Funding competition Knowledge Asset Grant Fund: Extend, Spring 2024

Eligible UK public sector organisations can apply for up to £250,000 from the Knowledge Asset Grant Fund in this strand. The funding will aid exploitation of intangible assets that have a broader application or client base than their owner organisation.

This competition is now closed.

Start new application

Competition sections

Description

The Knowledge Asset Grant Fund (KAGF) is run by the Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT) and funded by the Department for Science Innovation and Technology (DSIT).

The programme has £15 million funding available from 2021 to March 2025. Budget limits are imposed at each panel meeting to ensure only the best proposals are funded.

Innovate UK is administering this competition on behalf of GOTT.

The aim of this competition is to support the identification and development of public sector knowledge assets, including repurposing, commercialisation or expanded use. These assets can include:

  • inventions
  • designs
  • certain research and development (R&D) outcomes
  • data and information
  • creative outputs such as text, video, graphics, software and source code
  • know-how and expertise
  • business processes, services
  • other intellectual resources

This competition is split into 3 strands:

It is your responsibility to ensure you are applying to the correct strand for your project. You will not be able to transfer your application and it will not be sent for assessment if it does not meet the eligibility criteria.

In applying to this competition, you are entering into a competitive process.

This competition closes at 11am UK time on the deadline stated in this Innovate UK competition brief. We cannot guarantee other government or third party sites will always show the correct competition information.

Funding type

Grant

Project size

Your project’s total grant funding request must be between £100,001 and £250,000.

Accessibility and Inclusion

We welcome and encourage applications from people of all backgrounds and are committed to making our application process accessible to everyone. This includes making reasonable adjustments, for people who have a disability or a long-term condition and face barriers applying to us.

You can contact us at any time to ask for guidance.

We recommend you contact us at least 15 working days before this competition’s closing date to allow us to put the most suitable support in place. The support we can provide may be limited if you contact us close to the competition deadline.

You can contact Innovate UK by email or call 0300 321 4357. Our phone lines are open from 9am to 12pm and 2pm to 5pm UK time, Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays).

Who can apply

Your project

Your project must:

  • have a grant funding request between £100,001 and £250,000
  • start by 1 June 2024
  • end by 30 November 2025
  • last between 2 and 18 months
  • spend at least 50% of the budget during the first half of the project unless the project starts and ends within the same financial year
  • generate social, financial or economic benefits to the UK
  • to develop a knowledge asset that is majority owned by the UK government organisation applying for funding

Under current restrictions, this competition will not fund any procurement, commercial, business development or supply chain activity with any Russian or Belarusian entity as lead, partner or subcontractor. This includes any goods or services originating from a Russian or Belarusian source.

Lead organisation

To lead a project your organisation must be a UK public sector organisation headed by an Accounting Officer responsible for upholding Managing Public Money (MPM). Eligible organisations are generally central government organisations and their arm’s length bodies, though others may be in scope.

Your project must have approval from a Senior Civil Servant, or equivalent from the lead organisation, with delegation from the Accounting Officer, up to and including the value of the grant being sought.

Central government departments, arm’s length bodies and public sector research establishments (PSREs) are eligible for the Knowledge Asset Grant Fund (KAGF).

Organisations in the NHS secondary and tertiary care sector, and publicly owned commercial organisations, are not eligible to apply for grant funding or other services from the Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT).

We would encourage NHS Trusts to look at alternative funding schemes available to the NHS secondary and tertiary care sector by viewing Health Technology Pathway: Navigation Tool for Innovators in England document.

If you have any queries, you can contact the KAGF secretariat at GrantFund.GOTT@dsit.gov.uk. You can also visit the GOTT Grant Fund webpages, where we offer further guidance and support for our applicant community.

Subcontractors

Subcontractors are allowed in this competition.

Subcontractors can be from anywhere in the UK and you must select them through your usual procurement process.

You can use subcontractors from overseas but must make the case in your application as to why you could not use suppliers from the UK.

You must provide a detailed rationale, evidence of the potential UK contractors you approached and the reasons why they were unable to work with you. We will not accept a cheaper cost as a sufficient reason to use an overseas subcontractor.

All subcontractor costs must be justified and appropriate to the total project costs. An explanation must be provided as to why external expertise is needed. It is your organisation’s responsibility to ensure any spend of the grant fund follows existing commercial arrangements of your organisation and Crown Commercial rules.

The Knowledge Assets Grant Fund aims to support the development of public sector owned Knowledge Assets for the benefit for the UK. If the KAGF secretariat or panel concludes that the project would disproportionately benefit a subcontractor, the project will be deemed ineligible.

