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Grant Seeker's Budget Toolkit (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series)
 
 
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Grant Seeker's Budget Toolkit (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series) [Paperback]

James Aaron Quick (Author), Cheryl Carter New (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series January 30, 2001
Step-by-step guidance, insider tips, and all the tools you need to create budgets and financial plans that win grants

Grants are a major source of funding in the nonprofit sector, and nonprofits invest considerable time, effort, and resources into obtaining them. A key aspect of any successful grant application initiative is budgeting and financial planning. A well-crafted budget, clearly delineating when, where, and how grant moneys will be applied, goes a long way toward selling a grantor on an applicant's vision. Unfortunately, many nonprofit professionals lack the know-how required to create budgets that instill grantors with confidence. This book fills that much-needed gap. Authors James Aaron Quick and Cheryl Carter New walk you through the entire budgeting process, providing invaluable insider tips, guidelines, and rules of thumb. More importantly, they provide you with indispensable guidance including a complete, step-by-step budgeting system, with each step fully documented and accompanied by an arsenal of powerful tools, plus much more to help you transform your organization's vision-and mission-into reality.

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Grant Seeker's Budget Toolkit (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series) + Grant Management: Funding for Public and Nonprofit Programs + Winning Grants Step by Step (The Jossey-Bass Nonprofit Guidebook Series)
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Many concepts are very valuable and useful." (CharityChannel.com, September 2003)

From the Back Cover

Step-by-step guidance, insider tips, and all the tools you need to create budgets and financial plans that win grants

Grants are a major source of funding in the nonprofit sector, and nonprofits invest considerable time, effort, and resources into obtaining them. A key aspect of any successful grant application initiative is budgeting and financial planning. A well-crafted budget, clearly delineating when, where, and how grant moneys will be applied, goes a long way toward selling a grantor on an applicant’s vision. Unfortunately, many nonprofit professionals lack the know-how required to create budgets that instill grantors with confidence. This book fills that much-needed gap. Authors James Aaron Quick and Cheryl Carter New walk you through the entire budgeting process, providing invaluable insider tips, guidelines, and rules of thumb. More importantly, they provide you with indispensable guidance including a complete, step-by-step budgeting system, with each step fully documented and accompanied by an arsenal of powerful tools, plus much more to help you transform your organization’s vision–and mission–into reality.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (January 30, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471391409
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471391401
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 7.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #618,676 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Much more that you asked for...., July 14, 2002
By 
Jan Tunnell (Orlando, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Grant Seeker's Budget Toolkit (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series) (Paperback)
I have done many budgets and taught workshops and seminars on how to do budgets. The first response I had to this book is that I was glad I understood the process because if I didn't, I would not be able to understand this book. It is obfuscating, repetitive, and full of obscure, irrelevant quotes from such diverse sources as Humpty Dumpty, the Cheshire Cat and Shakespeare. As a matter of fact, I usually don't use obfuscating words or concepts myself, but this book has led me to do so. Having said that, I did gain new knowledge, new concepts and new viewpoints that will be very helpful. It was hard work to find these gems - I prefer direct, basic explanations since they usually avoid confusion. I also disliked Wise Guy and Wise Lady - text set aside in blocks - where he asks dumb questions and she give smart-aleck or condescending answers to dumb questions. Both are insulting to the intelligence of the reader.

This is definitely not a book that you pick up as a reference source when you are beginning or in the middle of preparing a budget. It is not a book for beginners, unless you have the time and patience to work your way through, chapter by chapter, learning their process step by step. Indeed, it would be a good text for a full semester class, with lectures and homework and steady progression through its many topics. Budgets don't really come into the picture until Chapter 5. The authors require that you learn or relearn their terminology relevant to grant writing before you can approach actual budgeting. Throughout the book they present concepts and ideas, and drag on through several paragraphs or pages saying what something is not before saying what it is. By their definition, of course - which you must accept to move forward.

