Grant Writing For Beginners Columbus OH

Those who are new to the grant writing process, whether for business or non-profit, are often intimidated by the hard work required for a grant application. Here are some helpful hints to get you started.

Local Companies

Comdoc Inc
614-889-6145
330 W Spring St
Columbus, OH
Datalink Transcriptions LLC
614-481-7666
1372 Grandview Ave
Columbus, OH
Central Ohio Copier Supply
614-258-8181
2700 E 6th Ave
Columbus, OH
Dominican Learning Center
614-444-7330
1111 Stewart Ave
Columbus, OH
Accumed Script
614-459-8335
1601 Bethel RD
Columbus, OH
CRI Digital
614-268-1100
4324 N High St
Columbus, OH
Blue Technologies
614-575-1999
250 S Hamilton Road
Columbus, OH
Eskribe Inc
614-212-5064
3592 Corporate DR
Columbus, OH
Capitol Copy
614-846-1510
2278 W Dublin Granville RD
Columbus, OH
Document Solutions
614-846-2400
100 E Campus View Blvd
Columbus, OH

Beginners to the granting process, whether for business or non-profit, are often intimidated by the hard work that it takes to write a grant application. It is hard work and it should be. No grantor wants their money wasted on a project that has poor planning and little or no effort invested into it by a grant seeker. The key to the granting process is getting organized and stop procrastinating. Here are some helpful hints to get you started.



Everyday you should be writing down your ideas and thoughts about your project. Saving them on a computer to a word file is preferable so you may edit, spell check, cut and paste, and reorganize them without having to continually retype.



You should seek out and solicit the advice of a successful businessman or community leader whose judgment you respect. Find someone who is able to devote a few free hours a week to give you the advice and help you need with the basic fundamentals of developing a professional business plan.



Grantors already know the type of project you are contemplating. Researching the feasibilities of the success of your project and conveying that to the grantors is your responsibility. The time you spend working on your project and the information you acquire is an asset to you personally because knowledge and information is a powerful tool in business or non-profit grant seeking.



Whether you have a finished plan or not the time to start your grant seeking process is now. You can always work on your plan as you go. Imagine investing 6 months of your time into a project and have everything ready to go except for your grant application and then you find out that you missed the closing date of an eligible grant for your project by a couple of days. Just because you wanted everything to be perfect, now would have to wait an entire year for that particular grant application to reopen.

Notice that the letters of each hint do not spell out some cute acronym. Memorizing a list of steps just to complete a program that may or may not assist you in your goal is counterproductive. Always strive to achieve your grant through perseverance and patience. Nothing substantial is ever achieved overnight or through just plain dumb luck.

For a list of grant programs that I have personally researched that will assist you in achieving your goal, please visit http://www.grantsformoney.com

About the Author:

Kevin J. Riley is a business and grant consultant with over 20 years business experience and the host of http://www.grantsformoney.com






Article Source:

thePhantomWriters Article Submission Service

Featured Local Company

Comdoc Inc

614-889-6145
330 W Spring St
Columbus, OH