Megan Mayzelle’s Post

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Climate & Sustainability Writer • Scientist • Business Owner

Think you might start looking for grants? Do this first: 1. capture your organizational strategy [in a recording or writing, doesn't matter] 2. articulate your theory of change 3. build a project plan 4. draft a budget If you don't have these, you don't know what grants you're looking for. You might tweak your project plan and its budget once you see the grant landscape. Grantors' interests change based on emerging research, market shifts, political priorities, and buzzwords. But your organizational strategy and theory of change shouldn't change. (Save the rare event that your initiative has an identity crisis and totally reinvents what it's about...In which case it's definitely not the right time to apply for funding.) If your org doesn't have them yet, the exercise of creating and capturing these 4 elements will do a lot more than prepare you for grant-winning. - You'll finally have your elevator pitch. - You'll know what partnerships will be most fruitful. - You'll have great copy for your website and brochure. - You'll be ready to present a pitch deck at the drop of a hat. - And your teammates will feel more aligned and motivated than ever. So take time to define who you are. And say it out loud. It's the first step to everyone else knowing what you're about.

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