Stop building funder briefings from scratch for every board meeting.
Your ED asks 'Should we pursue this grant?' and you spend half a day assembling a briefing. Grantable generates professional opportunity briefs automatically — shareable, exportable, and always up to date.
"The ED walks into your office: 'I heard about a grant from the Community Foundation — should we go for it?' You need to research the funder, assess fit, estimate the time investment, and present a recommendation. By the time you've assembled the briefing, half your day is gone. And this happens every week."
Time spent on leadership briefings
The old way vs. the Grantable way.
You know the old workflow. Here's how it changes.
Manual briefing assembly
- 1
Research the funder
Visit their website, check past giving, read their mission and priorities
- 2
Assess fit informally
Does our work align? What's the grant range? Are we eligible? Mental checklist.
- 3
Estimate effort
How long will the application take? What attachments do we need? When is it due?
- 4
Build a briefing document
Write up your findings in a Word doc or email — from scratch, every time
- 5
Present to leadership
Walk the ED or board through your recommendation verbally
- 6
Repeat for every opportunity
A new funder, a new briefing. Same process, same time investment.
Auto-generated opportunity briefs
- 1
Run a fit assessment
AI evaluates the opportunity against your org profile in minutes
- 2
Brief generated automatically
Professional 3-layer brief: funder profile, opportunity context, and fit assessment
- 3
Share with a link
Send the brief URL to your ED, board member, or team — no attachments needed
- 4
Export to PDF
Need a printout for the board meeting? One-click PDF export.
- 5
Always current
Brief updates as new information is added — funder enrichment, assessment changes, notes
- 6
Decision-ready format
Fit score, AI recommendation (Apply/Consider/Skip), effort estimate, deadline — all in one view
Every opportunity deserves a clear recommendation — not a gut feeling.
Let AI assemble the briefing. You make the strategic decision.