Number of applications

An eligible public sector organisation can lead on any number of applications for different projects.

Use of animals in research and innovation

Innovate UK expects and supports the provision and safeguarding of welfare standards for animals used in research and innovation, according to best practice and up to date guidance.

Applicants must ensure that all of the proposed work within projects, both that in the UK and internationally, will comply with the UKRI guidance on the use of animals in research and innovation.

Any projects selected for funding which involve animals will be asked to provide additional information on welfare and ethical considerations, as well as compliance with any relevant legislation as part of the project start-up process. This information will be reviewed before an award is made.

Previous applications

You can use a previously submitted application to apply for this competition where there has been a significant improvement of the application.

Follow-on funding is permitted for a previously funded project, subject to demonstrating successful delivery of the previous project’s outcomes and evidence of positive additional impact from the new project. Any previous submissions to this fund regarding the same Knowledge Asset, and related assessments may be shared with assessors to inform scoring of the latest submission.

We do not accept duplicate applications in the same funding round. If you have multiple projects which are similar, for example with similar outputs or products, you can consider combining the projects.

We will not award funding if you or your organisation has failed to:

  • complete and return a Knowledge Asset Grant Fund final report following the conclusion of a project previously funded under the KAGF
  • comply with grant terms and conditions for a project previously funded under KAGF

If other projects led by your organisation fall into one of these scenarios, then the KAGF secretariat reserves the right to not award funding until the issue is addressed.

Subsidy control (and State aid where applicable)

This competition provides funding in line with the Subsidy Control Act 2022. Further information about the Subsidy requirements can be found within the Subsidy Control Act 2022 (legislation.gov.uk).

Innovate UK is unable to award organisations that are considered to be in financial difficulty. We will conduct financial viability and eligibility tests to confirm this is not the case following the application stage.

EU State aid rules now only apply in limited circumstances. Please see the Windsor Framework to check if these rules apply to your organisation.

Further Information

If you are unsure about your obligations under the Subsidy Control Act 2022 or the State aid rules, you should take independent legal advice. We are unable to advise on individual eligibility or legal obligations.

You must always make sure that the funding awarded to you is compliant with all current Subsidy Control legislation applicable in the United Kingdom.

This aims to regulate any advantage granted by a public sector body which threatens to, or actually distorts competition in the United Kingdom or any other country or countries.

Funding

The programme has £15 million total funding available from 2021 to March 2025 across all grant streams. Budget limits are imposed at each panel meeting to ensure only the best proposals are funded.

Funding will be in the form of a grant.

You can request 100% funding for your eligible project costs of between £100,001 up to a maximum of £250,000.

Eligible costs include but are not restricted to:

  • market research
  • building prototypes
  • testing asset development
  • gathering supporting data
  • scoping end-users requirements
  • exploring IP protection
  • accessing expert advice to support development of the knowledge asset

You must only include eligible project costs in your application.

If successful, your award will be finalised pending receipt of a grant agreement. This must be signed by the Senior Responsible Owner, with the appropriate delegation from their Accounting Officer, up to and including the full cost of your project.

Your grant agreement will also commit you to apply trusted research principles in this project as a condition of grants offered by the Department for Science Innovation and Technology (DSIT).

Your proposal

The Knowledge Assets Grant Fund (KAGF) aims to unlock the potential for developing and exploiting public sector knowledge assets. The KAGF provides financial support to help unearth potentially valuable knowledge assets and to develop the exploitation pathway of assets outside of ‘business as usual’ purposes.

The aim of this competition is to support the identification and development of public sector knowledge assets, including repurposing, commercialisation or expanded use. These assets can include:

  • inventions
  • designs
  • certain research and development (R&D) outcomes
  • data and information
  • creative outputs such as text, video, graphics, software and source code
  • know-how and expertise
  • business processes, services
  • other intellectual resources

Potential value includes financial, economic and social benefits and can be achieved through commercialisation or expanded use of the asset across government and stakeholder organisations.

Assets do not have to be potentially revenue generating to attract funding but you must provide a clear plan and timeline to leverage value, for example, as a spinout, licence, open source or prototype.

The Knowledge Asset Grant Fund will support projects, or project stages, which are not suitable to secure investment from private sources. For example, this could be to develop an asset for use across different organisations within government which usually do not collaborate.

