award-application
Award Application Writer
Produces award submissions and grant applications that address every criterion with quantified evidence. The goal is a document where every paragraph earns points on the scorecard.
Process
Step 1: Gather the brief
Ask the user for:
- Award/grant name and organiser
- Selection criteria (the exact list, verbatim if possible)
- Word limits (per criterion and/or total)
- Judging rubric or weighting (if publicly available)
- Category entered (if multiple categories exist)
- Whether this is a first submission or a resubmission
- Any specific achievements, metrics, or stories they want included
If the user has a URL for the award, fetch the criteria page. Many awards publish judging guides or past winner profiles — these are gold for understanding what evaluators value.
Step 2: Map achievements to criteria
Create a working table before writing anything:
| Criterion | Key achievement | Evidence/metric | Story or example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Innovation | AI workflow automation | Report time: 3 days to 4 hours | Staff training program, 12 people |
| Growth | Revenue increase | 40% YoY, $X to $Y | New service line launched Q2 |
| Community | Pro bono program | 200 hours, 15 local orgs | Bushfire recovery site builds |
Every criterion must have at least one entry. A blank row means a missing section in the submission — and missing sections lose marks or trigger automatic rejection.
If the user cannot provide evidence for a criterion, flag it explicitly. Better to know the gap now than to submit vague filler.
Step 3: Write the submission
Address criteria in the exact order they appear on the application form. Judges often score sequentially — don't make them hunt for your answer to criterion 3 buried in the criterion 1 section.
For each criterion, use the STAR structure:
- Situation: Brief context (1-2 sentences). What was the starting point or challenge?
- Task: What needed to happen? What was the objective?
- Action: What specifically did you/the business do? Be concrete.
- Result: What changed? Quantify the outcome.
Keep each criterion response self-contained. A judge reading only that section should understand the achievement without needing context from other sections.
Step 4: Review against limits
- Check word counts per section and total
- Verify every criterion is addressed
- Confirm all claims have supporting evidence
- Read the opening line of each section — does it lead with impact?
Writing Approach
Lead with impact, not chronology
The first sentence of every section should be your strongest claim.
Wrong approach:
Founded in 2018, Acme Digital began as a two-person consultancy. Over the following years, we grew steadily, adding new team members and services. In 2025, we achieved significant growth.
Right approach:
Acme Digital grew revenue 40% in 12 months ($850K to $1.19M) while maintaining a 94% client retention rate. This growth came from a deliberate shift into AI-powered automation services, launched in Q1 2025.
Chronology can appear in the body as context, but never as the opening.
Quantify everything possible
Judges compare applicants. Numbers make comparison easy and your claims credible.
| Vague | Quantified |
|---|---|
| "Significant growth" | "Revenue increased 40% ($850K to $1.19M)" |
| "Many clients" | "127 active clients across 3 states" |
| "Improved efficiency" | "Reduced report generation from 3 days to 4 hours" |
| "Community involvement" | "Donated 200 hours of pro bono work to 15 local organisations" |
| "Award-winning team" | "Team of 8, including 2 certified Google Partners and 1 Shopify Expert" |
If exact numbers are not available, use defensible approximations with qualifiers: "approximately", "more than", "over the past 12 months".
Show, don't tell
Remove adjectives. Replace them with evidence.
| Telling | Showing |
|---|---|
| "We're innovative and forward-thinking" | "Trained 12 staff in AI tools, reducing average report time from 3 days to 4 hours" |
| "We deliver exceptional customer service" | "Net Promoter Score of 72, with 94% client retention over 3 years" |
| "We're passionate about our community" | "Built 6 pro bono websites for Hunter Valley bushfire-affected businesses in 2025" |
Respect word limits absolutely
Many awards auto-disqualify entries that exceed word limits. If the limit is 500 words, submit 480-500. Using significantly fewer words than allowed leaves points on the table.
When tight on words:
- Cut setup/context sentences first (judges know the industry)
- Combine STAR elements where natural
- Remove hedging language ("we believe", "we feel that", "it could be said")
- One strong example beats three weak ones
What Different Awards Look For
Business awards (Telstra, local chamber, BEC)
- Growth trajectory with numbers
- Innovation in products, services, or operations
- Leadership and team development
- Community contribution and social impact
- Resilience and adaptability (especially post-COVID, post-disaster)
Industry/professional awards
- Technical excellence and methodology
- Client outcomes with measurable results
- Thought leadership (publications, speaking, mentoring)
- Industry contribution beyond your own business
Grants
- Clear problem statement (what needs fixing and why it matters)
- Feasibility (can you actually deliver this?)
- Budget justification (every line item tied to an activity)
- Measurable outcomes (how will you know it worked?)
- Alignment with the grant's stated objectives
Anti-Patterns
Vague claims without evidence. "We are industry leaders in digital innovation" means nothing without proof. Every claim needs a number, a name, or a specific example.
Hyperbole and superlatives. "The most innovative company in the region" invites scepticism. Let the evidence speak — if it is the strongest entry, the judges will reach that conclusion themselves.
Missing selection criteria. Even one unaddressed criterion can mean rejection. If you genuinely have nothing for a criterion, acknowledge it honestly and pivot to what you do have: "While we have not yet expanded internationally, our domestic growth of 40% positions us for..."
Company history dump. Founding date, mission statement, and values belong in a one-sentence context line, not a full paragraph. Judges want achievements, not autobiography.
Passive voice and hedging. "It is believed that our approach may have contributed to improved outcomes" vs "Our approach cut processing time by 60%." Be direct.
Example: Innovation Criterion
Too vague:
Acme Digital is committed to innovation and staying ahead of industry trends. We regularly explore new technologies and implement cutting-edge solutions for our clients. Our team is passionate about finding better ways to solve problems and we believe innovation is at the core of everything we do.
Right approach:
In Q1 2025, Acme Digital deployed AI-powered content workflows across 40 client accounts, reducing average content production time from 5 days to 8 hours per campaign. The system combines automated research, draft generation, and human editorial review — maintaining quality (client satisfaction held at 4.7/5) while cutting costs 35%. We trained all 12 team members in prompt engineering over a 6-week internal program, making AI literacy a baseline skill rather than a specialist function. Three clients have since adopted similar internal workflows based on our methodology.
The second version names the innovation, quantifies the impact, explains how it was implemented, and shows downstream effects — all in fewer words than the vague version.
Context Rules
First-time applicants: Judges expect polish from repeat entrants. Compensate by being exceptionally specific with evidence. First-timers often win on the strength of a genuine story well told.
Small business competing against large: Don't try to match their scale. Highlight agility, personal service, per-capita impact, and percentage growth (a 40% revenue increase is impressive regardless of starting size).
Resubmitting after a loss: If feedback was provided, address every point raised. If not, strengthen the weakest section and add any new achievements since last submission. Mention continued commitment if appropriate: "Building on our 2025 entry, we have since..."
Multiple categories: Tailor each submission separately. Reusing identical text across categories signals low effort and often misaligns with different criteria weightings.