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Proposal Preparation

Getting Started

If you’re just getting started, it is highly recommended that you review our training, ORSP 102: The Pre-Award Process, prior to preparing a proposal for submission to an external sponsor.  The session will take you step-by-step through the Pre-Award process at the University of Maine, from identifying funding, to developing an idea into a viable grant opportunity, and preparing the proposal for submission to the sponsor. Access ORSP 102 and all other ORSP workshops via our Training page.

If you have not identified funding for your research idea, visit our Funding Sources page.

If you’ve identified a sponsor and are ready to begin preparing your proposal, use the basic steps for navigating the Pre-Award process below as your guide. A few tips and resources are provided along with each step; for a full list of resources organized by task, please consult the ORSP Resource Guide.

If you would like to have your proposal peer-reviewed prior to submission to the sponsor, consider the UMAPIT (University of Maine Advisory Panel and Internal Team for Research Proposal Review) Program.

Navigating the Pre-Award Process

 

Step 1: Give notice of Intent

  • Provide ORSP Pre-Award Staff with notice of intent to submit a proposal & a copy of the sponsor guidelines.
  • Discuss with your chair, dean or director, issues such as space requirements and cost sharing needs.

Step 2: Define submission timeline

Step 3: Create Proposal in PARS

Step 4: Begin to develop proposal content

Step 5: Initiate subrecipient process (if applicable)

  • Subrecipient/Vendor (Professional Services) Determination: In order to meet audit and compliance requirements and avoid problems down the road, it is important to make the proper determination in the proposal stage.
  • Subrecipients are distinguished from vendors (Professional Services) by having their own key personnel, scope of work, budget and budget justification.
  • For more guidance, please refer to the Budget Categories “Professional Services” and “Subrecipients” in the ORSP Guide to Budget Preparation and/or OMB Circular A-133 §_.210.
  • If your proposal includes a subrecipient, you must submit a Subrecipient Commitment Form to ORSP. It provides a checklist of documents and certifications required by sponsors, as well as an area for the authorized official to sign.

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Step 6: Consider staffing needs

Step 7: Address compliance

Step 8: Prepare budget & budget justification

Step 9: Submit budget and budget justification to ORSP for initial review

Step 10: Review & Revise & submit draft proposal to ORSP

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Step 11: Route the proposal in PARS

  • Timeline for ORSP proposal review
  • PARS (Proposal Approval Routing System)
  • Proposals cannot be routed for approval until ORSP has approved your project budget and budget justification, and provided you a submission number.
  • Know who your last approver is. Once you have received notification they have approved, you will need to log in to PARS and submit the proposal to ORSP.

Step 12:  Submit final proposal to ORSP

  • Timeline for ORSP proposal review
  • PARS (Proposal Approval Routing System)
  • ORSP Pre-Award Staff
  • Once all approvers in PARS have approved, be sure to log in to PARS and submit the proposal to ORSP.
  • Submit the final application package or inform ORSP you are ready to submit your proposal to the sponsor (provided they have web access to the proposal).
  • Be available! If you will be out of town on or near a deadline, please plan to finalize your proposal before leaving and provide contact information to ORSP in case there are questions after you’ve left.

 

Miscellaneous

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