revised applications
Several of our grant schemes offer applicants a single chance to submit a revised application after receiving a negative advice from the committee. However, certain conditions apply to a revised application.
What is a revised application?
The grant schemes for Design, Architecture, Digital Culture, Internationalisation, the Creative Industries Kick-start Grant Scheme and the Immerse\Interact Grant Scheme offer the possibility to submit a revised application. In these schemes, a revised application is defined as follows:
revised application: a grant application that, provided with new information, is resubmitted after a negative decision from the advisory committee for a Creative Industries Fund NL grant
Has your application been rejected after being submitted to an advisory committee? Then you have the option to submit a revised application for the same project once in a subsequent round. A revised application always contains new information. This could include an adjusted schedule or a refined project plan based on feedback from the committee.
How do you submit a revised application?
Submitting a revised application follows the same procedure as a regular application. In the application form, you indicate that it concerns a revised application and refer to the project number of the original application.
A revised application is usually submitted in a subsequent round within the same scheme, but can also be submitted as revised application under another scheme if, for example, the negative advice indicates that the intended project is better suited to that other scheme.
The number of revised applications that can be processed per round for the Design, Architecture, Digital Culture and Internationalisation grant schemes is limited and determined in advance. In the Creative Industries Kick-start Grant Scheme and the Immerse\Interact Grant Scheme, no distinction is made between revised applications and regular applications when processing applications.
How are revised applications assessed?
The advisory committee considers a revised application as a standalone, new application. The advisory committee reaches a new judgement based on the information from the revised application. The previous advice is not shared with the committee, and no comparison is made between the original application and the revised application. Since the composition of the committee changes per round, the committee may include different (critical) points in its advice.