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Planning and Project Development

Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

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Page 1: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Planning and Project Development

Page 2: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

{

Agency Capacity/Credibilit

y

Page 3: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Are all of the ducks in a row? DUNS (Dun and Bradstreet) number Register with Central Contracting (CCR) Register with Grants.gov Audited Financial Statements

Before You Apply

Page 4: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Reimbursement Cash-up-front.

Assess Cash Flow

Page 5: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Organizational Structure/Chart

Page 6: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Who will evaluate the project? Who will submit narrative reports Who will submit fiscal reports Who will train staff? Who will collect data? How? Database,

spreadsheet, etc.? How long have all of these people served

in their current roles/positions?

Identify Roles

Page 7: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

When did the agency begin? Why did the agency begin? What is the mission of the agency? How big is the annual budget? How many full time staff equivalents

work for the agency?

History of Your Agency

Page 8: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Federal money? State money? Previous grant awards? What is the allocated source of funds?

20% Federal 30% State 20% Fundraising 10% Donations 10% Memberships 10% Foundations

Experience with Grants and Contracts

Page 9: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

If you are planning to write a proposal for your organization, make sure you have permission from the right authority.

Review any policies the organization has regarding grant administration.

Review any Fiscal Policies around grant proposal development. Does the fiscal director need to approve budgets?

Final Cautionary Words

Page 10: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

How do I assess the overall effectiveness of our grant effort?

How do I evaluate my organization’s grant proposal writing

How do I evaluate the management of grants we receive?

How do I address the strings attached to grant awards?

What Does the Executive Director Need to Know?

Page 11: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Ethics, compliance with legal, financial and programmatic needs

Policies that promote efficiency and accountability across the organization

Clear standards for pre and post award functions

Financial and administrative systems Grant managers and staff trained to carry

out specific grant functions as proposed System of monitoring and evaluating design

to control quality of services

Grant Administration Requires

Page 12: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Opportunities Proposals Submitted Analysis of Proposal Submission Proposal Tracking Report Grant Award Tracking Accounting Reports (by fund) Progress Reports Evaluation Reports Audit Reports

Grant Administration Tracking Reports

Page 13: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Is related to the purpose and goals of the agency

Is reasonable for the agency to address Supported by statistical evidence and research Describes the condition as it exists NOW Always from the point of the beneficiary How big is it? (How many beneficiaries?) Who is affected? (Their demographics or

special characteristics) Why is this a problem? Why now, why our

agency (qualifications), what happens if nothing changes?

Identify the Problem(s)

Page 14: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

A problem is generally not a “lack of method”. Example: In the past two years, serious

swimming accidents have occurred in Fast Running River, resulting in the deaths of 10 children. Caring Community needs a swimming pool to teach swimming lessons and prevent further drowning accidents in Fast Running River.

Problem/Need Pitfalls

Page 15: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

The problem statement describes the need based on the agency, rather than a beneficiary focused need.Example: Youth Involvement Agency serves 400 youth each year that come from families characterized by domestic violence and alcoholism. Youth Involvement Agency needs to hire a Youth Counselor to council Youth.

Problem/Need Pitfalls

Page 16: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Don’t make assumptions.Example: Everyone knows that high-school drop-outs are more likely to have children early, live in poverty and use drugs.

(We don’t all know this! Support your claims with documentation from reliable sources.)

Problem/Need Pitfalls

Page 17: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Focus the statistics on your community, but relating the broader societal consequences can be helpful in seeking funding.

Funders like to see projects that can be replicated in other communities and have the same positive impact

Community Need or Societal Need

Page 18: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Brainstorming Exercise:What is the problem?Who is effected? (Characteristics)How many?Why do we care? (Societal impact)Why does it fit our agency?Why does it fit you (funding source)What happens if we do nothing?Research must support this!

What is the Current Condition

Page 19: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Related to the organizations purpose/mission

Reasonable size Supported by statistical evidence Statements from authorities Stated in terms of beneficiaries Beneficiaries participate in proces Not a “lack of a method”

All Needs Must Be Completely Described

Page 20: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Office of Financial Managementhttp://www.ofm.wa.gov/ PovertyPopulation DensityPopulation of Urban/RuralSchool District Data – free and reduced lunchNumber of VehiclesAmount of State FundingPopulation by age groupChanges in population

Data Sources for Special Needs

Page 21: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

American Communities Surveyhttp://www.census.gov/acs/www/ This is a census bureau survey on a much smaller scale than the census to assist communities in planning.

