Note: This AMA is no longer live. Thank you for all of your questions!
Hi! We're from Animal Charity Evaluators (ACE) and on February 19, we opened applications for our 2024 Movement Grants! Today, we’ll be answering your questions!
The AMA is your chance to ask our team about what projects we’re likely to fund, the application process, how to make a good application, and anything else about the program. Applications close March 17, 11:59 PM PT.
Our team members answering questions are:
- Eleanor McAree, Movement Grants Manager
- Elisabeth Ormandy, Programs Director
- Holly Baines, Communications Manager
We're looking forward to your questions!
Movement Grants is ACE’s strategic grantmaking program dedicated to building and strengthening the animal advocacy movement. For a limited time, you can DOUBLE your donation to ACE's Movement Grants! By donating to this program, you are investing in the expansion of a broader advocacy movement and a brighter future for animal welfare.
Thank you!
Note: This AMA is no longer live. Thank you for all of your questions!
Update: Thanks so much for all the great questions! Also, thanks to David van Beveren and the FAST Forum for hosting this AMA for us. We’ll be signing off for now but feel free to continue to post your questions over the next couple of days—we'll keep an eye on this thread and try to respond.
As always, if you have any questions about our work, you can also reach out to us on email, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or via our website. Thank you and we look forward to receiving your applications!
If you’d like to support our Movement Grants program, all donations are currently being DOUBLED! Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to get your donation for animals DOUBLED.
How effective is street activism that educates people about animal welfare in a cube-of-truth style? Are there more effective ways to help animals as a private person in your spare time, i.e. to help turn the population vegan?
This is a great question, and the truth is we don’t really know! It can be tough to track the effects of cube-of-truth style activism because it’s hard to follow up with everyone who engages with activists in this capacity to see whether they change their attitudes, beliefs, and behaviour as a result. What’s more, even if someone does cite this form of activism as a key driver of their shift towards veganism it’s very challenging to verify whether that’s accurate. The movement needs much more high-quality animal advocacy research to be done to help us determine how effective different interventions are, especially vegan outreach efforts. In the absence of high-quality empirical evidence, at ACE we look at the theory of change behind the program and interventions that grant applicants submit to us for funding. If there’s a convincing theory of change that describes how you predict your intervention will cause a change in the people you engage with, we are more likely to consider funding your project. As a concrete example, last year we gave a grant to We The Free to support their street activism because we felt their theory of change was particularly compelling. That said, in general, we tend to favor activities that target institutions over individuals because they can typically engage many more people with the limited funds we have to disburse.
In terms of the most effective ways to help animals as a private person, probably the most effective thing you can do is donate to effective animal charities or volunteer your time with them.
Dear ACE,
thanks for this AMA and the movement grants. I am grateful for your choice of supporting organisations developing and testing new interventions.
May I suppose that it includes efforts for a better political representation of animals and/or against regulatory capture?
Do you also support (running) programs or only campaigns (or other projects with a certain closing date)?
Thanks again
Thomas
Hi Thomas, thank you for your questions.
Yes, efforts for a better political representation of animals and/or against regulatory capture are eligible for a Movement Grant. Please note what percent of the work is lobbying in your application.
For the purposes of our project specific vs general support applications, we define a project as a discrete area of work within an organization. This means the grant awarded will be restricted to the work described in the application. Compared with the general support grant, where the grant agreement will allow for the organization to spend the grant at their discretion but we assess the applicant based on all areas of work in their organization.
If you are applying for a specific area of work using our project specific application, but there is no end date or obvious milestone that will serve as an end date, I recommend setting the end date as June 2025, which will be one year from when a grant is awarded.
Thanks, Eleanor
Hello Holly, thanks for organizing this! Considering ACE is open to projects that address wild animal suffering in neglected areas, would by any chance campaigns/ advocacy efforts focused on:
Are any of the above considered by ACE?
Hi Nathalie, thanks so much for your question and for listing these very important issues! At ACE, we prioritize animals that suffer in the largest quantities (such as fishes) and projects tackling the problem that causes the most suffering (such as industrial fishing and aquaculture). So, out of the list above, we would most likely fund a project on “Eliminating damaging industrial fishing.” Thanks, Holly
Hi ACE Team,
Thank you for hosting this session!
