Circulate the application form, any guidance notes and FAQs around your team. Allocate different sections to different people, depending on their skill set.
Common questions you may be asked when completing a funding application include:
Project description – what you need funding for and what any funding will contribute towards.
Need – demonstrate and explain the need for your idea. Identify any issues it will address, who will benefit and why it's important. Reference the research you have done to strengthen your case and explain how your idea will help meet your vision and aims plus locally relevant strategic priorities.
Impact – how it will benefit the local community, such as increased activity levels, improved mental wellbeing and social, community or individual development. Specify any audiences you particularly want to engage with, like inactive people, people with a disability, people on low incomes or people from diverse ethnic communities. Explain how you have worked out your impact and how you will measure your success.
Project delivery – how you'll manage the delivery of your idea and ensure your objectives are achievable. Consider any possible risks and how you plan to mitigate against these. Identify any partners that will support the delivery of your idea and their roles and responsibilities. Back this up with quotes from them to verify this.
Financial planning - be as accurate as you can with your costs to demonstrate that you have set a realistic budget. Outline any partnership funding (cash or in-kind) that will be contributed and provide evidence to back this up. Careful financial planning will give confidence that your idea is financially viable.
Sustainability – explain the expected timescales, including how long people will take part in it and any plans to raise additional funding. If your project is for an investment into facilities or equipment, explain how you will maintain and then replace them at the end of their useful life.
Additional information – include relevant documents such as your research findings, delivery plans, budgets, business plans, development plans, risk registers, quotes and letters of support, and evidence of partnership funding.
Complete a draft of your application and ask someone who has not been involved in writing it, to review it against the funders’ priorities and any criteria. They are more likely to pick up on whether you have missed any obvious information or need to provide any more detail.