From the Book - Regular Print - Sixth edition.
List of exhibits, figures, and tables
Part 1: Getting Ready To Seek Grant Support For Your Organization
1: Motivating yourself to follow a proactive, success-based grants system
2: Searching the literature to document your project's statement of need: creating an urgent and compelling case
3: Developing a proactive grants system: finding the time to organize for grants success
4: Grant-winning approach: expanding your possible solutions
5: Developing key search terms to identify the best grantor(s): redefining your project and improving your research/grants profile to get the right hits
6: Why grant funds to you and your organization? capitalizing on your capabilities
7: Creating grant-winning teams and consortia: involving volunteers through advisory committees and advocacy groups
8: Selecting the right marketplace for your project
9: Documenting organizational support for your proposal: preproposal summary and approval
Part 2: Public/Government Funding Opportunities
10: Understanding the government grants marketplace
11: Researching the government marketplace
12: How to contact government grant sources
13: Planning the successful federal proposal
14: Improving your federal proposal: the grants quality circle
15: Submission: what to do and what not to do
16: Federal grant requirements
17: Dealing with the decision of public funding sources
18: Follow-up with government funding sources
Part 3: Private/Foundation Funding Opportunities
19: Understanding the private foundation marketplace
20: Researching potential private foundation grantors: how to find the foundation that is best suited to fund your project
21: Contacting a private foundation before submission
22: Applying for private foundation funds: letter of inquiry-letter proposal
23: Proposal submission, the decision, and follow-up: private foundation funding sources
Part 4: Private/Corporate Funding Opportunities
24: Understanding the corporate marketplace
25: Researching potential corporate grantors: how to find the corporate funding source that is best suited to fund your project
26: Contacting a corporate grantor before submission
27: Applying for corporate funds
28: Proposal submission, the decision, and follow-up: corporate grantors
David G Bauer Associates, Inc ordering information