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Robin Rendell T/A R J RENDELL & CO

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10 practical suggestions

1. Plan for funding and give yourself time to deliver the best results for your business.
2. Understand the individual funder's requirements.
3. Be specific about the level of funding
4. Keep information about your business and the markets in which it operates current.
5. Know what differentiates you from your competition.
6. Do your own due diligence on your proposals.
7. Identify and cost the alternatives open to your business.
8. Ask yourself the questions you hope the funder won't ask.
9. Never turn yourself down.
10. Remember you are your best advocate for your business.




Why use a consultant?
Application procedures and forms can either be complex or time-consuming and some of the key decision-making criteria 'lost in translation'. It can often be difficult to know how best to proceed with a particular application and to improve your chances of success. For example, grant is always the minimum level of funding necessary for any project. Budgetary restraints and restructured funding schemes have increased pressure on reducing levels and changing the basis on which such support is made available. Grant consultants can help you justify the maximum allowable amount of support and identify the conditions under which grant and other funding might be provided.

A grant and funding consultant should save you time and resources!

Robin Rendell prepared his first grant application for a client in 1985. Since then, he has worked successfully as a grant consultant and specialist adviser on more than 500 grant applications and other funding proposals. He has worked for clients throughout the UK and in Ireland and other parts of Europe, the USA and Hong Kong; a diverse group of different sized businesses in a variety of sectors linked by a common requirement for funding towards the cost of investments in assets, people or innovation.

Helping your business is our business.

We can help if you are looking to:

1. Invest in people, capital equipment or product development in the UK or Europe.
2. Source new or replacement debt finance or capital for your business.
3. Sell your business.
4. Start a new business in the UK or Europe.
5. Obtain funding for a charity or community-based organisation in the UK.

How can we help you?

1. Write reader-and-user friendly business plans and prepare or work with your accountants on the preparation of supporting financial forecasts.
2. Identify sources of grant and other funding for your business in your existing and alternative locations.
3. Prepare or work with you on the preparation of funding proposals and applications and liaise with funders and help you negotiate appropriate levels of funding.
4. Bring lateral and flexible thinking to funding solutions.

Who are our clients?
Our clients' business activities are as diverse as their projects are varied but they all identify opportunities for sustained and profitable growth through planned investment in their businesses and see grants and supplementary private and public sector funding as an essential part of their financial planning. Our clients want to secure real benefits from grant and other funding that are not conditional on them changing how and when they proceed with a particular project. Funding that unnecessarily compromises the direction of your business or the scope, scale, location or timing of your project can bring short-term financial gain without the benefit of longer-term viability. Our clients in the not-for-profit Third Sector have introduced us to a wide variety of charitable activities carried out throughout the UK by a diverse range of individuals and organisations.

Costs
A reasonable amount of initial advice over the phone or by email is free of charge and without commitment. Our chargeable fee structure is time based but we are able to negotiate a fee made up of a reduced time-based element and a contingent percentage of funding offered to the client. Payment and receipt of a fee, equivalent to 3 hour's work, commits both parties to the contract.

 


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