Grant funding works best when it is intentional.
Many organizations come to grant writing looking for help with applications. What they often need first is clarity about what to pursue, when, and why.
Grant writing is most effective when it it grounded in clear strategy, realistic timelines, and strong internal alignment. Without that groundwork, even well-written proposals can struggle to succeed.
This page outlines how strategy and writing work together, and where it makes sense to begin

How our work is structured
Grant work typically falls into two closely connected forms of support:

Grant Strategy
Deciding on what to pursue, when to pursue it, and how it fits into your broader funding picture
Grant Strategy
Grant Strategy is about focus, not volume.
This works supports organizations that want to pursue grants more intentionally, without wasting time on low-probability applications or mismatched opportunities.
Grant strategy work helps organizations:
- Clarify where grants fit within their overall funding mix
- Identify the right types of funders to pursue
- Build a realistic grant calendar aligned with staff capacity
- Prioritize effort where it is most likely to pay off
This is often the right starting point if you:
- Have applied for grants before without much success
- Feel unsure which opportunities are actually a good fit
- Want a plan that is sustainable for a small team

Strategic Grant Writing
preparing applications once the groundwork is laid and the conditions are right
Strategic Grant Writing
Strong grant writing depends on more than good narratives.
It depends on timing, fit, and preparation.
Strategic grant writing support is offered when the necessary groundwork is already in place. Writing is completed by trusted contractors and overseen to ensure clarity, alignment, and consistency across submissions.
One-off or last-minute grant writing is not offered.
Writing support is offered when it is:
• Anchored in clear strategy
• Based on identified funders and realistic timelines
• Support by define programs and budgets
- Anchored in clear strategy
- Based on identified funders and realistic timelines
- Support by defined programs and budgets
This approach allows grant writing to be effective and manageable for small organizations and social enterprises.
Some organizations need both.
Some only need one.The goal is not to do everything. The goal is to start in the right place.

Already have a funding strategy?
Some organizations already know who they plan to apply to and when.
If you already have identified funders, a grant calendar, and clear programs and budgets, then you may be ready to move directly into strategic grant writing support, without additional research or planning.
In these cases, the focus is on:
- Translating and existing strategy into strong applications
- Managing writing timelines and deliverables
- Maintaining consistency and fit across submissions
Not sure where to begin?
That is common.
If you are unsure whether strategy or writing is the right starting point, beginning with Grant Readiness can help clarify next steps before committing to a larger engagement.

