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Build Your Club AcademyGrant Writing Assistant — User Guide
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Grant Writing Assistant

Manage multiple grant proposals from a single workspace. Capture funder details, draft each section with guided prompts, build budgets, and generate polished proposals as HTML or Word documents.

What is this tool?

The Grant Writing Assistant gives small nonprofits a structured workflow for writing grant proposals. Instead of starting from a blank document every time, you track each proposal as a project — with its own funder profile, deadline, sections, logic model, budget, and attachment checklist. When you're ready, the tool assembles everything into a polished proposal you can preview or download as a Word document.

Reuse pays off here. Most nonprofits reuse the same mission statement, organization background, and staff bios across every proposal. The Templates Library captures that boilerplate once so you're not retyping it for every funder.

Getting started

  1. Click Create Account on the sign-in screen and enter your name, email, and password.
  2. Choose Start a new organization, or Join an existing team with a 6-character team code from a teammate.
  3. Enter your organization's legal name. That's the entire onboarding — everything else lives inside the app.
Demo accounts: Try demo@example.org / demo for a fully populated demo team with a sample Hartley Foundation proposal already drafted.

Recommended workflow

First-time users get the most out of this tool by following this sequence:

  1. Set up your Templates Library first. Mission, background, staff bios, evaluation language — fill these in once. Every proposal will copy from here.
  2. Add the funders you target most to the Funder Library. Each entry captures priorities, contact info, average grant size, and requirements.
  3. Create a new proposal from a funder entry (or from scratch). The proposal inherits the funder's profile.
  4. Draft each section using the guided prompts. Use the word-count guidance for funders with strict page limits.
  5. Build the logic model — inputs through impact. Funders increasingly require this.
  6. Build the budget line by line. Each line has a category, description, amount, and narrative.
  7. Mark attachments ready as you collect them.
  8. Preview and download the final proposal as HTML or .docx for submission.

Managing proposals

The tool supports as many active proposals as you need. Each is a separate project with its own funder, deadline, and status.

Statuses

The active proposal

At the top of any proposal section page, you'll see the active proposal name with a dropdown to switch between proposals. The sidebar nav under "Active Proposal" always edits whichever proposal is currently active.

Funder profile

Every proposal starts with the funder's profile: name, type, contact, website, average grant size, focus areas, and application requirements. The more detail here, the better you can tailor the rest of the proposal. Priorities is the most important field — paste the funder's stated areas of interest verbatim from their website, then refer to it as you draft.

The proposal sections

Standard sections that appear in most foundation and government applications. Each section has guiding prompts and a word-count target where applicable.

SectionPurposeTarget
Need StatementWhat problem are you addressing and why does it matter?~500 words
Project DescriptionWhat will you do, concretely?~600 words
Goals & ObjectivesBig-picture goal + 2–4 SMART objectives~300 words
Methods & Logic ModelHow activities produce outcomes~500 words + logic model
EvaluationHow you measure success~400 words
BudgetLine items + narrativeTable + ~300 words
SustainabilityHow the work continues~250 words
TimelineQuarter-by-quarter milestones
AttachmentsRequired and supporting documentsChecklist

Logic model

A logic model is a visual representation of how your project works: Inputs → Activities → Outputs → Outcomes → Impact. Many funders now require this. The Methods page has a five-column logic model builder.

Budget

The Budget page is a line-item editor. Each line has:

The page automatically totals all line items and compares against your stated ask. A green "balanced" or red "over/under" indicator tells you if the math works.

Templates Library

Reusable boilerplate that you can copy into any proposal section. Fill these in once:

Each one has a "Copy to clipboard" button so you can paste into the active proposal section. The Build Proposal step also pulls org background and mission from here automatically.

Funder Library

A catalog of funders you research and target repeatedly. Each entry stores priorities, contact info, average grant size, and application requirements. From any funder entry, click Create proposal → to start a new proposal pre-populated with that funder's profile.

Building the proposal

The Build Proposal page assembles everything into a finished document. Three output options:

The page shows readiness statistics: percentage of sections drafted, budget total vs. ask, attachments ready, days to deadline.

Team collaboration

Multiple staff usually contribute to a grant proposal — the Executive Director writes the need statement, the Program Director writes methods, the Treasurer reviews the budget. Use the team feature so they all work in the same proposal.

Roles

Inviting members: leader shares the 6-character team code from the Team page; teammates enter it on the join screen.

Pro vs Free

FeatureFreePro
Unlimited proposalsYesYes
HTML + .docx outputYesYes
Templates LibraryYesYes
Funder LibraryYesYes
Team seats3Unlimited
Priority supportYes
Price$0$29 / month

Tips & best practices

Read the funder's guidelines before drafting

Every funder has specific requirements: page limits, formatting, required attachments, deadlines, allowable costs. Paste these into the "Application Requirements" field of the funder profile so they're always in front of you while drafting.

Tailor every proposal — even when reusing boilerplate

The Templates Library saves you typing time, not thinking time. Always edit boilerplate to fit the specific funder's priorities. A generic proposal reads as generic; a funder can tell.

Write the need statement to the funder, not in general

If the funder cares about education in California, your need statement should explicitly address education in California — not a national overview that mentions California in passing. Match the funder's geography, population, and intervention type.

Show the math in your budget narrative

"$15,000 for Program Director" is not enough. "$15,000 = $60,000 annual salary × 25% FTE × 1 year" tells the funder you understand what you're asking for and how it adds up.

Keep a record of declined proposals too

Use the "Declined" status — don't delete declined proposals. Funders often invite you to reapply with adjustments, and your earlier draft is the starting point.

Disclaimer

This tool is a productivity aid for nonprofit grant writing. It does not guarantee grant awards. Funders have their own selection processes and many factors outside any applicant's control determine outcomes. The boilerplate prompts and templates are starting points — every funder requires customization.

Always verify the most current submission requirements directly with the funder before submitting.

Build Your Club Academy · Grant Writing Assistant User Guide