The Coca-Cola Company and the Coca-Cola Foundation have an online application for requests
GRANTS and CONTESTS
National Endowment for the Humanities Challenge Grant
Grants may be used to establish or enhance endowments or spend-down funds that generate expendable earnings to support ongoing program activities. Funds may also be used for one-time capital expenditures that bring long-term benefits to the institution and to the humanities more broadly. Grant recipients must raise, from nonfederal donors, three times the amount of federal funds offered.
AWARD: have ranged from $30,000-$1million but probably will not fund over $500,000
DEADLINE: May 5, 2010
MORE INFO
Save America’s Treasures Grant
Funds preservation and/or conservation work on nationally significant intellectual and cultural artifacts and nationally significant historic structures and sites
AWARD: 25,000 to 700,000
DEADLINE: May 21, 2010
MORE INFO
The Community Center and Library Association in Pittsburgh received a grant of $100,000 from the Hearst Foundation in 2009 to create the William Randolph Hearst Group Study Room.
Check out possibilities at the Hearst Foundations site. They accept applications on a rolling basis.
PRODUCT FUNDRAISINGYes, we have no bananas…..
Here is a site offering products to sell if you have the time or space! They also offer fundraising ideas:
http://www.easy-fundraising-ideas.com/
Cashing it in!
UBI
With all the money rolling in from sales, you may want to read this about unrelated business income:
http://www.nonprofitexpert.com/income.htm (remember that you may want to consult an attorney for tax related questions).
I was not sure where to put this small list of grocers and related retailers below who may offer donations to your organization or have fundraising opportunities where you both benefit. Some offer outright donations and others may make you work for it! Check these below and let me know if you hear of any others or if any of these change—thanks!
Bi-Lo
Giant “Cash for Causes” fundraiser (Their site says that 100 families spending $100/week will earn $26,000)
Karns
Save-a-Lot
Sheetz fundraiser scrip sponsor
Wal-Mart
Wegman’s
Weis
National Endowment for the Humanities Challenge Grants
NEH challenge grants may be used to establish/enhance endowments or spend-down funds (that is, funds that are invested, with both the income and the principal being expended over a defined period of years) that generate expendable earnings to support ongoing program activities. Funds may also be used for one-time capital expenditures (such as construction and renovation, purchase of equipment, and acquisitions) that bring long-term benefits to the institution and to the humanities more broadly. Because of the matching requirement, these NEH grants also strengthen the humanities by encouraging nonfederal sources of support.
Applications from small and mid-sized institutions are welcome.
AMOUNT: up to $1 million but usually not more than $500,000
DEADLINE: May 5, 2010
MORE INFO: http://www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/challenge.html
These are some BASICS which may be worth remembering ………….
Everyone’s time is valuable—yours included. Why waste time on an application that is not competitive with others? Planning is always wise. With a grant you need to know what you need or want and your current resources, if any. You also need to locate funders, learn application deadlines, gather materials and much more!
Don’t make the mistake of applying for a grant at the last minute.
One way to help with planning in fundraising is to keep a FUNDING CALENDAR. Whether or not you intermingle it with your personal planner (or put it on your iphone), you may find a tickler type calendar system is helpful.
Start with the basics in your funding calendar and fill in your calendar with deadline dates for the various work stages. Selecting work dates is a process of moving backwards from deadlines. Use pencil since changes do happen! You may also find that you develop your own shorthand for calendar entries. (My own calendar entries are more cryptic-and messy–than in examples shown below!).
Provide time in your schedule to work on the items in your calendar.
Schedule and honor the work on your calendar (an appointment with yourself) as you would an appointment with a person!
A Municipal Calendar Example
Grants and the Calendar
The various stages of grant writing can also be entered in your calendar but grants may not be as predictable. It may be that you only hear of a grant after reading about another library’s successful application. Or, perhaps your search of a funding database shows that you just missed a generous foundation’s deadline. Don’t forget about that grant! Many grants are offered every year, with only slight changes.
If the grant application was due March 1 in 2010, check back at that foundation’s site three months prior to March 1, 2011!
December 1, 2010 calendar entry shows: chk www.librarybillions.com for grant?
If your search finds that the grant is again offered, look at the deadline and select work dates by moving back from the deadline.
Be aware that awarded grants also expect you to follow a timeline. Use the tickler calendar system so you can keep in compliance with their deadlines. An added benefit is less stress (and no terse phone calls asking for that late Quarterly report!)
Here are some grants you may want to put on a calendar!
1675 Foundation
Available to Chester and Philadelphia Counties for capital campaigns, general operating support, endowment and special projects. (Other locations may be invited by a foundation trustee)
AMOUNT: $2,000 to $50,000
DEADLINE: October 1 and March 1 (mark your fundraising calendar)
MORE INFO
Howard Heinz Endowments
Mainly gives in southwest PA but has also given throughout PA. Check out past 2008 grants for examples.
DEADLINE: August 1 and February 1 (mark that calendar!)
MORE INFO
ARTICLES/BOOKS TO READ
“2009: The Year in Review,” Philanthropy News Digest. December 30, 2009 http://foundationcenter.org/pnd/specialissues/item.jhtml?id=277600016 (January 4, 2010).
