Close Menu
 

Workshop: Developing Your Fundraising Skills

Home » News » Workshop: Developing Your Fundraising Skills

About The Event

Ensuring that services throughout the third sector can secure funding is a vital step towards attaining one of our 4 main goals here at TSI (Perth & Kinross), ‘Building Capacity’. This means supporting the third sector with the resources it needs to thrive.

Hosted by The Gannochy Trust, Cranfield Trust & Citrus Consultancy, this workshop received huge praise from attendees last year and hopes to build the skills and confidence of staff, volunteers, and trustees who are responsible for making funding applications to grant-making trusts and foundations.

The deadline for applications is Friday 14th March, the event is free to attend and applicants will be advised if they have secured a place by Friday 21st March.

What Will be Covered?

  • Why grant applications fail
  • Developing your funding action plan
  • How to demonstrate outcomes and evidence of need
  • The importance of demonstrating impact of existing service/project
  • Identifying the right grant making trust or foundation
  • Key to making a strong application
  • Thinking like a funder

More details about the event can be found here.

Date and Time

Tuesday 1st April 2025 · 10:00am – 3:00pm

Location

The Gannochy Trust office, Pitcullen Crescent, Perth PH2 7HX

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience. We use necessary cookies to make sure that our website works. We’d also like to set analytics cookies that help us make improvements by measuring how you use the site. By clicking “Allow All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts.
These cookies are required for basic functionalities such as accessing secure areas of the website, remembering previous actions and facilitating the proper display of the website. Necessary cookies are often exempt from requiring user consent as they do not collect personal data and are crucial for the website to perform its core functions.
A “preferences” cookie is used to remember user preferences and settings on a website. These cookies enhance the user experience by allowing the website to remember choices such as language preferences, font size, layout customization, and other similar settings. Preference cookies are not strictly necessary for the basic functioning of the website but contribute to a more personalised and convenient browsing experience for users.
A “statistics” cookie typically refers to cookies that are used to collect anonymous data about how visitors interact with a website. These cookies help website owners understand how users navigate their site, which pages are most frequently visited, how long users spend on each page, and similar metrics. The data collected by statistics cookies is aggregated and anonymized, meaning it does not contain personally identifiable information (PII).
Marketing cookies are used to track user behaviour across websites, allowing advertisers to deliver targeted advertisements based on the user’s interests and preferences. These cookies collect data such as browsing history and interactions with ads to create user profiles. While essential for effective online advertising, obtaining user consent is crucial to comply with privacy regulations.