If you are unsure whether your project is in scope, you can contact the KAGF secretariat at GrantFund.GOTT@dsit.gov.uk. You can also visit the GOTT Grant Fund webpages, where we offer further guidance and support for our applicant community.

Specific themes

This competition will prioritise projects in the theme of Artificial Intelligence (AI).

GOTT is looking to fund projects that enable responsible transformative changes through the development and use of Knowledge Assets in the wider public or private sector through the use of AI.

Projects in scope comprise both the development of new AI algorithms or software and the application of existing solutions in areas which have not been considered before in the public sector.

We welcome applications from off-theme projects in this round. On-theme projects will be prioritised where funding is limited.

Further information for the scope and themes can be found at GOTT’s funding page and their recent blog.

Projects we will not fund

We are not funding:

  • fundamental R&D aimed at creating new knowledge assets
  • projects which have already advanced to the point where they could be eligible for investment by private funding sources
  • projects that are directly or indirectly requesting funding for an existing commercial entity that is not a government body
  • projects that aim to subsidise ‘business as usual’ activities, for example, activities directed by Ministers or set out in organisational strategies or remit, unless they address new markets or customers
  • projects that only benefit the organisation applying or existing customers and users
  • privately owned companies, including spin-out companies

Organisations not eligible to apply for the KAGF include, but are not limited to:

  • universities and academic institutions
  • local governments and their organisations
  • local Enterprise Partnerships
  • devolved administrations and organisations overseen by the Scottish Government, Welsh Government or Northern Ireland Executive, this includes NHS Scotland and Wales, and Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland
  • publicly owned commercial organisations, such as The Crown Estate
  • NHS secondary and tertiary care sector, including NHS trusts
  • private sector organisations
  • independent charities

Funding will not be conditional on:

  • export performance, for example, awarding funding to a baker on the condition that it exports a certain quantity of bread to another country
  • UK content, for example, awarding funding to a baker on the condition that it uses 50% UK flour in their product
3 January 2024
Online briefing event: watch the recording
3 January 2024
Competition opens
14 March 2024 11:00am
Competition closes
18 April 2024
Applicants notified of outcome of the sift
18 April 2024
Applicants invited to panel interview
25 April 2024
Deadline for panel submission (responses to feedback or presentations)
30 April 2024
KAGF Panel
2 May 2024
KAGF Panel
9 May 2024
Applicants notified

Before you start

You must read the guidance on applying for a competition on the Innovation Funding Service before you start.

Before submitting, it is the lead applicant’s responsibility to make sure that:

  • all of the information provided in the application is correct
  • your proposal meets the eligibility criteria
  • all sections of the application are marked as complete

You can reopen your application once submitted, up until the competition deadline. You must resubmit the application before the competition deadline.

What we ask you

The application is split into three sections:

  1. Project details.
  2. Application questions.
  3. Finances.

Accessibility and inclusion

We welcome and encourage applications from people of all backgrounds and are committed to making our application process accessible to everyone. This includes making reasonable adjustments, for people who have a disability or a long-term condition and face barriers applying to us.

You can contact us at any time to ask for guidance.

We recommend you contact us at least 15 working days before this competition’s closing date to allow us to put the most suitable support in place. The support we can provide may be limited if you contact us close to the competition deadline.

You can contact Innovate UK by email or call 0300 321 4357. Our phone lines are open from 9am to 12pm and 2pm to 5pm UK time, Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays).

Assessment and Panels

Assessment

Applications will first be assessed for eligibility by the Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT) secretariat. Eligible applications will then be sent to a team of external panel members who will carry out an initial assessment. Applications that do not meet the quality threshold at this stage will not go on to a panel assessment but will receive feedback.

Grant applications will be assessed and scored by written review from three panellists.

Projects meeting the threshold will be invited to present a pitch presentation to the panel and answer questions.

Your application will be assessed based on:

  • the quality of the project
  • the likelihood of project success, considering the team, need and track-record
  • the likelihood of future impact and benefit to the UK

For more support on how to put together a strong application, and more details on our eligibility criteria, you can refer to the GOTT Grants Guidance on our website.

Before the panel

By the deadline stated in the invitation email, you must send:

  • a list of those who will attend the panel assessment, up to 5 people from your project can attend
  • your presentation slides, these must be in Microsoft PowerPoint and your pitch must last no longer that 4 minutes

Note that we cannot reschedule slots once they have been allocated.

At the panel assessment

You will be invited to present your pitch before taking questions from the panel for 20 mins. The total interview time will be no longer than 25 minutes.

Following the interview, the panellists will discuss and score your project. This score will be based on a combination of your written application and interview.

