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Grant Budget Development

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1 Grant Budget Development
Elaine J. Marshall March 21, 2017 Grant Budget Development

2 Introduction Your budget is a financial representation of your project; there should be nothing in the budget that isn’t also explained in the narrative The budget is a plan—it will probably change, especially if the project is multi- year. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t plan it carefully and make it as detailed as possible. The best budgets result when there’s input from both the project experts AND the financial experts. Make sure the numbers add up—you’re asking a grantor for money; you want to demonstrate to them that you’ll pay attention to the details and be careful with it.

3 Getting Started Read the funding announcement or program guidelines carefully Research the funding source—what have they awarded in the past? Identify all costs that are necessary and reasonable for the project Be as specific as possible about what the project will cost. You will often be asked to provide both a budget form and a budget narrative which explains each line item and how you arrived at the figures you’ve used. Doing the work to make the budget detailed and accurate now will make budget management and reporting much easier later.

4 Getting Started Go-To References
Grantspace Foundation Center SC Association of Nonprofits: Together SC USC’s budget preparation guide Basic Budget Categories Personnel and non-personnel costs Direct and indirect Allowable and unallowable

5 Budget Categories Personnel
Identify all those who’ll work on the project How much of their time will be spent on this? Do you need to hire new people? Did you account for advertising costs? Background checks? Search job ads and online for reasonable salary ranges Costs include both salaries and fringe benefits Fringe benefits are real costs. Employers must provide FICA, unemployment compensation, workers’ compensation and other costs (health insurance, bonuses, retirement) in addition to salaries.

6 Budget Categories Contractual Supplies and materials
Travel Printing & copying Consultants Phone/fax Supplies and materials Postage Office supplies Educational supplies Food Equipment and maintenance

7 Budget Categories Other costs Indirect or overhead costs Space/rent
Utilities Insurance Postage Taxes Shipping or freight costs Program evaluation Indirect or overhead costs Does your organization have a negotiated IDC rate? Will the grantor cover these costs?

8 Sample Budget Request

9 Sample Budget Request From:

10 Sample Budget Form From:

11 Sample Budget Form From:

12 Sample Budget Form

13 Sample Budget Form

14

15

16 Sample Budget Narrative
From:

17 Sample Budget Report Request

18 Sample Budget Report Request

19 Other Things to Consider
How much flexibility you have with the budget and whether you’ll need to explain and/or get permission for changes Reporting requirements—how often and in what detail will you need to update the grantor Whether the award is based on cost reimbursement, fixed price, or something else Reimbursement – you get repaid for demonstrated project expenses Fixed Price – the grantor pays you a set amount; if there’s any left at the end, you keep it; if the project costs more, you have to eat the overage Something else – for example, you receive ½ the funds up front and the rest after your final report is submitted

20 Other Things to Consider
Should our organization have a budget committee? It depends . . . How long must we maintain records? For federal grants, the standard is “three years from the date of submission of the final report” /uniform-administrative-requirements-cost-principles-and-audit- requirements-for-federal-awards#h-49 Grantspace’s very useful page on records: Management/Accountability/record-retention

21 Questions? Elaine J. Marshall


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