Silver refers to these details as "boilerplate items," and he recommended all nonprofits develop hard-copy and electronic versions of them so they can be easily inserted into your grant proposal. There are a number of things that can be on your boilerplate list, but Silver narrowed it down to 10 items he deemed most important:
- Documentation of agency legal status;
- Agency mission, vision, and values;
- Description of services, programs, staffing, fees, eligibility, or admissions criteria;
- Descriptive information on your geographic service area and target population (including state, regional, and national comparisons);
- What makes your agency special (examples include unique mission, quality, and cost metrics);
- Volunteers: Numbers, roles, hours, and the aggregate annual economic value of the time they contribute;
- Key management and staff;
- Summary statistics/utilization data; and,
- Key performance indicators and trends (cost per client or per encounter, number of clients served per year, comparison to industry standards).
No comments:
Post a Comment