Free Self-Test
UK donors will not support organisations that are not registered and legally compliant within their home countries. An aspect of the due diligence carried out by prospective UK grant-making trusts is to scrutinise home country registration documents. If applicable, they will also ask for a website link to in-country registration authorities’ sites where applicant organisations are shown to be registered.
UK donors are unlikely to fund organisations whose registered founding documents are not in English. The absence of an English language registered constitution can be a barrier to receiving UK trust funding. One option to consider is a professional translation certified by a sworn appraiser. (However, this is expensive and will not satisfy all UK trusts.)
In general (aside from having close personal links with someone at a grant-making trust), British donors rarely take a chance on very new organisations that have not been around long enough to have three full years’ audited financial statements. Longevity helps. The longer an organisation has been established (the subtext meaning that it has stood the test of time), the better.
UK trust donors require a number of local donors to be supporting an organisation before they will fund it. This shows them that the local donors have conducted due diligence on the organisation and are also satisfied with impact reports.
The British pound is generally strong against most currencies and giving small amounts increases donor trusts’ admin load. UK trusts are unlikely to fund very small organisations (except where there are close personal links). A few small UK donor trusts do focus on funding small amounts. However, their resources are limited and don’t fund many charities.
Like donors globally, UK grant-making trusts rarely give undesignated money. Their staff expect a clear proposal for a single project (occasionally a programme). Such proposals must outline the specific problem or crisis and how the applicant organisation addresses the problem. The accompanying budget must be in both the local currency and GBP.
Ideally, organisation staff or volunteers should develop a mini business plan per project prior to and as part of its development. Few do. Large donors often ask for such a plan in order to ensure that projects are clearly thought through. These should include the theory of change on which the project is based and how it will be monitored and its impact evaluated.
If not claiming Gift Aid, international organisations are losing out on an extra 25% on donations by UK individual tax payers! This does not apply to trusts.