Short
Description:
The Global Knowledge Partnership's Seed
Grant and Small Innovative Projects Fund - Letters of
Inquiry
>>> Click here to submit your Letter of
Inquiry - Online Form
2004 Announcement
The Global Knowledge Partnership (GKP) is pleased to
announce its Seed Grant and Small Innovative Projects Fund
(SGSIP Fund) for the year 2004. Supported by the Swiss Agency
for Development and Cooperation (SDC),
GKP invites Letters of Inquiry for pilot projects or from new
or ongoing small-scale initiatives, between US$10,000 to
US$15,000, with a focus on developing countries. Priority will
be given to small or locally-based organizations.
For ongoing small-scale initiatives, proposed projects can
be limited to the identification and development of specific
project components deemed urgent to complement or strengthen
efforts to achieve the overall project's original
objectives.
Projects proposed are expected to contribute to the
achievement of one or both of the following objectives:
- Facilitate innovation using ICTs from the ground-up to
further strengthen and promote the growth and maturity of
civil society participation in the Information Society.
- Promote and facilitate the fertilization of
multi-stakeholder partnerships for the upscaling and/or
replication of small-scale and community-based
initiatives.
DEADLINE: Letters of Inquiry are invited
from now until 29th February 2004. Proposals will only be
invited for submission based on Letters of Inquiry received
and the suitability of the project proposed. Letters of
Inquiry will be evaluated on a case-to-case basis and
decisions are expected to be made within a maximum time-frame
of one month after the deadline. To submit your Letter of
Inquiry, please complete the online form. Proposal guidelines
will only be provided to those invited to submit their full
proposals (Request for Proposal). Some basic principles about
writing a Letter of Inquiry can be found in Annex
1.
IMPORTANT:
Please do NOT send us your proposals. All Letters of Inquiry
submissions will have to be made in English.
Project/Project Component Term: To be
successfully completed by 30th November 2004 or earlier.
Final reporting for grant provided: 15th
December 2004
Intellectual Property Rights: In
supporting any projects or project components, GKP would like
to be able to publish and or disseminate the experience or
results of the project concerned through any method and means,
freely and without reservation, towards the realization of its
vision and mission.
PRIORITY AREAS OF FOCUS
Projects may either aim at an intended group of
beneficiaries or at addressing an issue. Special preference
will be given to projects designed and implemented by minority
or disadvantaged groups, such as women, youth, indigenous
communities and the poor. The four priority areas of focus for
grant-making are:
- ICTs for Women's Empowerment
- ICTs for Youth Participation
- Indigenous & Displaced Communities &
ICTs
- ICTs for Poverty Reduction
Issues addressed could include, but not necessarily be
limited to:
- Accessibility and affordability of ICTs
- Social, political and/or economic empowerment and
participation
- Human rights advocacy, knowledge and awareness-raising
- Gender equity and equality
- Non-discrimination
- Violence Against Women (VAW)
- E-health
- E-learning/life-long learning
Criteria for Selection and
Implementation
- Strategic use of ICTs
- Capacity-building, information-sharing and knowledge
creation
- Mobilisation and participation
- Ground-up relevance and grassroots links
- Use and mix of new media with traditional media and the
arts (theatre, music/dance, writing, art).
- Diversity of stakeholder involvement
- Inclusive, participatory and transparent management
practices and implementation
- Clearly identified monitoring and evaluation mechanisms
and tools
[NOTE: Criteria are not ordered in terms of priority and
each need not necessarily be given the same weightage in final
selection for funding]
For more information, please contact:
SGSIP Fund (seedgrant@gkpsecretariat.org.my)
An online form to submit your Letter of
Inquiry is available on the GKP portal (http://www.globalknowledge.org/)
>>> Click here to submit your Letter of
Inquiry - Online Form
Date of this Document: 27th January
2004
Letter of Inquiry: Some Basic
Principles
A Letter of Inquiry is not a vague exploration of an idea.
It is assumed that you have already thought through your
proposed project and are just presenting an abbreviated
description. This abbreviated description would still have to
include a budget.
Your Letter of Inquiry should be concise as far as
possible. Please avoid jargon, flattery, and/or flowery
subjective statements that cannot be supported by facts or
others' statements.
A Letter of Inquiry, in essence, contains a condensed
version of the basic components of a proposal. You should give
the highlights of the same information in much the same order.
For example, where you might use a page to write up an
executive summary, in a Letter of Inquiry, you would cover the
same content within a paragraph.
Your Letter of Inquiry to the
Global Knowledge Partnership Secretariat should not be more
than three pages long (1,500 words
maximum).
In your Letter of Inquiry, please ensure that you have the
following elements:
- Opening Paragraph
- This serves as your summary statement.
- It should be able to stand-alone. We should be able to
know what you want to do from reading this paragraph, and
what exactly you want from us.
- Answer the following: Who wants to do what? How much
is being requested? Is this a portion of a larger project
cost? Over what period of time is money being
requested?
- Statement of Need (1-2 paragraphs)
- This section answers the "why" of the project.
- Explain what issue you are addressing.
- Explain why you have chosen to respond to this set of
issues in the way that you have.
- State briefly why this matters in the area in which
you will be working.
- Note who benefits. Make sure you can indicate the
public good achieved.
- Project Activity (this will be the bulk of your letter)
- This section answers the "what" and "how" of the
project.
- Give a general overview of the activities involved.
Give more detailed information to the degree that space
allows.
- Highlight why your approach is novel and deserving of
the special attention that funding connotes.
- Indicate if there will be collaboration with other
organizations and what their roles will be. Be specific
about who does what.
- Outcomes (1-2 paragraphs; you can put this before or
after the discussion of activities)
- State the specific outcomes you hope to achieve.
- Indicate how evaluation is part of the project - how
will you know you've achieved these
outcomes?
- Credentials (1-2 paragraphs)
- Demonstrate why your institution or your staff is best
equipped to carry out this activity.
- Put any historic background about the institution
here.
- Be always substantive. Indicate awards, rankings, and
tangible measures that set you apart from your
peers.
- Budget (1-2 paragraphs)
- State what the total project cost will be and how much
of that you would be requesting. Indicate broad categories
of activities to be funded.
- Include other sources of funding, both cash and
in-kind. Especially indicate what your institution will
contribute. Do not overlook the value of all in-kind
contributions, including those of your collaborators. In
valuing your in-kind contributions, be realistic. Do not
unnecessarily inflate any figures.
- Closing (1 paragraph)
- Offer to give any additional information the
foundation might need.
- Give a contact name and contact information for
foundation follow-up.
- Express appreciation for the reader's attention or the
opportunity to submit if it is in response to a Request
for Proposals (RFP).
- Specifically indicate you are interested in discussing
the project and will "contact their office" by a certain
date (allowing time for them to receive and read the
letter).
- Generally it is best to have the highest ranking person
available 'sign' the letter even if they are not identified
as the "contact" person. This indicates institutional
support.
>>> Click here to submit your Letter of
Inquiry - Online Form
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