Stanford Social Innovation Review

Stanford Social Innovation Review is an award-winning magazine covering best strategies for nonprofits, foundations, and socially responsible businesses. Published quarterly by the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Subscriber Login



Auto-login on future visits

Forgot your password?
Obtain a login

RSS Feed

Related Opinions

Browse by Categories

Behind the Scenes of Grantmaking

Other articles on:
Posted: January 26, 2007 08:18 PM
Author: SSIR Editor

BY PERLA NI

Ever wonder what happens to your proposal after you submit it? Read this book to find out.

Thank You for Submitting Your Proposal: A Foundation Director Reveals What Happens Next
141 pages
(Medfield: Emerson & Church, Publishers, 2006)

imageFor the first time, a foundation director has revealed the inner workings of the grantmaking process.  Candid, funny and painfully accurate at times, Thank You For Submitting Your Proposal, a new book by Martin Teitel, the executive eirector of the Cedar Tree Foundation, tells it as it is--and well, you might not like it.

First, someone low in the organization screens your proposal and probably dumps most of it directly in the trash. If you pass, a program officer reads your Letter of Inquiry and summarizes the entire thing to fit inside a tiny box on a spreadsheet.  Then, at the weekly meeting, the program officer reads out the proposal’s title; staff chirp, “Nope, not a fit”; the program officer makes a note on his spreadsheet; and “it’s over in 5 seconds.”

The job of the staff, it seems, is to sift through and select grants that are within the guidelines created by the board. Teitel describes his role as “Curmudgeon-in-Chief” and asks his staff to imagine the board voting on each grant. This activity is usually enough to stop proposals in their tracks. What nonprofits need to realize, Teitel says, turning to the other side of the equation, is that he and his staff are “functionaries carrying out the decisions of other--invisible--people,” the boards members.

Tietel does raise lack of board accountability in his book, but he doesn’t offer a solution:  “Generally speaking, board members win if there is a debate and if it’s structural there’s nothing you can do about it.” So, Teitel tells his staff to “make your case, make it well, and sit back and watch the process. It’s not yours to decide.” I finished the book and decided that despite how painful it is to be on the nonprofit side, being a foundation program officer who has to constantly defer to foundation board members is an even more painful job.

Teitel, who, before working in a foundation, was on staff at several nonprofits, provides the right amount of emotional support for fundraisers.  He reminds us, “You have a right to ask for money.  It’s not groveling for largess, but requesting a share of a publicly-supported resource.” He acknowledges that fundraising is extremely labor intensive and discouraging work: “People who do it deserve credit for trying.”

Teitel recounts one story of a fundraiser who told him that he sent out six proposals and got five back with no response.  “You need to send out 40 proposals,” replied Teitel.  “And when you get a discouraging response, you should keep doubling it and double your networking and research and editing.  Sometimes there is a person who I’d love to give a grant, but I don’t want to be their only funder.”

“If I were king of the world,” said Teitel in an interview, “I would require every foundation program officer and board member to have substantial experience working at nonprofits.  Every doctor has been a patient.  You can’t give away money without having raised money.”

His suggestion to fundraisers is also good advice: “Your morale and even sanity will be improved if you don’t expect fairness, justice or rationality--not to mention basic courtesy.” Arm yourself with this book and don’t take rejection so personally again.  I hope that Teitel, whose writing is lucid and lively, will write his next book for funders, counseling them on how to improve their grantmaking process and relationship with grantees. 

Please share your experiences below.



image

Perla Ni, founder and former publisher of the Stanford Social Innovation Review, is the founder and CEO of GreatNonprofits. She is also a co-founder of Grassroots.com.