Data Sources

Page 22: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

National Survey of America’s Familieshttp://www.urban.org/center/anf/nsaf.cfmThe National Survey of America's Families provides a comprehensive look at the well-being of children and non-elderly adults, and reveals sometimes striking differences among the 13 states studied in depth. The survey provides quantitative measures of child, adult and family well-being in America, with an emphasis on persons in low-income families.

Data Sources

Page 23: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Archived NSAF Datahttp://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/sdatools/studies/4582 This site allows choosing of data subsets to customize reports.

Data Sources

Page 24: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Google Public Datahttp://www.google.com/publicdata/directoryThis site has searchable data.

ESRI Non-Profit Community Analysthttp://www.esri.com/nonprofit/esri-community-analyst

Data Sources

Page 25: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

City or County Planning DepartmentsRegional Transportation Planning OrganizationsDepartment of Social and Health Services- Licensed Adult Family Homes, Nursing

Homes

Other Data Sources

Page 26: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

The more rural the area of interest, the more difficult to find data.For planning purposes, focused and detailed information is often best.

Data Limitations

Page 27: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Surveys (publicize and allow call-in, ask for outside critique)

Community events (fair, public meetings) Community gathering locations (post

office, laundry mat, church, school, senior center)

Locations where special needs populations live or gather

Collecting Data

Page 28: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

In order to get valuable and accurate information, it is imperative to get as “close” to the beneficiary as possible.-Not usually the administrator that knows-Even friends and neighbors don’t always know-Just be aware that the info is not completely reliable

Stakeholders and Service Providers

Page 29: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Analyze the data to try and answer the questions:1. Who needs (client characteristics),

what, how many times (frequency), for how long, from where (origin) to where (destination)?

2. How many folks with similar needs and similar origins and destinations are in my service area?

Now What?

Page 30: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Based on the data start with lowest intervention, lowest cost and work up:1. Is there a need for ANY service? Some areas do not

have enough need to warrant daily, or even weekly service. Is there some level that makes sense?

2. Would a shared ride system work – enough capable drivers to support carpool or other shared system.

3. Are there service requirements that can’t be served by 1 and 2? (Wheelchair riders, elderly and frail)

4. Are there enough passengers with similar origins and destinations at the same time of day to warrant the cost of a bus and driver? What size bus?

Tailor the Service

Page 31: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Project Evaluations Did the project perform as promised? # of clients enrolled # of services per client

Process Evaluations Did the process deliver the promised

outcomes Did the participants experience the

desired change?

Build in Evaluation

Page 32: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Provide a direct visual representation of the inputs for your project and the expected outcomes.

By using a logic model, you can involve other staff members and professionals to ensure that your logic is sound.

It should show a direct correlation between the proposed inputs and outcomes and be measurable.

Logic Models

Page 33: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Surveys and goal setting by participants is one way to measure progress toward improvement

Goal Attainment Scaling is presented in the PP and PW and is used to measure a clients perceived initial status at enrollment.

Periodic review of progress toward meeting the goal is ranked by the individual to establish their personal progress.

Surveys of Participants/Riders

Page 34: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Surveys can be a quick and easy tool to establish progress toward a goal.

Pre and post activity surveys can be used to establish the effectiveness of a particular training or intervention on a persons knowledge attainment.

Surveys require the person participating to be available

Survey Limits

Page 35: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Goal measurements are only as good as the initial goal setting.

Some progress is easy to objectively measure (weight loss, strength, quitting drugs, smoking cessation or improved blood sugar)

Other progress is more difficult – improved anxiety level, healthier family communication, better coping skills

Goal Attainment - Difficulties

Page 36: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Evaluation must be built into the project design in order to ensure some measurement and connection between the problem and the objectives.

Evaluation can be scary. Good evaluation is done without emotion, is

based on the facts/data and looks at all aspects of the project.

Good evaluation reviews the management, staff, clients, outreach, and model to arrive at recommendations for improvement and change.

Evaluation from the Start

Page 37: Planning and Project Development. { Agency Capacity/Credibility

Kellogg Foundation Evaluation Handbook Logic Model Handbook http://www.wkkf.org/knowledge-center/

publications-and-resources.aspx

Evaluation Resources