Funder Alignment Analysis Guide
Your Organization Logo

Funder Alignment Analysis Guide

Deep dive worksheet for strategic mission alignment

Lesson 4: Analyzing Funder Priorities and Alignment

Why Deep Alignment Analysis Matters

Finding a funder who gives grants in your subject area is just the starting point. The organizations that consistently win funding go further—they analyze whether a funder’s deeper priorities align with their approach and strengths.

This alignment is what separates applications that get funded from those that get politely declined.

Use this guide to conduct a thorough analysis of one potential funder. By the end, you’ll know whether this funder is truly a strategic match for your organization or if you should focus your energy elsewhere.

How to Complete This Analysis

Set aside 45-60 minutes of focused time. You’ll need access to the funder’s website, recent grant lists, and any available annual reports or strategic plans. Be thorough and honest—superficial analysis leads to wasted applications.

1. Funder Overview

2. Reading Between the Lines

Key Words and Phrases to Look For:

  • “Evidence-based,” “data-driven,” “measurable outcomes” = They want numbers and research
  • “Community-led,” “grassroots,” “lived experience” = They value beneficiary decision-making
  • “Innovation,” “pilot,” “new approaches” = They want to test new ideas
  • “Scale,” “replication,” “proven models” = They want to expand what works
  • “Systemic change,” “root causes,” “policy” = They focus on structural solutions
  • “Direct service,” “immediate needs,” “crisis response” = They want hands-on help

3. Analyzing Their Grant History

What to Look for in Recent Grant Lists:

  • Types of organizations funded (budget size, age, location)
  • Specific programs or strategies they supported
  • Grant amounts and duration patterns
  • First-time grantees vs. repeat recipients
  • Any organizations similar to yours

4. Strategic & Philosophical Alignment

Funder’s Theory of Change

Our Theory of Change

5. Your Competitive Advantages

Types of Competitive Advantages:

  • Track Record: Years of service, proven outcomes, evaluation data
  • Relationships: Community trust, strong partnerships, board connections
  • Expertise: Specialized knowledge, cultural competency, lived experience
  • Infrastructure: Technology, systems, facilities, capacity
  • Uniqueness: Only provider, innovative approach, distinctive model
  • Strategic Position: Geographic reach, population access, timing

6. Final Alignment Assessment

The Five Specific Reasons Test

If you can’t identify at least five specific, substantive reasons why you’re a strong match, this probably isn’t the right funder.

Overall Alignment Rating

Based on your analysis, how would you rate the overall alignment?

Excellent fit across mission, strategy, and values. High confidence we should apply.

Decent fit with some gaps or questions. Worth pursuing if capacity allows.

Limited fit or significant concerns. Should probably focus energy elsewhere.