Hi Amanda, thank you for your questions. See my response to each below:
1 and 2, yes we can award grants to groups, organizations, and companies located anywhere in the world, as long as the application meets our other eligibility criteria. We are not able to fund groups or projects that:
3. Yes Movement Grants has a restriction on the amount we can award to lobbying, but this restriction applies to the total Movement Grants Program, not to any individual grant. I wouldn’t be concerned about this limit when applying.
4. Through our Movement Grants program, we provide funding for both specific projects (restricted funding) and general operational support (unrestricted funding), including salaries. Do you have a specific project you need funding for? If not, I would suggest applying for general operating support. You will not be favored for applying for one over the other.
5. Unfortunately, we receive several hundred applications so we do not have the capacity to interview applicants. We use the information provided in our application form and follow-up questions to make grant decisions.
Thanks, Eleanor
Dear ACE team! Thanks for doing this AMA.
At the bottom of the Grant Application you state: "Use this area to submit additional documents requested by the funder, outside of those normally required in each step."
Can the 'upload document' section be used to provide documents that describe the project in more detail? I am thinking here for example about a 'strategy' document that puts our cage-free legislative campaign in a wider context, and a 'roadmap' document that details the timeline of the campaign. Or is this section strictly meant for documents ACE requests during the application process?
Hi Samo, thanks for your question! If you fill in all mandatory questions in the application form, that will be sufficient information to make our grantmaking decisions. You can include extra documents like the ones mentioned, but they won’t be the focus of our decision-making. In the second stage of the process, we usually ask follow-up questions to applicants if we need more clarification. Thanks, Holly
Hello, and thank you very much for organizing this! Our project includes studying the available literature and research on a very underrepresented group of animals in order to develop informative material for the movement, carrying out a public awareness campaign, drafting a charter for best practices, and planning a strategy for future legal and corporate intervention. I'm not sure which of the interventions described in your menu best describes our action. Could you please help?"
Based on the description of your work it appears that you will be looking for a general support grant as you are requesting funding for many projects. In our general support application form we ask applicants to provide up to two intervention areas. We assess applications for general support on what organizations spend most of their time and resources on (ideally over 75%). This is so we evaluate your organization fairly and don't put excessive weight on smaller projects. We recommend against including information about projects that require less than 25% of your organization's time and resources. You describe a number of intervention areas in your message including: research, corporate outreach, and public awareness campaigning. I recommend looking through our Menu of Interventions page and deciding which most fit the description of your work.
Please note, the Menu of Interventions is not an exhaustive list of intervention types. Once we have concluded this Movements Grants round we will revisit the completeness of our Menu of Interventions and decide whether we need to update our categories.
Thanks, Eleanor
What should not be missing and what points should a good proposal include? Thank you again!
If you complete all of the mandatory fields in the application form, we will have sufficient information to make our grant decision. The notes in gray against some questions in the application form provide additional guidance on what we are assessing in each of those questions. In the second stage, we usually ask follow-up questions to applicants if there’s anything else we need to clarify.
Thanks, Eleanor
We also received some questions via email, which I thought would be helpful to share with you all. I will post them in this thread 👇🧵
Question: Will applying for a higher amount decrease the chances of getting funding? Or is it best to apply for the lowest possible amount needed to carry out the project?
Response:
Requesting more in the first stage is unlikely to hurt your chances of being awarded a grant provided you sincerely believe that being awarded more will substantially improve the impact of your project—we might well agree! Conversely, if it appears that an applicant has excessively padded their budget with unnecessary line items, we would look unfavorably upon this.
There is a question in the application form about breaking down your budget. This would be where we would note what is necessary for the project and what is nice to have. If you can also explain how the nice-to-have line items will further help animals, this will help us decide whether to fulfill the requested amount or offer partial funding.
We have previously awarded partial funding where we think the organization can deliver the project with less funding, and disbursing those additional funds to another organization will benefit animals more. We do this because our program is highly funding-constrained compared to the number of quality applications we receive.
Depending on the size of the grant being considered (if it is over $20,000), we will often follow up with the applicant to understand whether they would be able to deliver the project with partial funding.
Question: A number of people have been in touch to ask whether Masters and PhD students research projects are within the scope of the Movements Grants program.
Response: The program is open to applicants undertaking research, so Masters and PhD students are eligible to apply for funding. Note that we typically award grants to research organizations, mid-stage career researchers, and research programs because their work is often more likely to have real-world outcomes for animals than Masters or PhD student's research projects. However, we don't want to discourage you from applying, and we strongly advise that in your application you include how the research will ultimately help animals. For example, will the findings of your research be used by animal advocacy organizations, governments or industry? How will you ensure the users of your research will see your work and adopt its findings? This is needed so we can understand the potential impact of your work.
