Skills Product & Business Crafting Structured Grant Proposals

Crafting Structured Grant Proposals

v20260618
grant-proposal
This advanced skill generates complete, highly structured grant proposals and funding applications tailored to funder priorities. It moves beyond generic writing by producing detailed sections including project summary, problem statement, SMART objectives, methodology, measurable impact outcomes, and a comprehensive budget narrative. Use this when applying for research grants, charitable funding, or innovation funds to maximize your chance of securing necessary resources.
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Overview

Grant Proposal Skill

Produces structured grant proposals tailored to the funder priorities — the most common reason grants fail is writing about what you want to do rather than what the funder wants to fund.

Required Inputs

  • Funder name and grant programme
  • Grant amount sought
  • Project description (rough notes are fine)
  • Your organisation (type, track record, capacity)
  • Funder stated priorities (copy from their guidance — essential)
  • Word or page limits
  • Deadline

Output Structure


Project Title

[Informative and memorable. Should convey the problem being solved and the approach.]

1. Project Summary / Abstract (200-300 words — written last, placed first)

[What you will do, why it matters, who will benefit, measurable outcomes. Every sentence earns its place.]

2. Problem Statement / Need

  • The problem: [Specific, evidenced — use data]
  • Who is affected: [Population, scale, geography]
  • Current situation: [What exists and why it is insufficient]
  • Consequence of inaction: [What happens if not funded]
  • Why your organisation: [Track record, relationships, expertise]

Funder test: does this problem align with [funder] stated priorities? Make the connection explicit.

3. Project Objectives

3-5 SMART objectives:

  • Objective 1: [Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound]

4. Methodology / Approach

Phase 1: [Name] (Months 1-X) [What will happen, who will do it, what is produced]

Key activities:

  • [Activity — specific]

What makes this approach innovative or effective: [Why this over alternatives]

5. Impact and Outcomes

Level Description Measure
Output [Tangible deliverable] [How counted]
Short-term outcome [Immediate change] [How measured]
Medium-term outcome [Behaviour change] [How measured]
Long-term impact [Systemic change] [How evidenced]

Direct beneficiaries: [Who and how many] Sustainability: [How work continues beyond grant period]

6. Evaluation Plan

  • Who evaluates, how, when, what is measured, how findings are shared

7. Budget Narrative

Budget line Amount Justification
Staff costs £[amount] [Role, % FTE, duration, salary]
Travel £[amount] [Specific journeys named]
Equipment £[amount] [Itemised]
Indirect costs £[amount] [[X]% of direct — check policy]
Total £[total]

Value for money: [Cost per beneficiary. What could not be done without this grant]

8. Organisational Capacity

[Track record of similar projects, governance, financial management. Name previous grants and outputs — be specific]

9. Risk Register

Risk Likelihood Impact Mitigation
[Risk] H/M/L H/M/L [Specific mitigation]

Quality Checks

  • Every section explicitly references funder stated priorities (not just generic language)
  • Problem statement includes specific data, not just assertions
  • Objectives are SMART (measurable and time-bound)
  • Budget narrative justifies every line with specific detail
  • Sustainability section explains what happens after the grant ends
  • Word limits respected

Anti-Patterns

  • Do not write a generic proposal — every section must be tailored to the specific funder's stated priorities
  • Do not exceed the specified word or page limits — over-length proposals are disqualified at many funders
  • Do not leave the sustainability section vague — funders need to know what happens after grant funding ends
  • Do not use jargon the funder's reviewers won't understand — write for the panel, not the project team
  • Do not underspecify the budget narrative — every significant line item must be justified with method and reasoning

Example Trigger Phrases

  • "Write a grant proposal for [project] applying to [funder]"
  • "Help me write a funding application for [grant programme]"
  • "Turn these project notes into a grant proposal: [paste]"
Info
Name grant-proposal
Version v20260618
Size 4.34KB
Updated At 2026-06-19
Language