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Foundation Giving

How Grant Makers Can Move Quickly

June 26, 2011 | Read Time: 1 minute

The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation quickly approved a $3.7-million grant to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution to study radioactive materials in the Pacific Ocean.

Hereโ€™s how other foundations can position themselves to respond to what Thomas J. Tierney, a co-founder of the Bridgespan Group, calls โ€œunanticipated strategic opportunitiesโ€:

Donโ€™t commit your entire grant-making budget at the start of the year. โ€œIf you commit 100 percent of your grant-making to predetermined strategies, youโ€™ve locked yourself up, unless you want to drill down further into your corpus,โ€ Mr. Tierney says.

Go big. If a foundation is willing to commit money in response to an unexpected opportunity, it should consider covering the full cost, as the Moore foundation did. The scramble to round up additional supporters could delay a time-sensitive project.

Work with charities you already know. The Moore foundation has awarded grants to Woods Hole since 2006, so the grant maker could focus on the worthiness of the project instead of the effectiveness of the organization. โ€œThis was not a blind date,โ€ Mr. Tierney says.


About the Author

Senior Editor

Ben is a senior editor at the Chronicle of Philanthropy whose coverage areas include leadership and other topics. Before joining the Chronicle, he worked at Wyoming PBS and the Chronicle of Higher Education. Ben is a graduate of Dartmouth College.