Secondly, we are unable to award grants to individuals working outside of the U.S., please ensure your university or another organization can act as fiscal sponsor to receive a grant if awarded.
Question: A few people have queried the eligibility of individuals working outside of an organization to receive a Movement Grant.
Response: We are able to fund individuals working in the United States, although such a grant may be considered taxable income. Individuals working outside the U.S. are asked to collaborate with a fiscal sponsor.
Question: I received a Movement Grant last year, am I eligible to apply again?
Response: Yes! Provided the work you are applying for remains in scope (see the Movement Grants eligibility criteria here) previous grantees are welcome to apply for funding again this round.
Question: I am curious whether you accept grant applications from organizations preferring to remain anonymous or not publicly acknowledged as grantees?
Response: You can apply and request to remain anonymous. If successfully awarded a grant, we would only publicly list the amount and that it was to an anonymous organization.
There is no question in the application form asking if you would like to remain anonymous, but you can note “anonymous” in the preferred name field so we are aware of your preference. If awarded a grant, we ask for feedback on our announcement post providing another opportunity to request that your grant remain anonymous if you haven’t already made us aware.
Question: I have previously applied for funding on Granti, is there any connection between this application and applications I have submitted for other funders?
Response: Granti is the grant management platform ACE is using for Round 8 of the Movement Grants program. A number of other funders in the animal advocacy space use Granti, so applicants may already be familiar with the platform. Although we are using the same platform, our grantmaking programs are separate, we cannot see any applications you have submitted to other funders, and likewise they cannot see the application you have submitted to ACE.
This is our first time using Granti and we appreciate any feedback you have on how you have on your user experience.
Question: We will be applying for funding to cover our general operational costs, how do you determine an end date for the grant period?
Response: If you apply for general support funding, we will award the grant for 12 months from the point at which the grant agreement is signed - this means your grant period is likely to be from June/July 2024 to June/July 2025. If you spend the grant before that period concludes, you are welcome to report on your grant earlier (there is a question in the application that invites you to provide a date to report earlier), but this is not required.
You can find more information on the Process and Timeline here.
Hi! I wanted to ask if there is a problem with funding more than one project from an organization. if an organization has been previously funded, it is better to request funding for a specific project or general funding.
This year we are asking applicants to either apply for a single project through our project-specific application or for general support. We are two weeks into the application process and we have already received over 200 applications! Which is amazing, but unfortunately we won’t have the capacity to assess multiple projects for each organization that applies. You will not be favored for applying for a single project over general support, or vice versa..
Could you potentially fund general operating costs for an individual as opposed to an organization? I'm thinking salary for working on related but distinct research projects for a few months.
Yes, individuals are eligible for our unrestricted general support grant.
How many grants do you plan to give in 2024 and what do you anticipate the range of grant amounts being?
We don’t have a fixed number of grants we intend to award. This primarily depends on the total donations we receive for the program. In previous rounds, we have awarded between 35 and 52 grants per year, and we expect that the number of grants we award is unlikely to differ from this range.
The minimum we will award an individual or organization is $5,000 USD, and this year we have removed the maximum amount we will award grantees. However, we are unlikely to award a high number of grants above the previous cap of $50,000 USD because the focus of Movement Grants remains on supporting earlier stage organizations and organizations working in countries with emerging animal advocacy movements, in both cases most of our applicants typically apply for less than $50,000.
Last year we awarded a high number of partial grants where the Movement Grants Committee felt that the project could still be delivered with reduced funding and we could have a greater impact by awarding an additional grant to another organization. Based on feedback from our grantees about the challenges some have faced with partial funding we anticipate fulfilling the full amount of more grant requests this round, this is likely to result in fewer grants being awarded. That being said, we are still likely to award some partial grants.
Thanks, Eleanor
Thanks Elaanor and ACE for grant making, do you consinder the number of organisations you have funded in a particular country as a cause for not funding all applicants?
No, we don’t. We often fund multiple organizations in a single country. That said, reviewing a number of applications in a country can make it easier to compare the different interventions and often allows us to identify which interventions appear more promising. We ask applicants to provide their Theory of Change and their geographical, political, or cultural context so we can determine which projects in a given country are likely to be the most impactful.
To what extent does your program engage with organizations addressing wild animal suffering, and is there a prioritization for such applications given the limited number of entities working on this issue?
