet to help those struggling with both alcohol and opioid use disorders.

    Grant won: Nearly $5.7 million from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

    Grant used for: Development of the company's naltrexone implant, BICX102, for opioid use disorder, and to achieve FDA approval.

    Top tips:

    • Tip #1: Do your research and see what options are out there to broaden your reach and choose grants that are best for your needs. There is a ton of information online on government websites like grants.gov.
    • Tip #2: Be thorough and patient in your application, and hire an experienced grant writer. Ours helped us win our first grant on the first try.
    • Tip #3: Be reasonable in the amount you are asking for. They may choose to award you more in the future but may deny you now if you ask for more than they feel they want to give.

    4. Make time to apply

    Grant winners: Jaron and Maggie Clayton, founders of Running Dogs Brewery, a brewery and community events space in St. Helen’s, Oregon.

    Grant won: $10,000 Nav's Small Business Grant

    Grant used for: Expansion of their space to accommodate more guests and events.

    Top tips:

    • Tip #1: (Jaron) Take the time to find grants and don't miss the opportunity to apply. The one you pass up may have given you the extra funds you needed. We almost passed up on the opportunity to apply for the Nav grant because of how busy we were. We found it with only a few days left to apply.
    • Tip #2: (Maggie) Don’t worry too much that the grant is a perfect fit. Nobody who had a brick-and-mortar business had won (the Nav grant) and we weren’t sure if it applied to our business. SHEDCO (a grant for which we were a finalist but didn’t win) was more for startups and we still applied. My advice would be don’t let those guidelines restrain you from applying. You just never know.
    • Tip #3: (Both) Don’t just focus on one grant at a time. We’re reaching out to economic development groups and searching online for other grants.

    RELATED: 5 Small Business Grants for Women Entrepreneurs

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    Profile: Gerri Detweiler

    Credit and financing expert Gerri Detweiler has answered more than 10,000 credit and financing questions online and has been interviewed for more than 4,000 news stories. She is the author or coauthor of five books, including Finance Your Own Business: Get on the Financing Fast Track with attorney Garrett Sutton. Her articles have been widely syndicated and she has testified before Congress about credit legislation.

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