6 Top Tips When Funders Aren’t Accepting Applications
Candid’s vice president of Influence, Aleda Gagarin, shares her development expertise to answer the burning question every fundraiser asks themselves: Does the grantmaker accept applications and should I even consider this funder if they don’t? What do I do when funders aren’t accepting applications?
“Do they, or don’t they?” It’s a tempting question to start with when doing grant prospect research, centering on whether or not grantmakers accept unsolicited proposals. It seems like an easy non-starter to help you filter out prospects, but in reality, the question of whether to consider funders not accepting unsolicited proposals is a bit of a catch-22.
On the one hand, it’s not likely that a cold proposal to a grantmaker that doesn’t accept them will get anywhere; on the other, imagine how many proposals grantmakers that do accept unsolicited proposals have to sift through. The likelihood of yours rising to the top suddenly doesn’t seem much better.
Consider prospects even when funders aren’t accepting applications
There’s a better way to prospect, and it requires longer-term vision and relationship cultivation. It requires a deeper dive into the grants a grantmaker is making, and centers around a deep knowledge and belief in your own work and mission.
Ideally, your prospect research will help you narrow down a list of foundations with giving that reflects your cause, your locale, the population you serve, and your mission. From there, you further narrow down the list by selecting foundations who historically giving grants similar in size and scope to what you are looking for.
Do not disregard prospects that fit your work and mission in every way just because they do not accept unsolicited proposals.
In development, it is our goal in life to get on the radar of funders that we believe would make meaningful long-term partners in supporting our work financially, helping us develop organizationally, and increasing our ability to serve. The “accepting proposals ” question has nothing to do with how well a funder fits with our work. In such cases, we must find other ways to bring our work to their attention; to help them see us a good partner in helping them achieve their own missions. So, how do we get our work in front of them, without being disregarded with a cold proposal?
Here are a few places to start:
- Make sure program officers we want to partner with are on newsletters about our work, so that they can begin to see and understand our work in real-time, and so that we remain on their radar.
- Network! Make in-person connections at events. Ask questions about other people ‘s work, and be excited about your own. An event is rarely the best time to ask to apply for a grant, but it ‘s a great way to start building a relationship that could turn into solid, long-term support.
- Connect the dots. Research who works where and who you know, and ask someone in your circle to make a warm introduction for you. If you’re an Foundation Directory user, take advantage of FDO’s LinkedIn feature to learn more about key staffers and leverage your connections for the introductions you need.
- Send your prospect news coverage or other interesting materials that cover the work you do that also aligns with theirs.
- Be savvy on social media. Connect with them online. Share good content, and ask good questions. This will also help you better understand funders’ changing interests!
- Invite them for an onsite visit! Ask them to come tour your office, see your work, come to an event. Let them see the value of your work with their own eyes whenever possible.
You also never know when a funder might start accepting applications, so approaching funders that are a good fit can give you an advantage in the future. (Philanthropy News Digest lets you know in real-time when RFPs are available.) Get to know funders and inspire them to get to know you, so that when the time is right, you’ll be top of mind to receive an invitation to apply. It seems easy to send off cold proposals to whomever will accept them; but it rarely ever pays off. Build yourself a thorough and thoughtfully researched prospect list, and then consider your best approach. Think outside the box.
Prioritize building relationships with funders who you truly believe would make excellent partners and who will both value and improve your work. Don’t stretch your work or water it down into something it isn’t just to fit criteria of a funder who is easy to apply to; believe in your work and focus your development work on finding funders whose missions truly align with yours.
Kate, Digital Communications Manager, Candid says:
Hi Nathan,
Here are some resources that can help you potentially score that first grant:
"-What is the percentage of grant proposals that foundations actually fund?
https://learning.candid.org/resources/knowledge-base/percentage-of-funded-grant-proposals/
-How do I approach a foundation and build a successful grantee-funder relationship?
https://learning.candid.org/resources/knowledge-base/approaching-foundations/
-Why you should consider and approach funders who don't accept unsolicited applications, https://help.candid.org/s/article/applications-not-accepted"
Feel free to reach out to our Online Librarian team via learning.candid.org if you have further questions!
Nathan Medina says:
In my 20 years of direct experience in working with foundations, I have had a 0% success rate of getting grants from foundations that don't accept unsolicited requests. I have tried probably hundreds of times to get through but it hasn't happened. The only success with them is if they contact me or if I can somehow develop a connection with them, which is possible but extremely difficult.
Phoebe Bayot says:
Interesting! This is one great way to understand essential idea especially when one planning on scaling up their work.
Thank you for this.
himanshu says:
excellent acknowledgement.