Posts Tagged ‘financing’

PBS Challenge Fund

The PBS Challenge Fund is accepting proposals for television project proposals will national appeal that will attract new audiences.

“The Program Challenge Fund was created to support high-profile, primetime, limited series for the national public television schedule.  The Program Challenge Fund is jointly administered by CPB and PBS, which make funding decisions based on mutually established programming goals and objectives.

CPB and PBS have refined the purpose of the Program Challenge Fund in an effort to bring additional impact to the National Program Service schedule. The Program Challenge Fund funds high-visibility, high-impact, limited series that offer a definitive take on a subject or break new ground in popular, public service media.  CPB and PBS expect a successful Program Challenge Fund program to be the highlight of a given season’s schedule, have the potential to generate publicity, and attract new audiences to PBS broadcast and online content. ”

For more information, click here.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

PUMA Offers Documentary Development Grants

“An international documentary development fund, offering 40 awards annually of up to 5,000 euros each.”

“This is a rapid response fund, providing resources in the early stages of documentary projects, to shoot and edit a film trailer. The fund is open to filmmakers of any nationality and grants will be awarded on a quarterly basis.  These awards are open to emerging and established filmmakers working anywhere in the world.
We welcome one-off, creative documentary ideas of any length and subject, in any style and form, but we are particularly keen on ideas that speak to PUMA.Vision’s core values of safe, peace and creative.”

Click here for more information.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

Rainbow Enowment Offers Grants for Projects That Support the LGBT Community

“The Rainbow Endowment is a non-profit grant-making organization that funds organizations and projects designed to enrich the lives of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transsexual (LGBT) people.”  Scroll down to the bottom on the page to find out about their grant-making process.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

National Geographic All Roads Seed Grant

“The Seed Grant Program funds film projects from indigenous and underrepresented minority-culture filmmakers year-round and from all reaches of the globe. The program awards up to 16 film projects annually with grants ranging from $1,000 to $10,000.  Submission deadlines are quarterly on the 15th of each March, June, September and December. All applications must be received in the National Geographic All Roads office no later than midnight Eastern Standard Time on each of the quarterly due dates. If the due date falls on a Saturday or Sunday Eastern Standard Time, then applications are to be received in the National Geographic All Roads office no later than the Friday before the 15th of that particular quarterly due date.”

For more information, click here.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

Sundance Documentary Grants Up To $2-Million Every Year

Every year, the Sundance Institute Documentary Fund grants between $1 – 2 million to non-fiction films exploring contemporary issues.  The deadline has passed for 2011 but check back with them often because they usually start excepting submissions at the beginning of each year.

Visit the Sundance Institute Documentary Fund webpage for more information.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

POV Calls for Documentary and Film Submissions

“POV, public television’s premier showcase for independent, non-fiction film seeks programs from all perspectives to showcase in its annual national PBS series. All subjects, aesthetic approaches and lengths are welcomed.”

Here are some of the guidelines:

  • Non-fiction only.
  • Works by independent filmmakers.
  • Works that have not been broadcast nationally. 
  • Works that are complete or near completion.
  • Works not previously submitted to POV
  • Works of any length will be considered. Works that comply with PBS underwriting guidelines.

For more information, visit the POV submissions page.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

NEA Production Grants For Up To $200,000.

The National Endowment For The Arts offers grants for television and radio projects that feature the arts.

“Supports projects for radio and television arts programs that are intended for national broadcast. Grants generally range from $10,000 to $200,000.”

For more information, visit their website.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

Carnegie Corporation Grant Info

The Carnegie Corporation of New York funds projects that fit within their mission.  “Our aim is to invest in innovative projects that can have measurable impact and can create meaningful, transformative change.”

Visit their website for more information.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

Fundraising Through CrowdSourcing & CrowdFunding

Crowdsourcing (also known as crowdfunding) is a relatively new term made popular by new media sites that draw on the collective and voluntary knowledge, expertise or support of their visitors or users.  If you look up the term “crowdsourcing” via Google’s define function, only 4 definitions appear (“crowdfuning” only has one).  Yet, crowdsourcing is increasingly gaining in popularity as a way to raise funds for documentary and series productions. 

I have not used crowdsoursing myself but have been invited to donate through crowdsourcing sites such as Kickstarter.com , IndieGoGo.com and RocketHub.com.  These sites allow producers to present their ideas and projects then set a monetary fundraising goal (such as $5,000 in completion funds for a documentary) and a time frame.  If the target goal is not reached on some sites, the project does not receive the funds.  Other sites give the project owner whatever funds are collected.  Most sites charge a fee. 

Visitors to the project fundraising site are able to donate however much they like and are often offered thank you gifts for certain donated amounts.  For example, one project I saw offered the documentary soundtrack to anyone who donated at the $100 level.