After your panel

The panellists will individually score your application and these will be averaged to provide your overall score. This score will supersede the initial assessment.

You will be notified if you have been successful or not by email and you will receive feedback based on comments from the panel within a week of notification.

1. Project details

This section provides background for your application and is not scored.

Your application will be managed in a secure and confidential manner, along with any conflicts of interest.

Application details

Give your project’s title, start date and duration.

Project title and executive summary

Provide a brief executive summary for your proposal. This will only be accessed by the Knowledge Asset Grant Fund Secretariat and assessors.

Explain:

  • what the aims of your proposal are
  • what the funding you are requesting will be used for, providing a brief summary of funded activities
  • how you will know if the project has been successful
  • how any technical activities funded through this grant will support the expanded use of the asset and journey towards intended benefits

Your answer can be up to 250 words long.

Public description

Provide a summary that concisely explains your project to a lay-person. Outline the intended purpose and anticipated impact of your knowledge asset, any gaps in the market or issues it intends to solve and who it might benefit. The summary will be published on gov.uk if the project is awarded funding. Do not include any commercially sensitive information, particularly anything that could jeopardise any intellectual property (IP) protection.

Your answer can be up to 200 words long.

2. Application questions

Questions 1 to 8 are for data collection purposes only and will not be scored.

Questions 6 to 8 will also provide key information for GOTT to assess your project eligibility. Any responses that do not comply with the eligibility criteria will result in your project being excluded from the competition.

The assessors will score questions 9 to 12. You will receive feedback for each scored question.

You must answer all questions. Do not include any website addresses (URLs) in your answers.

Question 1. How did you hear about this competition (not scored)

Select one:

  • Innovate UK GOV.UK website
  • Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT) GOV.UK website
  • internet searching or browsing
  • word-of-mouth (through a colleague or networks)
  • social media
  • The Government Office for Technology Transfer emails, newsletter or KA Champion Network
  • interaction with individuals in GOTT
  • other

Question 2. Applicant organisation and location (not scored)

You must state the name and full registered address of your organisation and any subcontractors working on your project. You must also include the working location of your project if it different to the registered address.

We are collecting this information to understand the geographical location of all applicants.

Your answer can be up to 200 words long.

Question 3. Senior Responsible Owner (not scored)

Does your organisation have a Senior Responsible Owner (SRO) for knowledge asset management, as described in HMG Rose Book guidance?

If an SRO for knowledge asset management has been appointed, you must provide their:

  • name
  • job title
  • email address

If no SRO has been appointed or is not known type ‘Not Known’ in the text box.

Your answer can be up to 100 words long.

Question 4. Knowledge Asset Management Strategy (not scored)

Does your organisation have a Knowledge Asset Management Strategy (KAMS), as described in HMG Rose Book guidance?

If your organisations has a Knowledge Asset Management Strategy (KAMS), briefly describe how your proposed project fits into that strategy.

If not, please outline any corporate support you will receive from your organisation.

Your answer can be up to 200 words long.

Question 5. Animal Testing (not scored)

Will your project involve any trials with animals or animal testing?

You must select one option:

  • Yes
  • No

We will only support innovation projects conducted to the highest standards of animal welfare.

Further information for proposals involving animal testing is available at the UKRI Good Research Hub and NC3R’s animal welfare guidance.

Question 6. Additionality check (eligibility check, not scored)

Explain why your project cannot be funded by your organisation.

For example:

  • there is no financial resource allocated for this activity
  • the activity ineligible for external grants
  • part or fully funding the project would take away funding from core activity
  • Department for Science Innovation and Technology (DSIT) funding would lever funding or resources from your organisation that otherwise would not be made available

If your project is eligible for other funding sources other than the KAGF you must explain what these are and why they are not suitable.

Where you have applied for other sources of funding, list them and the outcome of the applications.

Your answer can be up to 300 words long.

Question 7. Conflicts of interest (eligibility check, not scored)

You must declare whether you, or any person involved in this project, have any personal interests that could conflict with those of your organisation as a grant applicant or those of The Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT) as funder of this project.

Select:

  • I declare there are no conflicts of interest
  • I declare that there is a conflict of interest

Some conflicts of interest can be managed fairly within a KAGF project. If you have declared a potential conflict of interest, you must describe the conflict that is present in your project in an appendix to support your answer. The KAGF secretariat will make an assessment and inform you of their decision.

The appendix must be a PDF, up to 1 A4 page long and no larger than 10MB in size. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.