Wild animal suffering is one of our priority cause areas, so we welcome applications from those working to improve wild animal welfare. We prioritize applicants based on whether they are using novel interventions, target large numbers of animals, and/or operate in regions that are underrepresented in animal welfare. While we’ve previously funded more projects working on farmed animal advocacy, as you mentioned this is due to the fact there are limited organizations working on this issue. We would like to see more projects addressing wild animal suffering to fund through our Movement Grants! Thanks, Holly
Hi again,
I am not sure if I should file for a project specific application or for a movement grant : what are the guidelines on this matter?
It really just comes down to the type of support you need. Through our Movement Grants program, we provide funding for both specific projects and general operational support, including salaries. Do you have a specific project you need funding for? If not, I would suggest applying for general operating support. You will not be favored for applying for one over the other. Thanks, Holly
Thank you for your questions!
Hi ACE— thanks for joining us on the FAST Forum for our first AMA!
On your movement grants FAQ: "Movement Grants also cast a wider net and may invest in more speculative or early-stage programs, while the Recommended Charity Fund offers donors more predictability." (emphasis mine)
What are some speculative or early stage programs that you've funded that were deemed successful investments later on, if any?
Thanks again!
Thanks so much for this question.
Many of the projects we fund via Movement Grants are happening at younger, smaller organizations, so there are two “early-stage” elements: early-stage organizations that might be in regions with a nascent animal advocacy movement, and early-stage projects that might be happening at early-stage organizations, or are happening at more established organizations that are expanding their programmatic work.
Here are some examples of early-stage organizations we funded in 2023 that we think are doing impactful work in their global region. In these cases we’ve tended to give general operating funds rather than funding specific projects (though that’s not always the case):
We funded Samayu and A Just World to continue their systems-based approach to achieving positive animal welfare outcomes in the farming industry. They focus on both the aquaculture and poultry sectors, conducting regional research, advocating for improved policies, conducting outreach to farmers and communities, and running campaigns.
We provided general support for Good Growth to continue work in two areas to accelerate the growth of sustainable and ethical food systems in Asia. The first area is open-access market research to understand local stakeholders, farming systems, and consumer attitudes and identify locally relevant interventions. They launched a website that makes public datasets more accessible for advocates and funders, and this grant allowed them to scope out the demand for and potential impact of this project. The second area was community engagement and capacity-building to facilitate knowledge-sharing and build advocates’ research skills. This included conducting outreach by delivering workshops at animal advocacy events and producing content for their website.
We funded Animal Empathy Philippines to implement a capacity-building program for Filipino youth leaders. They work with rural youth, particularly those in geographically isolated and disadvantaged areas, to co-create localized projects helping farmed animals in the country. They also plan to develop a program implementation toolkit and training for other organizations to roll out the same program in the future.
Here are some examples of early-stage projects we funded in 2023 at more established organizations:
We funded a project by Education for African Animal Welfare that aimed to influence the discourse on egg-laying hen welfare in Tanzania, promote cage-free farming, and consolidate and share information on welfare considerations in chicken farming. They worked with farmers and key stakeholders to assess the status and compile a report on battery cage farming in Tanzania through a nationwide survey, literature review, and stakeholder consultative meetings. They aimed to use this research to slow the intensification of poultry farming in the region.
We funded ARAF Plateau Dogon fora project that focused on raising awareness about the risks of battery cage farming of chickens in the Ségou region of Mali. They planned to mobilize youth and target the public at local events and schools across several municipalities. They also aimed to educate people on welfare issues and encourage people to not buy animals that have been raised in cages.
We gave a grant to AnimaNaturalis to take legal action against the federal government for failing to comply with its legal obligations on animal welfare in slaughterhouses. Their objective was to force authorities to comply with the provisions on animal welfare. They planned to focus on the federal government first and later move against state governments.
I hope these examples help you better understand the grant decisions we make in our Movement Grants program. If you have any additional questions or I haven’t answered you sufficiently please let me know!
Elisabeth
Thank you for doing this! Our org's work doesn't fit into any of the dropdown interventions listed (we are a capacity building org - we provide pro bono legal services to animal protection orgs). Is there a way to list our work as "other"?