I recently that the chance to ask some of my colleagues in the independent production business about their experiences raising money on crowdsourcing sites. 

  • Anne Mathide Cobern exceeded her $5000 kickstarter goal for her thesis film “Pretty All the Time.” Her film was winner of DC Shorts 2009 Script DC and a semi-finalist for the Carole Fielding award through the University Film and Video Association.
  • Mary Ratcliff is a writer and director who used crowdsourced for her film “Catching Up.”  You can find out more about Mary on her website.
  • Ishu Krishna’s company is Citra Productions.  She is currently crowdsourcing her film “Arrange to Settle.”  Check out her kickstarter page here
  • Emmett Williams is an independent producer is using crowdsourcing to raise funds for a short documentary about people living with Multiple Sclerosis called “If You Can Dream.” Check out his IndieGoGo site here for more about the his documentary.  Or visit his website.

 

Why did you choose to raise funds through a crowdsourcing site rather than ask family and friends?

Anne Mathilde Coburn: For me, it’s a mix. In many ways, I probably could have gotten cash straight up from family, which has accounted for a good bit of the total, but I like the artificial deadline of Kickstarter–it creates deadline pressure on the part of the donor and the person with the project, which (at least with me, my family and friends) is a real concern in an open-ended fundraising scenario. I would suggest making arrangements with large potential donors to hang back until the last minute in case you have difficulties reaching the end goal. Also, craft a personal letter to everyone you know that hopefully creates an emotional tie between you and your potential donors. The good thing about social media/Kickstarter/crowdsourcing et al, is that if your contacts are in wildly different cities (for me, they’re in New York, DC, and Cleveland), people like to come to a place where they can follow the progress of the film. A blog with a link to the Kickstarter page; the Kickstarter page itself; Twitter updates– all of these things take time, but create a deeper connection between you and your donors/friends.

I’m actually using Kickstarter right now for my thesis film, which is a short narrative piece. I’m trying to raise $5,000. We’re currently at $4,265 with 21 days to go. I should also mention, though, that I have been saving for my thesis film (for 8 months), and have gotten a couple of grants from my university in order to make this film as well.

How involved is the process?

Mary Ratliff: I raised $500 through Kickstarter and I fully believe I would have raised over $400 of that through direct donations without the campaign. If you want to get substantial results through Kickstarter you need to make fundraising almost a full time job with promotions and getting your link out there. Getting your project featured (on their site) is one of the best ways to actually get funding from strangers, which requires a lot links back and forth from your page to and from other websites, people tweeting, etc.  You have to work really hard to build your own press because they don’t do any of that for you unless you are already really popular and successful.  Also, I’ve been told repeatedly that projects with videos have much, much higher success rates.

Are there any fees involved?

Mary Ratliff: You have to account for the fees that you have to pay to both the crowdsourcing website and their payment processing system (IndieGoGo and Paypal, Kickstarter and Amazon).  Depending on the size of the donation, they can run over 10%, but that’s the average.

What are some benefits to fundraising through crowdsourcing sites?

Ishu Krishna: I put up a paypal link for my previous project, and asked people to donate.  I got some donations but not a lot.  With Kickstarter, it gives me a kick in the butt to be more aggressive with fundraising, and it puts the urgency behind it. I have also had two people contact me through kickstarter to invest large amounts, and not just donate through kickstarter.  I am currently in talks with them, and not sure if it will pan out.  But it’s two people I am talking to that I didn’t know before.

What types of thank you gifts are you offering?

Emmett Williams:

  • For $1: You will be added to the IF YOU CAN DREAM email list to receive updates on the progress of the film throughout production.
  • For $25: The above plus a DVD of the broadcast television version of the documentary and a Thank You in the film credits.
  • For $100: The above plus the official “IF YOU CAN DREAM” t-shirt.
  • For $250: The above plus the extended Directors Cut of the documentary available to film festivals.
  • For $500: The above plus a Producers credit in the film.
  • For $1000: The above plus you will play a role in the development of the film through special online screenings where your opinion of the Work In Progress will be sought.

 

For more information about crowdsource financing check out this blog post  from FilmContact.com.  It talks about some interesting crowdsourcing distribution concepts.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

ITVS Funding Initiatives

ITVS (Independent Television Service) has a number of funding initiatives that are funded during various parts of each year.  They include:

  • Open Call – completion grants
  • International Call – brining international subject to the U.S. audience
  • Diversity Development Fund – research and development grants for producers of color
  • Commissioned Funding – grants given at the discretion of ITVS for projects that fall outside of the other categories

For more information, visit the ITVS funding webpage.

Find out more about grants and funding in the grants and funding category.

To purchase a download of the Funding Your Dream Documentary seminar, click here.

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