“Place Your Bets: How to Get and Preserve Government Funding in Tough Economic Times,” GuideStar, January 2010 http://www2.guidestar.org/rxa/news/articles/2010/place-your-bets-how-to-get-and-preserve-government-funding-in-tough-economic-times.aspx?source=jan10nwsltr (January 7, 2010)
FORUMS/TRAINING
February 9–10, 2010 Technology Essentials 2010: WebJunction Online Conference
WebJunction is hosting a free two-day online conference. The theme is Technology Essentials ands includes staff training, marketing, outreach, funding, advocacy, services and programming, technology planning, virtual libraries and the library’s web presence.
COST: Free
Register at: http://evanced.info/webjunction/evanced/eventsignup.asp?ID=1633
FOUNDATIONS AND ENDOWMENTS
Locate foundations by name or location through the Foundation Center’s wesite at: http://www.foundationcenter.org/findfunders/foundfinder
GRANTS and CONTESTS
The 21st Century Community Learning Center program (CCLC) program
provides federal funding for the establishment of community learning centers that provide academic, artistic and cultural enrichment opportunities for children, particularly students who attend high-poverty and low- performing schools, to meet state and local standards in core academic subjects; offers students a broad array of activities that can complement their regular academic programs and to offer literacy and other educational services to the families of participating children. Grantees and all sites must provide academic enrichment activities to students attending high-poverty schools to help them meet state and local standards in core content areas, such as reading, math and science. Any private or public organization may apply if it proposes to serve students who primarily attend schools eligible for school wide programs or schools that serve a high percentage of students [at least 40 percent] from low-income families and the families of students described in Item 1 above
AMOUNT: 50,000 to 500,000
DEADLINE: February 8, 2010
ARTICLES/BOOKS TO READ
Preston, Caroline. “Five Trends Help to Create “Nonprofits of the Future,” Chronicles of Philanthropy. November 9, 2009. http://philanthropy.com/news/updates/index.php?id=10105
Cohen, Rick. “Amaze your Friends with these Nonprofit factoids,” Blue Avocado http://www.blueavocado.org/node/460 (November 4, 2009)
Anderson, Katya. “Four Essential Tweaks to Your Appeal in a Recession,” Katya’s Non-Profit Marketing Blog October 26, 2009 http://www.nonprofitmarketingblog.com/site/four_essential_tweaks_to_your_appeals_in_a_recession/
ENDOWMENTS and FOUNDATIONS
Martignetti, Tony “Get Going On Planned Giving” Guidestar November 2009
http://www2.guidestar.org/rxa/news/articles/2009/get-going-on-planned-giving.aspx?source=nov09nwsltr
FORUMS/TRAINING
December 8th
“Is Your Story Big Enough? Uncover the emotional spark that turns current and potential supporters into true believers”
Register for any of the free Nonprofit 911 training series provided by Network for Good at http://www.fundraising123.org/training
FREE OR SOMEWHAT FREE
Free multimedia–also learn more about public domain:
Dybwab, Barabra. “Website for 26 Places to Find Free Multimedia for your Blog,” http://mashable.com/2009/08/04/free-blog-media/, Aug 24 2009
Free web services through Grassroots.org and Taprootfoundation.org. Find out more at FundraisingIP:
http://www.fundraisingip.com/fundraising/find-free-web-services-for-your-non-profit/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+FundraisingIP+%28FundraisingIP.com+Fundraising+Ideas%
GRANTS and CONTESTS
Chase Community Giving
Can you muster your patrons to vote for your library on Facebook? Voting deadline for round one is December 11, 2009
Amount: one hundred awards of $ 25,000, five awards of 100,000 plus a one million dollar winner!
More Info: http://apps.facebook.com/chasecommunitygiving/
Grant Writing
“What Tone Should I Set in Our Grant Proposal?” Seeking Grant Money Today . November 8, 2009. http://thegrantplant.blogspot.com/2009/11/what-tone-should-i-set-in-our-grant.html (November 16 2009) Explore this site for other grant tips
Outback Steakhouse
The restaurant helps out community organizations with food and volunteers. One library sold tickets to a dinner at Outback and all proceeds were kept by the library. Outback had supplied the food and volunteer servers! Get your proposal ready!
More Info: http://www.outback.com/companyinfo/outbackgivesback.aspx
National Museum of the American Indian
Exhibitions and Publications program awards grants of $7,500 to $15,000 to support exhibitions and installations, publications, and critical writing that interpret and present the work of contemporary Native visual artists to the public and encourage dialogue and critical commentary
More Info: http://www.americanindian.si.edu/icap/
The IRS
Do you ever solicit to out of state donors? Should you be registered? http://www.onphilanthropy.com/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=7893
MISCELLANEOUS
Combined Federal Campaign (the Federal government’s workplace giving campaign and the world’s largest source of unrestricted funds for non-profits) Are you listed?
Find the non-profit financial statistics you need at http://nccsdataweb.urban.org/NCCS/V1Pub/index.php