Storytelling for Grantseekers: The Guide to Creative Nonprofit Fundraising
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Grantwriters, it turns out, have plenty in common with fiction and nonfiction storytellers. Like these other writers, says Cheryl A. Clarke in Storytelling for Grantseekers, grantseekers need to "transport readers to another location and teach them about people they may know nothing about." Grantwriting is often a tedious experience. Make it creative, says Clarke. To better capture the imagination (and wallet) of your audience, observe your agency in action as would a reporter, then craft what you see into a narrative as would a novelist. Your nonprofit agency is your hero; your story is about "people being helped, and their lives possibly being changed forever" because of the services provided by your agency. This is a passionate, clear, knowledgeable guidebook, sure to "put the joy and creativity back into the grantseeking process." With additional chapters on finding and cultivating appropriate grantmakers, forming a budget, and packaging your proposal. --Jane Steinberg
Review
Many books, articles, and videos about proposal writing crowd our shelves. The good ones provide grantseekers with the building blocks and, more importantly, the confidence for creating a competent proposal. The really good ones also inspire enthusiasm for what is thought by many to be a tedious, albeit necessary, chore. In Storytelling for Grantseekers Cheryl Clarke inspires.
Clarke, a fundraising consultant and trainer, is also a published short story author. She came to realize that fundraising - and specifically proposal writing - incorporate many of the techniques used in storytelling. A story sets a scene, has characters, and builds tension through a plot. A good proposal should do the same. By approaching the proposal as an opportunity to tell your nonprofit's story, the process becomes more enjoyable for the writer. Storytelling allows the passion to show through the proposal prose, making it more enjoyable for the reader and thus more likely to be funded.
Clarke elaborates on the storytelling metaphor with each chapter. In the proposal narrative you introduce the characters (the agency's clients) and the setting (the catchment area for the agency). The statement of need builds tension and adds conflict to the story. Goals and objectives can be thought of as the resolution to the need or problem described in the statement of need. Evaluation and the plan for future funding are the epilogue and seeds for a sequel, whereas the budget is the story's translation from words to numbers. Clarke uses excerpts from proposals to illustrate these ideas. She also provides summaries of key points for each chapter.
Clarke takes her own advice. I read Storytelling for Grantseekers as a story. Certainly if this technique makes a how-to volume more readable it will work for the far more compelling story that a nonprofit tells. Both new and experienced grantwriters will benefit by using the approach described here. (Jean Johnson Reference Librarian/Technology Specialist Foundation Center San Francisco, CA)
Storytelling for Grantseekers: The Guide to Creative Nonprofit Fundraising
Storytelling for Grantseekers: The Guide to Creative Nonprofit Fundraising,Cheryl A. Clarke,Jossey-Bass,0787956309,Business & Economics,Business / Economics / Finance,Business/Economics,Fund Raising And Grants (General),Fund raising,Non-Profit Organizations Management,Nonprofit Organizations & Charities,Proposal writing for grants,Business & Economics / Nonprofit Organizations & Charities,Charities & voluntary services,Consultancy & grants for businesses,Non-profitmaking organizations,Writing & editing guides
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