Question 8. Ownership and control of the assets (eligibility check, not scored)

Describe who owns, or will own, and controls the assets, for example, any protected intellectual property (IP), know-how or materials.

You must list:

  • the assets that you bring into your project
  • the assets that you will develop during your project
  • whether it is solely you, your organisation or a third party with an ownership position, stating this position and percentage share

To be eligible, the knowledge assets developed in the project must be majority owned by the public sector. For example, background IP may be used from another source, but KAGF funding cannot be used to develop that background IP to benefit a non-public sector owner.

If information arises that you did not disclose in this answer, this may be grounds for your project being made ineligible.

Your answer can be up to 400 words long.

Question 9. Your knowledge asset and project (scored)

What is your knowledge asset and how your project will develop it?

Describe:

  • what your knowledge asset is
  • the background or landscape to your knowledge asset
  • the knowledge, social or market gaps your knowledge asset will address
  • previous development of your knowledge asset
  • if this knowledge asset has previously received funding from GOTT, for example, from the KAGF, briefly describe the outcome of that activity and how it created the foundation for this new project
  • how your knowledge asset will be developed over the course of the project, providing a comprehensive list of funded activities, including exploitation activities, not just technical development

Your answer can be up to 750 words long.

You must download, complete and upload the KAGF Project Planning and Costs template as an appendix to support your answer. The completed template must be saved and uploaded in a PDF format, no larger than 10MB in size. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.

The template plan must include:

  • a list of the discrete work packages of your project, indicating the lead assigned to each
  • the total cost and completion timelines for each work package
  • a forecast of the costs for your project

Question 10. Evidence of need by new users (scored)

The Knowledge Assets Grant Fund aims to unlock Knowledge Assets for expanded use beyond the current userbase.

Provide an outline of what you have done to date to understand the market and how this has informed the development of the knowledge asset, including:

  • how this asset will bring benefits to new users compared to other options available to them
  • how you plan to capture a proportion of the market and what that market share may be
  • who the main competitors and competing products or services are

Your answer can be up to 300 words long.

Question 11. Project management, risk mitigation and project team (scored)

How will you manage your project effectively? How will you manage risks, and where applicable, government reputation in line with current government policy. This is especially important for applications on the Artificial Intelligence theme?

Describe:

  • your approach to project management, identifying any major tools and mechanisms you will use to ensure a successful and innovative project outcome
  • any potential risks for your project and how you intend to manage them

Your answer can be up to 300 words long.

Who is in your project team and what are their roles and expertise?

You must download, complete and upload the project team template provided, as an appendix to support your answer.

The template will ask you to list and describe:

  • the roles, skills, experience and track record of all members of the project team that are relevant to delivering this project
  • who in the team will have the overall responsibility to manage the project and its delivery, labelling them as the lead
  • for each team member, an outline of the approximate amount of time (%) they will be allocated to the project
  • any external parties, including subcontractors, who you will work with and what their contribution will be

The completed template must be saved and uploaded in a PDF format, no larger than 10MB in size. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.

Question 12. Potential benefit, outcomes, and next steps (scored)

How does the development of the knowledge asset benefit the UK in the long term?

At the end of this project, how do you intend to continue to develop the assets and progress their exploitation?

Describe:

  • your intended exploitation route, for example, commercialisation through licensing or spin-out company formation, partnership or joint venture, open access and sharing with relevant public sector beneficiaries
  • your understanding of your asset’s route to target markets, users, adopters and engagers
  • how you will undertake exploitation and which resources you will draw on internally and externally
  • how the asset and the results from this grant will be managed by your organisation, including management of any IP rights
  • how you will ensure that the benefits to the UK will be preserved throughout exploitation
  • what the likely timescales are
  • quantification of the potential of your knowledge asset’s benefit to the UK

Your answer can be up to 600 words long.

3. Finances

You must complete your own project costs, organisation details and funding details in the application.

For full details on what costs you can claim see our project costs guidance.

It is also mandatory for you to fully complete the ‘Project Planning and Costs’ template enclosed in question 9.

Background and further information

Organisations in the NHS secondary and tertiary care sector, and publicly owned commercial organisations, are not eligible to apply for grant funding or other services from the Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT).

We have welcomed a range of innovative projects from within the NHS secondary and tertiary care sector and publicly owned commercial organisations over the last two years and would like to thank all of those clients who have worked with us. We now need to show success in other sectors that require our help.

GOTT has a cross-government mandate and must ensure that our limited resources avoid duplicating support and funding that is already available.