This is really a book on preparing grant applications, not just budgets. Several chapters and sections of chapters are devoted to projects, programs, defining problems, defining solutions, project development, and program evaluation. Each is described in detail, with examples and forms, which are also available on the accompanying CD-ROM. By the time you get to Chapter 5 and see a budget form you are exhausted. But take a vitamin pill - Chapters 6 through 9 detail in depth the difference components of a budget, using their terminology. Which you memorized back in the beginning of the semester for the first test. Again, the explanations are exhaustive and belabored, and stated often in negatives, which is confusing. For example, Chapter 6 is dedicated to explaining direct costs. There are nine pages defining the different types of travel, including definitions of travel by watercraft and by animal. After all the various modes of travel are defined, the rest of the chapter explains how to acquire each of them on site and the different types of each. Bus travel is broken down into inter-city, intra-city, and chartered. They also describe express buses and local buses, and where and how to purchase tickets. More information than most of us need, to say the least. If you don't know the difference between an express and a local bus by now, you are in big trouble. Not that it is relevant to preparing a budget anyway.

The authors are committed to a budget format that uses very specific line items. They state that any item you can put in a budget can fit into one of their categories. Just for fun, I came up with a couple of items I would put in a budget that I couldn't fit into their scheme. And if you want to use their forms from the CD-ROM, you must do all your budgets according to their line items. You are on your own if you have a potential funder that demands you use their forms and their line items.

If you can ignore all the indirect, convoluted and useless information, this book has a lot to offer. Many concepts are very valuable and useful. Some of the forms are also useful. There are planning forms and evaluation forms in addition to more budget forms that usually appear in one place. Select the information that is relevant, ignore the rest and use what is applicable. Wading through the chaff to get to the wheat is not easy, but many of the kernels are worth the effort. And if you are taking or teaching a full semester course this could be a useful text or supplement.

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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Book delivers more than budgeting advice, November 14, 2001
This review is from: Grant Seeker's Budget Toolkit (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series) (Paperback)
In providing a much-needed context for the discussion of grant proposal budgets, the authors have actually created a step by step, straightforward plan to design a sound project. They begin with how a good project springs from a problem that your organization can solve. Then they walk you through defining the project's purpose, goals, and component steps.

I am torn about this book, because I believe grant seekers should NOT be the ones to design programs; program staff ought to do that. However, I realize that in reality grants people often end up with this task, or can act as advisors and coaches to those going through the process. And in any case, we grant seekers need to understand the task of project design and how it relates to expressing a project in numbers and words when approaching a funder.

The book goes on to focus on budgets, after the groundwork of planning has been expertly laid. The sections on budgets are very useful for anyone dealing with government proposals.

So, while the book takes a stance I don't necessarily agree with - that the grant seeker is a project designer - I have rated it highly because it is sure to result in better planned projects for anyone who follows its advice.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Step by Step to a Budget that Makes Sense, January 24, 2005
This review is from: Grant Seeker's Budget Toolkit (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series) (Paperback)
I discovered this book when writing The Complete Idiot's Guide to Grant Writing and found it terrific for learning how to put together a program budget. Having done this for years and having taught others how to do it, I found their approach clear and to the point. The many examples are especially helpful.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In Colorado, educators and librarians will find in Resources in Grant Writing for Colorado Schools & Libraries that a budget is a plan for anticipated expenditures, activities, and accomplishments stated primarily in fiscal terms. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
indirect cost base, hourly wage personnel, activity analysis worksheet, air travel segment, travel worksheet, hourly wage positions, grant project budget, project budget total, many grant makers, costing object, plain language definition, budget narrative, calculation worksheet, fringe expenses, fringe rate, personnel fringe, staff members travel, grant seeker, cash match, ground travel, budget form, trip segment, contractual services, grant winner, hired vehicle
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Travel Planning Worksheet, Wise Lady, Fund Source, Employee Benefits, Salaried Positions Funded, Activity Analysis Checklist, Department of Education, New York, Totals Supported, Training Stipends, Travel Planning Questionnaire, Coach Class, Grant Seeker's Toolkit, Tourist Bureau, Chamber of Commerce, Example of Completed Worksheet, Face Page, Principal Investigator, Proposal Narrative, Travelers Bureau, Indirect Rate, National Science Foundation, San Francisco, Source Identity, Standard Form
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