The 27 intervention types we include in our Menu of Interventions aim to capture a broad spectrum of strategies animal advocates use to try to produce change for animals. We categorized these interventions to better understand and communicate how the animal advocacy movement works as a whole and how individual charities operate within the movement. The Menu of Interventions is not an exhaustive list of intervention types. We only include those commonly used by the charities in our Charity Evaluations and Movement Grants programs. We expect to update this list as we encounter new interventions used by the organizations we evaluate.
You are correct that your intervention is not listed as an option in our Menu of Interventions. For your application, please put another intervention in the field, and ensure the details provided in the question: ‘Describe the work of your organization’/’Please describe the project for which you are seeking funding?’ accurately describe the work you are applying for funding for. Once we have concluded this Movements Grants round, we will revisit the completeness of our Menu of Interventions and decide whether we need to update our categories.
Thanks, Eleanor
Thank you, Eleanor. I’m not able to enter my own text into the field; the field only allows me to choose a drop down item. We’ll be sure to thoroughly describe what we do though in the section below.
Hi everyone, thank you so much for offering this opportunity! Our organization (Vegan Society Austria) works on 3 projects that I would like to ask if they can be considered for funding. Here a brief description of them:
1st project: DGI - Dietary Guideline Initiative. Two of our employees are working on this project and the aim is to change the official dietary recommendations for Austria. We have already achieved success with it and our employees are currently working on changing the nutrition plate and the food pyramid. We would need more money to gain a greater presence in the professional organisations for nutrition and to make vegan nutrition more present.
2nd project: Vegucation. The demand for purely plant-based dishes is increasing in the catering industry. This demand must be met with professional expertise in plant-based cuisine. This is why Vegucation was created. It is a multilateral project that combines expertise and education to offer people different paths to purely plant-based cookery training. It’s the only programme in the world where there is a cooperation with universities; 50 vocational schools in Austria are taking part. Our idea is to pass this successful concept on to other countries, as we see great potential and want to do more. We could imagine internationalising it.
3rd project: Veganuary. We organised the Veganuary campaign in Austria (with the help of Veganuary International) - media wise it was very successful (we had over 70 clippings) and all the major food retailers participated. (If you want to know more about the success of Veganuary in Austria, I can send you the End of Campaign Report).
Are there any chances that we can get a funding for one of our projects? Thank you so much!
Thanks for reaching out - these projects all sound interesting! Unfortunately, we can’t give guidance on which specific project to focus your application on via this AMA. But we can offer guidance on what areas we prioritize.
For Movement Grants we prioritize funding efforts that work towards institutional or systemic change rather than individual change, such as institutional, legal, or corporate outreach. Some of your projects look quite promising in that regard. For more information about what we are most interested in funding this round, check out our Application Guidelines and read through the questions. We’d recommend using these guidelines to choose which project to focus on for an application.
We do hope to see an application from you. Thanks for all your work for animals!
Elisabeth
Thank you Elisabeth! :-)
For the year 2022, you have published an intervention chart (on docs.google.com). I can't find it anymore. Does it (or a 2023 version) still exist? There you have numerically evaluated different forms of action. For example, protests had a low priority, while investor outreach had a high priority.
Another question about this table: documentaries have a low priority. Most of the vegans I know have become vegan because of these these videos (e.g. Earthlings, Dominion). Why don't you find them more important than other actions (e.g. Investor outreach)
Here is the 2023 version of the Intervention Relevant Scores.
Regarding documentaries, it appears that a small number of documentaries are highly effective in convincing individuals to move towards a vegan diet. However, the vast majority of documentaries promoting animal welfare or veganism are not impactful. If we had a greater understanding of which documentaries would be as successful as Earthlings or Dominion, we would be much more likely to award documentary makers grants. Without this knowledge, we find that other interventions, such as investor outreach, are often a better use of our scarce funds.
Thanks, Eleanor
Hi there. How closely do you work or team up with other grant-giving organizations like ProVeg, Thrive, the EA Animal Welfare Fund, or any others? I'm curious about the level of collaboration or partnership you have with these or similar programs. Thank you!
We often ask other grantmaking organizations to share our application with organizations they think will be a good fit for Movement Grants. Occasionally, if we are aware an applicant has received a grant from another grantmaker, we may ask for feedback from the grantmaker. We also consider how likely the applicant will receive funding from other funders, although we don’t actively coordinate with them to determine this.
Thanks, Eleanor
Hi ACE! Thank you for this AMA session!
I am working for 2 NGOS. I could register with no problem on Granti for the first one, but I can't seem to manage registering fro the second one : I get an error message "the application is not working, please come back later".
How can I solve this problem?
