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News release: How to make your JISC funding bid stand out from the crowd

News release
30 January 2012

How to make your JISC funding bid stand out from the crowd

Are you looking to secure JISC funding this year? As competition grows for 
funds, our advice on successful bidding can help you make a strong application.

Sarah Porter, director of innovation at JISC, said: “We want to attract bids 
from a wide range of universities and colleges, those that know JISC well and 
others that might be bidding for the first time or need additional help with 
their application. We know bidding for funds is a time-consuming process and we 
are therefore aiming to give organisations the best possible chance of being 
successful in their applications.”
 
JISC advice for successful bidding includes:
* Describe how your proposed project meets the criteria set out in the call
* Demonstrate how your idea  is aligned with the objectives of your college or 
institution, including what buy-in you have from senior management
* Carry out an initial assessment of the risks of undertaking the project – and 
then mention this in your bid
* Include an initial project plan and show how the project will be managed
* Think ahead – include information about dissemination, embedding and 
evaluation mechanisms
* Show that your project is sustainable once the funding has ceased – not just 
financially but also in terms of the skills sets of the people involved, and 
any data/software preservation
* Go green – show that you have considered the environmental impact of your 
project, eg. server power and data storage space you need
* Consider the wider benefits of the project  for UK education and research to 
show that your project is good value for money.  You might think about 
generating workshops, briefing papers or web pages to help disseminate the 
findings of your project more widely
* Check you understand JISC’S position on IPR and that your bid is in line with 
this
* Don’t let your bid fail on the easy stuff: make sure you stick to the page 
limit and get your bid in on time

Dominic Tate, repository development officer at the University of Nottingham 
who has compiled advice on successful JISC funding bids, said: “I would 
recommend an email or telephone call to the contact at JISC to sound them out 
about whether your idea for a bid is in scope for the call for funding. I would 
also recommend that you ask someone else outside your immediate team/colleagues 
to review a draft of your bid and give you feedback on the clarity of what you 
are proposing to do and deliver.”

Joss Winn, senior lecturer at the University of Lincoln who has managed a 
number of JISC projects, said: “When I write a bid, it is a somewhat open, 
collaborative process that proposes to formalise and build on work that we’re 
already doing and what we already know. I know that this is not uncommon and is 
not a guaranteed ‘secret to success’, but it is worth underlining.”

He adds: “Bid writing can be a useful  reflective exercise - rather than simply 
'bidding for money', it's part of the overall narrative of the project itself 
that starts with the bid and ends with the project outputs and papers.”

Useful resources:

Find out what you can bid for now and sign up for funding updates 
<www.jisc.ac.uk/fundingopportunities>


Read a briefing paper about applying successfully for funding
<http://www.rsp.ac.uk/documents/briefing-papers/2011/WritingBidsforFunding_RSP_0811.pdf>

Read a blog post from Joss Winn on his experience of JISC projects
<http://joss.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/2010/11/15/writing-jisc-bids/>

Find out more about what JISC is looking for in grant bids
<http://www.jisc.ac.uk/fundingopportunities/bidguide/grantbidguide.aspx>

Find out what we’re looking for from responses to tender invitations: 
<http://www.jisc.ac.uk/fundingopportunities/bidguide/ittbidguide.aspx>
  
Do you work in a college? Your JISC regional support centre can give you advice 
on writing an effective bid.  
Find your nearest representative <http://www.jiscrsc.ac.uk/>

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