Some points to consider for your organization's ROI
I was asked this frank, yet wonderfully complex question by a colleague the other day. The organization they work for has a strong grant seeking revenue line item comprised of foundations and the occasional state grant. The organization was recently considering applying for its first federal grant and was wondering what type of award size was “worth” the heavy lift of the application requirements. Given that the average federal grant proposal takes an average of 100 hours of effort to complete and submit, this is an important question to consider before diving into an application.
Here is a scenario similar to what my colleague and I discussed:
Is a $150,000 grant award enough for the work it takes to complete a federal application?
Maybe yes.
What if the $150,000 grant award is now a three year grant period, so it is actually $50,000 a year. Is that award a big enough return on investment compared to the work it takes to complete a federal application?
Maybe yes, perhaps likely not compared to the first scenario.
Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on your perspective, there is no specific formula to apply that will help your organization decide if a potential federal grant award is “big enough” to be a strong return on your investment (ROI) of the time and effort it takes to write a competitive application and the capacity required to successfully manage the funding.
We are left then as grant professionals, facilitating our grant teams, trying to help our team navigate the question of “How large should a federal request be for a good ROI for *our* organization?” Here are some points to consider in that conversation:
Clearly there is a lot to factor into your decision about the ROI of a federal grant application. Just as a grantmaker has numerous factors to consider when making a grant award, you also have numerous factors to consider when making the choice about whether or not to apply for a federal grant.
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