Hi Astrid! Please email me directly and we'll take a look for you: [email protected] :)
Hi! When trying to figure out if a salary is too high or too low, what kind of criteria or tools do you rely on? I'm curious about all the different aspects you consider, could you break down the various factors and elements that play into your evaluation process?
For example, how do you weigh industry standards, the cost of living in the relevant area, the role's responsibilities, and the experience required? Also, do you take into account the overall budget of the organization and how the salary fits within the pay structure for similar positions?
Thanks!
Thanks for this question and for carefully considering staff salaries in your project budgets.
We do take a look at staff salaries to get a sense of what we think is fair and realistic to achieve the goals of a project. However, we tend to err on the side of trusting charities to set salaries that are in line with their particular region. We are not experts in global nonprofit salaries and tend to do more of a high-level red flag check than a deep dive into proposed salary budgets. Some examples of past red flags that we’ve raised are if we see a salary that we think is unjustifiably low for the role and aims of a project, or if we see a salary line item that we are unsure is necessary or should perhaps be paid by an institution rather than ACE (e.g. we have sometimes questioned salary line items for university teaching staff, and whether such salary should be paid by the university rather than ACE). We rarely (if ever) receive applications that include salaries that seem unjustifiably high. In cases of red flags, we tend to ask direct follow-up questions to the applicant rather than making assumptions with no additional information. A salary line item would very rarely be the reason we reject a proposal.
Elisabeth
Hi, ACE, Thank you so much for this AMA. I work on Animal rights in Pakistan. I practice animal law and teach animal law as well in Pakistan. I am representing three different organizations here and wanted to essentially pitch one project on behalf of each of them. 1. World Moot on International Law and Animal Rights: The WMILAR is the 1st world moot(Animal law competition working on bringing together the fragmented development of animal law from across the globe by conducting mooting competitions and moot training courses from experts. The moot problem which is the fictitious legal problem law students will argue on from across the world includes a problem on farm animal rights as well. This is a legal competition that aims to create animal law globally. Would this be a project ACE would consider covering? 2. Environmental and Animal Rights Consultants LLP Pakistan, EARC is Pakistan's 1st animal law firm. We are working on quite a few high-profile animal rights cases in the courts and developing policies. For farm animals, we are conducting some on-ground research so we can lay a map out of what the situation looks like in Pakistan. We also want to conduct education programs at the school level and I have built a curriculum for it.. We also want to provide free legal aid to animal rescuers in Pakistan. 3. Charity Doings Foundation Pakistan. We run Pakistan's 1st Disaster Zone Farm Animal Shelter and are looking for funding to sustain the project. We treat 400-600 farm animals every month and without a basic infrastructure, advocating for farm animals is incredibly hard. Would ACE consider covering any of these initiatives? I know 2 of these are legal initiatives and the last one is welfare but they have a farm animal angle and I wanted some advice on how to put forth a better application because this will help us create a proper animal rights movement in Pakistan. Most of our work so far, for the last few years has been completely pro-bono as we haven't been able to get grants. To make these initiatives more sustainable, I feel the ACE grant would be monumental. Do we have any chance? Kindly, Altamush Saeed
Thanks for your question and for your hard work for animals!
For more information about what we are most interested in funding this round, please check out our Application Guidelines and read through the questions. We’d recommend using these guidelines to choose which project to focus on for an application.
We will not typically consider funding direct animal care, including the provision of funds to sustain animal care for farmed animal sanctuaries. It is highly unlikely that we’d fund project 3.
For the first two legal projects, you’d need to be clear in your application about how your efforts serve to help animals. We’re interested in the theory of change of specific projects, and our aim is to prioritize those projects that have the highest chance of reducing the greatest amount of suffering for the most animals. We will prioritize efforts that work towards institutional or systemic change rather than individual change, such as institutional, legal, or corporate outreach.
Elisabeth
One more question :-) Do you advise requesting a grant of 20,000 USD or applying for a slightly lower amount, like 19,500, for example? Does it make any difference? Please consider we are applying from Europe. Thank you!
Thanks for this question! Requesting more in the first stage is unlikely to hurt your chances of being awarded a grant provided you sincerely believe that being awarded more will substantially improve the impact of your project—we might well agree! The application process may just take more time. Depending on the size of the grant being considered (if it is over $20,000), we will often follow up with additional questions and to understand whether the applicant would be able to deliver the project with partial funding. Thanks, Holly
Thank you! :-)