Improve Your Grant Proposals with Grammarly

January 02, 2017

All grant proposals require copyediting before submission. If you don't have an editor on your staff, one option is to hire a freelance copy editor.  Another option is to recruit a colleague to review your proposal for grammar, formatting, general flow, and coherence.  If none of these options are open to you—you don't have an editor on staff, you can't afford a freelance editor, and no one in your organization has the time or skills to take on copyediting—a tool you should know about is Grammarly.

Grammarly can help you refine your proposal writing. (Landing page for Grammarly (screenshot January 2026))

INTRODUCTION TO GRAMMARLY

Grammarly is a Web-based editor that will scan your text for the proper use of more than 250 advanced grammar rules. It will also check spelling and flag overused words.  If you use Microsoft Word or Apple Pages, you already have access to a built-in tool that checks for spelling and basic grammar issues. Grammarly takes it a step further by not only highlighting potential issues but also by explaining what the grammatical issues are and the options for resolving them. In addition to spelling and grammar checks, Grammarly includes a plagiarism scan, which compares text against eight billion Web pages and alerts you to text published elsewhere, and a citation generation feature, which will generate citations in MLA, APA, or the Chicago style. According to the company's website, Grammarly catches 10x more errors than Microsoft Office. 

HOW TO USE GRAMMARLY TO IMPROVE GRANT PROPOSALS

If you are working on a grant proposal, you can use Grammarly to review each proposal draft as you go through the process, or you can save the Grammarly review until after you have your final draft ready. Either way, Grammarly can help. If you're pretty confident in your ability to catch grammatical errors, you can use Grammarly at the end of the grant writing process as a backup to your own careful reviews. A Grammarly scan will catch things a traditional (human) editor would pick up, such as extra spaces between words, obvious misspellings, and run-on sentences. Grammarly also analyzes sentence length and highlights overly long sentences for wordiness.

Checking Proposal Drafts with Grammarly

Using Grammarly to scan your proposal drafts before you send them out for review can also be very helpful.  Each time you complete a Grammarly scan, the program will highlight areas it believes need improvement. Reviewing the results of the Grammarly scan can help you see where you need to restructure sentences or revise wording. Additionally, every time you finish a proposal draft—particularly between the first and second drafts—you've probably inserted new text. Running a Grammarly scan on each draft will help ensure that the new text is free from obvious errors. Another advantage of running Grammarly scans on every proposal draft is that reviewers, no matter how many times they are told to focus on the content and not worry about copy editing, still struggle to refrain from doing it. If you want to minimize the risk that reviewers will spend their time copyediting rather than making substantive comments, doing a Grammarly scan before you send drafts for review should help.

Using Grammarly for Final Editing

If you use Grammarly at the end of the grant writing process, you'll want to reserve a couple of hours to run the Grammarly scan, review each suggested change, make any necessary revisions, and rescan the document to ensure everything has been addressed. Using Grammarly is an iterative process.  Depending on the length and complexity of the document, you may end up going through the process of scanning—>reviewing—>scanning multiple times until you have a final draft that reads well.

IMPROVE MORE THAN GRANT PROPOSALS WITH GRAMMARLY

Grant proposals aren't the only documents where Grammarly comes in handy. In the context of proposal writing, Grammarly is also useful to scan cover letters and supporting materials for grant applications, such as resumes of proposed staff. 

Outside of grant proposals and related documents, Grammarly can improve the quality of cover letters, resumes, work emails, and business letters. For online content, Grammarly offers a browser extension that can be activated to review any text you write online, including blog posts or Facebook comments.

To have Grammarly scan your writing, you have three options. You can:

  • Use a browser extension for online content.

  • Activate an Office extension if you use Windows.

  • Upload your document to your Grammarly account after logging in at www.grammarly.com (any document you upload to Grammarly will be saved on the site until you choose to delete it).

WHAT GRAMMARLY CAN'T DO

Grammarly is a tool. It's not foolproof. It can help you produce a stronger document, but it doesn't catch everything and doesn't fix things automatically. Grammarly scans your writing and points out possible grammar errors, spelling errors, and problems with sentence construction or length. However, you can't do a wholesale "accept" for all the proposed changes. You'll need to go through each suggested correction and decide how to respond. While Grammarly will do a more thorough check than the built-in spell checkers in Microsoft Word or Apple Pages, it won't spot all problems, and sometimes its suggestions are wrong or inappropriate for the context. Grammarly will facilitate better writing. It doesn't replace carefully reviewing your document, and it's not equivalent to having a professional editor review it.  However, one major benefit of using Grammarly is that, by having to evaluate Grammarly's proposed corrections, you'll find yourself reviewing your writing more carefully and catching problems you might have missed in the past.

IS GRAMMARLY FOR YOU?

Unless you're a strong writer and copy editor who rarely misses a grammatical or spelling issue, Grammarly can help you. If you're not sure whether Grammarly is for you, the company makes it easy to try their product with a free version that checks your text for 150 grammar and spelling issues. Grammarly's premium account offers a much larger menu of features. 

For anyone writing something that needs to be as error-free as possible — such as a grant proposal or resume — Grammarly's premium version would be a worthwhile purchase. Grammarly would also be a good investment if English is not your first language. While you need to bring a basic understanding of English to Grammarly to evaluate Grammarly's suggested changes, a Grammarly scan can give you direction. After you scan your document with Grammarly, you'll see your biggest trouble spots. For example, maybe you're solid with spelling, but there are a few grammar rules that regularly trip you up. Grammarly can help you see areas where you need to improve your skills.

GRAMMARLY PRICING

As mentioned above, Grammarly offers a free, basic account. If you want to upgrade to the premium account, you can choose from three subscription options. You can purchase a monthly ($29.95/mo.), quarterly ($59.95/quarter), or annual subscription ($139.95/year).  A quarterly subscription could be a good fit for a job hunt or for a block of time when you anticipate working on a number of grant proposals or other donor documents.

Having a second pair of eyes review your grant proposals and other important documents is always advisable. If you can afford to pay a professional copy editor, do so. If you can't afford a copy editor, and you don't have friends or colleagues who are good at spotting English grammar and spelling mistakes, consider a subscription to Grammarly.

OTHER WEB-BASED EDITING SERVICES

If you prefer working with a real person, consider Editorr.com. Just like with Grammarly, with Editorr.com, you upload your text for editing, and it is returned to you with edits. The difference is that your editing job is picked up by a real editor, not a software program. Editorr.com has editors working 24/7. Submitted jobs are picked up by an editor within minutes. The text has been edited and returned quickly. Additionally, you can chat with the editor about their edits.


Previous
Previous

How to Increase the Odds that Your Grant Application Will Be Funded

Next
Next

Improve Your Chances of Getting Grant Funding: Create a Communications Strategy