The Grant

Niels Tudor-Vinther
The Grant
Latest episode

237 episodes

  • The Grant

    The Grant Collaboration - ENCO Series (2): Maximising Impact Through Communication, Dissemination and Exploitation

    28/04/2026 | 35 mins.
    How ENCO works with visibility, stakeholder engagement and market uptake

    Check out the episode website
    In this second of the ENCO Series, produced in paid collaboration with ENCO Consulting, I’m joined by Rosanna Buonfiglio and Marco de la Feld to talk about one of the most important but often blurred areas in EU projects: communication, dissemination and exploitation. We unpack the differences between the three and why it matters to keep them distinct. Communication is about making the project visible and understandable. Dissemination is about making sure the right people can actually access and use the results. Exploitation is about what happens when you want those results to go further into strategy, market positioning, business models and real uptake.
    We then move into how ENCO works with these areas in practice. Rosanna explains how communication and dissemination strategies are built from the proposal stage by identifying audiences, messages and the right channels, while Marco shows how exploitation connects project results to business plans, competitor analysis, IPR strategy and post-project development. Using the SYMBA project as a case, they show how these three dimensions can reinforce each other when they are designed together from the start. It’s a practical episode for anyone writing proposals, managing EU projects or trying to make sure that project results do not just sit on a website after the funding ends.

    Time codes:
    02:05 Guest introduction
    06:26 Why communication matters
    10:37 Communication, dissemination and exploitation
    14:16 ENCO’s approach to C&D&E strategy
    23:54 Delivering communication in practice - the SYMBA case
    32:28 Outro
  • The Grant

    #222 Young Professionals in EU Funding

    27/04/2026 | 1h 11 mins.
    Young Professionals in EU Funding – Careers, Challenges & Growth w/Oliver Cressall from Venturenomix

    Check out the episode website

    In this episode I’m joined by Oliver Cressall from Venturenomix to talk about young professionals in EU funding. Oliver shares what it feels like to enter the field from the proposal support side — helping with consortium building, partner coordination and the administrative backbone of bids — while still learning the language, structures and unwritten rules of the system. We talk about the invisible barriers juniors face: feeling “not experienced enough”, struggling with jargon, and assuming that everyone else in the room understands far more than they do.
    We then move into the bigger picture: where young people can actually enter this world, what they are looking for when they do, and what too many employers still get wrong. Oliver speaks very clearly about meaningful work, climate motivation, flexibility, mobility, autonomy and the need for managers who support rather than exploit young staff. We also talk about LinkedIn pressure, the lack of safe spaces to share doubts, and why this sector needs to take junior well-being and development much more seriously if it wants to keep good people.

    Time codes:
    02:12 Guest introduction and fly in
    09:05 The invisible barrier: “I’m not experienced enough”
    22:25 Entry points into EU funding: more paths than you think
    33:38 What young professionals are really looking for
    44:37 Safe spaces and communities: why they matter
    59:43 Advice to young professionals – and to the system
    01:05:31 The toughest challenge
  • The Grant

    #221 Better Proposals - Impact, Training & Research Communication

    20/04/2026 | 1h 7 mins.
    Better Grant Proposals – Impact, Training & Research Communication

    Check out the episode websiteIn this episode I’m joined by Elaine Massung, founder of Academic Smartcuts, to talk about how researchers can write better grant proposals and communicate their ideas more effectively. Elaine has worked as a researcher, postdoc, funding agency professional at EPSRC and now as an independent trainer. That gives her a very practical view of where proposals go wrong: researchers often do not give themselves enough time, do not read the guidance carefully enough, start with a solution before defining the problem, or fail to explain their work in language reviewers can actually use.
    We also dig into impact — one of the most repeated but still weakest parts of many proposals. Elaine and I talk about why “publish in high-impact journals, attend conferences and host a workshop” is not enough, and how researchers can think more creatively about visibility and use: trade magazines, teaching materials, podcasts, blogs, stakeholder meetings, existing networks and other channels that actually fit the project. We also discuss proposal audits, training, time pressure, networking challenges and why getting help early is not weakness — it is often what makes the proposal stronger.

    Time codes:
    01:47 Guest introduction and fly in
    06:20 The Core Insight: Everyone Makes the Same Mistakes
    14:51 Teaching Researchers to Think Differently
    24:57 The Impact Problem
    44:27 New Ways of Creating Visibility
    53:24 Reflections and advice
    56:42 The toughest challenge
  • The Grant

    The Grant Collaboration: ENCO Series (1) In Tune with Your Ideas - Our role as European Projects Consultants

    14/04/2026 | 36 mins.
    How consultants translate innovation into strong EU proposals

    Check out the episode website

    In this first episode of the ENCO Series, produced in paid collaboration with ENCO Consulting, I’m joined by Antonietta Pizza to talk about the consultant perspective on proposal writing. We unpack what European project consultants actually do beyond the clichés: finding the right call, understanding the innovation behind the idea, building a strong consortium, shaping a realistic work plan and translating highly technical content into a proposal language that evaluators can follow. Antonietta explains how this process begins with listening carefully to the client, understanding how they work and then building a proposal process that is both structured and collaborative.
    From there we move into the real-life complexity of proposal development: different partner rhythms, holiday periods, timeline pressure, templates, impact logic and the challenge of keeping the whole application coherent. Antonietta shares how ENCO works through repeated calls and co-creation with key partners to make sure the proposal is ambitious but still feasible, and why the consultant’s external eye can be so valuable in identifying weak spots early. We also touch on a concrete funded hydrogen case, showing how a highly technical concept can be turned into a convincing EU proposal when the right structure, consortium and narrative come together.

    Time codes:
    01:56 Guest introduction and fly in
    05:10 The consultant perspective
    08:56 Translating ideas into EU projects
    12:56 Designing a strong proposal
    22:28 Common proposal pitfalls
    28:32 Success Story – LIGNOFUN
  • The Grant

    #220 A Book on Diversity Leadership in Research Management

    13/04/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    A book conversation on diversity literacy, leadership and global research

    Check out the episode website

    In this episode I’m joined by Jakob Feldtfos Christensen, Director of DIVERSIuniTY and co-host of the Diversity in Research Podcast, to talk about his new book: Diversity Leadership in Research Management: A Practical Guide. We unpack why he felt the need to write it now: research management is maturing as a profession, diversity is becoming more deeply embedded in research funding and project work, and yet many of the conversations around it remain too abstract, too polarised or too detached from the practical reality of running international collaborations. Jakob wanted to write something different — a short, practical book that research managers can actually use in their everyday work.
    From there we go into the substance of the book. Jakob explains why diversity literacy is one of the key concepts: not just representation or values statements, but a real professional skillset for people working in research support, project development and international collaboration. We talk about how the book moves from leadership to the research support office and then to the individual research manager, and why this matters more and more in a world of Horizon Europe gender analysis requirements, expanding global collaboration, AI-supported writing and growing geopolitical tension. It’s a conversation about a book — but also about the future of research management as a people profession.

    Time codes:
    01:40 Guest introduction and fly in
    06:03 Background and Motivation
    18:42 The Book
    32:45 The Work
    48:46 Finalization and Release
    54:59 The toughest challenge

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About The Grant

Getting EU funding for your research project idea is great, but the process from project idea to submission of the full proposal is rough and tough. 20.000 proposals are submitted every year and every single one of these preparations goes through many challenges. Most of these challenges have the same overall characteristics, that can be minimized or eliminated by being aware of them already when starting the proposal process. This podcast is for proposals preparers looking for tips, tricks, advice or just an audible pad on the shoulder to deal with the unavoidable tough work
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