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Funding the Future
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Funding the Future

Author: GrantDrafter

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Funding the Future is a podcast that tells the story of the impact that nonprofits have and how the secure the funding to make it happen.

Hosted by Alyssa Medway, the cofounder of GrantDrafter - the easiest way to get your next grant drafted in ten minutes or less.
3 Episodes
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Grant funding is essential to community services. Yet navigating competitive, resource‑heavy applications can feel overwhelming.Barbara Brangan founded Grantful to reduce this grant writing burden for purpose-driven organisations. Since 2018, she has helped Australian not‑for‑profits win over $55M across mental health, aged care, Aboriginal and community health.Through Grantful, she distills complex programs into funder‑ready stories, guides end-to-end grant writing for both multimillion‑dollar tenders and small community grants and by doing so creates more time for organisations to focus on service delivery.On this week’s episode of “Funding the Future”, Barbs and I talked about grant writing as both creativity and rigour, the humility that runs through this work, and how AI can support teams without replacing the human heart.We discuss: 🟢 turning freelance work into Grantful, choosing a name that reflects both grants and gratitude 🟢 the headache that is turning program design and ideation into strict word limits and funder guidelines 🟢 The value of clients managing their project budgets to avoid errors and ensure narrative consistency 🟢 balancing humility with the need to celebrate success in funding applications 🟢 choosing which opportunities to pursue — small wins versus large tenders 🟢 adapting to a crowded grant landscape and balancing the use of AI with maintaining an authentic voice.Listen: • YouTube • Spotify • AppleSponsored by GrantDrafter — draft your next grant in 5 minutes or less.
In this episode, Alyssa chats with Nisha D'Souza, founder of EcoNiche, a conservation consultancy based in India helping frontline organisations build the systems they need to create lasting impact. Nisha shares how she left her role at IUCN to start EcoNiche in 2019, only to face COVID overnight. She opens up about walking away from a paying contract that didn't align with her mission, writing a winning Chanel Foundation proposal the night before her wedding, and why planting a million trees isn't the same as creating real impact. From helping a nomadic tribal community get included in India's census through a mangrove aquaculture project, to converting abandoned salt pans into thriving wetland habitat for migratory birds — this episode is full of powerful stories about what conservation looks like when it's done right.
The conversation explores the financial challenges faced by Nat Heath and his organization, highlighting the struggle for funding and the innovative approaches taken to secure financial sustainability through reconciliation action plans and cultural awareness initiatives.TakeawaysThe first eight months were financially challenging.Living off breadcrumbs was a reality for us.Funding was hard to come by due to organizational gaps.Organizations preferred consultants over direct investment.We sought to create legitimacy through our work.Reconciliation action plans became a funding strategy.Cultural awareness initiatives were also leveraged for funding.Investing in grassroots organizations can yield better results.Support for organizations should be more direct and less transactional.Innovative funding solutions are essential for sustainability.
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