| Begin
with Research | Include
an Abstract | Prove
Organizational Capacity | Timing
Issues |
| Scope
of Impact | Population
Served | Seven
Suggestions |
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| Local Funders for Local Projects |
| A foundation in a small town in Oklahoma or
New Jersey with $10-million, making grants to the local hospital or library,
is often the largest frog in that pond. They'll be bigger in their impact
there than Rockefeller is in the worldwide pond. And there's more accountability
because the trustees drive past the hospital; their grandchild was born
there. They use the library. Joe Pierpont,
Association of Small Foundations |
| Broad
Impact for National Funders |
| The program needs the potential for broader
impact. If a project can work only under very specific circumstances in
a very limited area, it probably is not a prime candidate for funding.
Ideally, of course, the project would have the power to change public policy
and transform major systems. Even if it doesn't, though, it should still
have the potential to work in more than one place, for more than a few
people. Anne C. Petersen, Ph.D., Senior
Vice President for Programs, W.K. Kellogg Foundation |
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