We would encourage NHS Trusts to look at alternative funding schemes available to the NHS secondary and tertiary care sector by viewing Health Technology Pathway: Navigation Tool for Innovators in England document.

Data sharing

This competition is led by the Government Office for Technology Transfer (GOTT), part of the Department for Science Innovation and Technology (DSIT), supported by Innovate UK (each an “agency”).

Any relevant information submitted and produced during the application process concerning your application can be shared by one agency with the other, for its individual storage, processing and use.

This means that any information given to or generated by Innovate UK in respect of your application may be passed on to GOTT and vice versa. This would include, but is not restricted to:

  • the information stated on the application, including the personal details of all applicants
  • scoring and feedback on the application
  • information received during the management and administration of the grant, such as Monitoring Officer reports and Independent Accountant Reports

Innovate UK and GOTT are directly accountable to you for their holding and processing of your information, including any personal data and confidential information. Data is held in accordance with their own policies. Accordingly, Innovate UK, and GOTT will be data controllers for personal data submitted during the application.

Innovate UK’s Privacy Policy

Department for Science Innovation and Technology’s Privacy Policy

Innovate UK complies with the requirements of UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018, and is committed to upholding data protection legislation, and protecting your information in accordance with data protection principles.

The Information Commissioner’s Office also has a useful guide for organisations, which outlines the data protection principles.

Assessment

Your application will be reviewed by up to 5 independent assessors based on the content of your application and their skills or expertise relevant to your project. All of the scores awarded will count towards the total score used to make the funding decision unless you are notified otherwise.

You can find out more about our assessment process in the General Guidance.

Your submitted application will be assessed against these criteria.

Next steps

If you are successful with this application, you will be asked to set up your project.

You must follow the unique link embedded in your email notification. This takes you to your Innovation Funding Service (IFS) Set Up portal, the tool that Innovate UK uses to gather necessary information before we can allow your project to begin.

You will need to provide:

  • the name and contact details of your project manager and project finance lead
  • a redacted copy of your bank details
  • an exploitation plan

In order for us to process your claims, you must make sure you have a valid UK business bank account. It can take several weeks for a new account to be created if required. We recommend starting this process as early as possible to avoid any delays to your project start date.

The bank account which grant is to be paid into must:

  • be a business account in the same name as the organisation listed in IFS
  • be from a UK bank regulated by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA)
  • have a cheque and credit clearing facility

Online accounts are eligible as long as they meet the above criteria.

Innovate UK will accept most banking societies apart from:

  • Viva Wallet
  • Intesa Sanpaolo
  • Equals Money UK Limited

If you have any doubts that your bank account will not meet Innovate UK's funding criteria, you can use the sort code checker. If you input the sort code and find a tick next to the ‘BACS Direct Credit payments can be sent to this sort code’, this will give you an indication that the bank account you hold is acceptable.

Finance checks

We will carry out checks to make sure you are an established company with access to the funds necessary to complete the project.

You must check your IFS portal regularly and respond to any requests we have sent for additional information to avoid any delays.

Failure to complete project setup may result in your grant offer being withdrawn.

Your Grant offer letter (GOL)

Once you have successfully completed project setup, we will issue your GOL.

The GOL will be made available on your IFS portal. You will need to sign and upload this for us to approve. Once approved we will send you an email with permission to start your project on your confirmed start date.

You must not start your project before the date stated on your email and GOL. Any costs incurred before your agreed start date cannot be claimed as part of your grant.

If your GOL is approved on or before the fifteenth of the month it will be dated from the first of that month. If your GOL is approved after the fifteenth, it will be dated the first of the next month.

If your application is unsuccessful

If you are unsuccessful with your application this time, you can view feedback from the assessors. This will be available to you on your IFS portal following notification.

Sometimes your application will have scored well, and you will receive positive comments from the assessors. You may be unsuccessful as your average score was not above the funding threshold or your project has not been selected under the portfolio approach if this is applied for this competition.

Contact us

If you need any more information about the eligibility or scope of the competition you can email GrantFund.GOTT@dsit.gov.uk.

If you need more information about how to apply or you want to submit your application in Welsh, email support@iuk.ukri.org or call 0300 321 4357.

Our phone lines are open from 9am to 12pm and 2pm to 5pm UK time, Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays).

Feedback

The Knowledge Assets Grant Fund would be grateful for feedback to help inform refinements and improvements for future years.

Please send feedback to GrantFund.GOTT@dsit.gov.uk, using the subject line ‘Feedback’.

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