Dishaya / Work Packages / Grant Or Proposal Research
A Proposal Evidence Base You Can Cite
Turn one messy question into a client-ready report and deck where every claim taps to its source. For a grant or proposal, that means the problem's scale, the interventions with evidence behind them, and the outcomes funders expect, cited before you write the ask.
What The Package Contains
- A designed report. The scale of the problem, what existing research shows works, comparable funded programs, and the measurable outcomes funders in your space expect. Exportable to Word and PDF.
- A matching deck. The same evidence as presentation slides for a board, a partner, or a review committee. Exportable to PowerPoint.
- A source ledger. Every claim labelled verified, partial, unverified, or contradicted, with the exact source passage one tap away, closed by the Confidence Ledger.
Every claim is checked against its exact source passage before it is written. What fails the check is disclosed, never hidden. Funders read citations for a living; this package arrives with them built in.
An Example Structure
An illustrative outline. Your finished report follows your question, not a fixed shape.
- The Problem And Its Scale
- What The Evidence Says Works
- Comparable Funded Programs
- Measurable Outcomes Funders Expect
- Gaps The Evidence Does Not Settle
- The Confidence Ledger
Who Uses It
Program leads and grant writers at nonprofits building the case for a new intervention. Researchers and founders answering an RFP where every assertion will be checked by a reviewer. Anyone who has lost a week hunting citations for claims they already believed.
Common Questions
What goes into a grant research package?
The evidence base a proposal is built on: the scale of the problem, what existing research shows works, comparable programs that got funded, and the measurable outcomes funders in the space expect. Each claim carries a label (verified, partial, unverified, or contradicted) and taps open its exact source passage.
Can I aim it at my specific program and funder?
Yes. The template opens as an editable question. Change the topic, the intervention, and the funding context before anything runs; nothing is spent until you start the run yourself.
Does a Verified label mean the claim is true?
No. Verified means the claim is supported by the source it cites. Sources themselves can be wrong or out of date, which is why every claim taps open the passage behind it, and why what fails the check is disclosed, never hidden. Read the methodology for what each label promises.
Start Your Evidence Base
One question in. A cited evidence base out, ready for the proposal that carries your name.
Start This Package FreeThe question is editable before anything runs. 5 free packages a month.