As we head into the second half of 2026, we got to accept the fact that funders now look for evidence and as per our research, the grant success rates can fall below 20%. That is why Evidence is one of the vital aspects that. Over time we have observed funders look for some vital essentials while approving the grants.
A well-structured and accurate proposal is necessary for the applicants as we get confused, and evidence earns the credibility and the trust of funders as they look for similarities and previous experience of your funding. A common pattern we observed during our research was that NGOs are facing problems of being unaware of what the evidence they need to provide for the proposals.
Why Do Funders Look Beyond the Proposal?
During our research into nonprofit funding discussions, one concern appeared repeatedly that there are emerging large number of applicants the funders have to face every day. They look for human-like connections in proposals and authenticity. Many proposals are well written and aligned with funding priorities. As a result, funders often need additional information and access to the documents and evidence of your work whether u can handle the project. They seem to take less risk as for funding purpose
Administrative/Financial Competence:
A functional and systematic fund management from beneficiary fund to salaries of the employes. A trust should be built upon the founder’s vision and approach. The record of money spent on training conductions and having a financial record is must for a part of thw projects
The Impact of Real Stories:
Having a proof and claiming has big difference with real stories helps to build a human centric connection. Project reports, Photographs, Attendance records, Monitoring reports including all of these with a testimonial attached with a letter of supervisor can prevent you from being behind from other applicants. The feedback and follow-ups on beneficiaries may help build a positive image. Mostly if non – profit had funding they had positive feedback they consider them again .
Lack Of Funders Relationship:
Funders expect pre-application contact and relationship-building; not doing this “drastically reduces your chances of getting funded.” followups and calls before applying helps in recognition and building a relation and after the proposal asking for the feedback
Final Thoughts
A well-written proposal is not enough. You must prove that your plans are safe, smart, and highly effective. Funders want to see that you have already done good work, that the community trusts you, and that you manage money wisely. You can prove this by collecting clear data, building strong local partnerships, and sharing real stories from the people you help. Ultimately, funders do not give money based on good intentions; they invest in your proven ability to deliver real result