Chat Bubble Comment

This sounds like a great read - my next step after this comment is to ask our Information Center to get a copy.  The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is experimenting with different ways to solicit good ideas and make grants—an initial foray in to this arena has been to collaborate with Changemakers to run three online, open-source competitions.  The first launched earlier in January and seeks innovative approaches to prevent and reduce intimate partner violence in the U.S.  We talk more about this on the blog run by our Pioneer Portfolio, which funds innovative ideas that may lead to future breakthroughs in health and health care (http://blogs.rwjf.org/pioneer/).  Our hope is that the Changemakers open-source model will allow us to connect with good ideas from a broader community of change leaders, and ultimately make grants in a quicker, more transparent way.  We’ll see if it works - it’s definitely a departure from our standard RFP solicitations, but we’re excited about the prospects.

We encourage the SSIR community to check out our Pioneering Ideas blog—any and all feedback and inquiries are welcome!

»» Posted by: Susan Promislo on January 31, 2007 08:26 AM

Chat Bubble Comment

Thanks Susan,

Wow, you guys are the first foundation I know of that runs its own blog.  I just checked it out.  I’m really impressed - you’ve got quite a few of your program officers participating and you’ve got some guest bloggers.  I hope that you’ll do what SSIR does with this blog - which is to market it by also pushing the blog out in its email newsletters. 

Hey, do you know of any other foundations out there that are putting themselves out there with a blog and willing to engage in a conversation with the world out there?  I think it’s a fantastic step in the right direction for foundations for those reasons you gave. 

Cheers,
Perla

»» Posted by: Perla Ni on February 2, 2007 12:52 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

Hi Perla—thanks so much for the enthusiastic reaction!  It’s been a great experiment with the blog thus far.  We just hope we can inspire more dialogue with outside audiences so that we’re not just blogging
amongst ourselves.  Ideally, we’d love it to be a mechanism that
engenders possible funding ideas, greater transparency, provocative ideas and challenges to our approaches and to things going on in the field, etc. 

In our research in launching Pioneering Ideas, I pulled together a list of foundations (and related philanthropic resources) that blog - it’s still fairly current.  One of the bolder ones I’ve seen is the Meyer Memorial Trust...they’ve really opened up their work for grantees and outside stakeholders to comment on, and they seem to be getting a good amount of feedback, both positive and constructively critical.  A personal favorite is Lucy Bernholz’s blog on the future of philanthropy as well.

Skoll Foundation—runs Social Edge on social entrepreneurship
(http://www.socialedge.com)
Grand Rapids Community Foundation—President Diana Sieger writes President’s POV (http://www.grfoundation.org/blog/)
Meyer Memorial Trust—runs institutional blog
(http://www.mmt.org/weblog/)
The Vermont Community Foundation—“From Transactional to Transformational Philanthropy: Exploring a New CF Business Model” - blog to invite reactions to their new 5% for Vermont model
(http://thevermontexperiment.blogspot.com/)
Acumen Fund - runs http://www.acumenfundblog.org/ . Emerging Practitioners in Philanthropy—runs Epiphanies blog
(http://epip.blogspot.com/)
Pew Partnership for Civic Change—director Suzanne Morse writes blog “Smart Communities” (http://smartcommunities.typepad.com/)
Jesse Rasch—a blog on venture philanthropy, entrepreneurship, and angel investing (http://www.jesserasch.com/jesse_rasch/)
Lucy Bernholz—Philanthropy 2173: Provocations on the Future of Philanthropy (http://philanthropy.blogspot.com/)
Albert Ruesga, VP, Meyer Foundation, runs White Courtesy Telephone, an online forum about philanthropy
(http://postcards.typepad.com/white_telephone/)

--Susan Promislo

»» Posted by: SSIR on February 6, 2007 06:24 PM

Chat Bubble Comment

Wow, thanks for that, Susan!

Foundations - please blog!  Most foundations would say that they believe in knowledge building and sharing, engaging in dialogue with their communities, and convening conversations among stakeholders.  And now the read/write web gives them the opportunity to do all that easily.  Kudos to all those on Susan’s list for taking the first steps!

Perla

»» Posted by: perlani on February 14, 2007 01:12 AM

Chat Bubble Post a Comment

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Please enter the word you see in the image below: