Team funding applications require a different approach to narrative CVs. Rather than showcasing individual excellence, you need to demonstrate collective strength and complementary expertise. The main challenge is that you’re doing this within the same word limits as an individual CV 😲
This post covers what changes (and what stays the same) when writing team narrative CVs, and provides a practical process for developing them collaboratively.
What do team and individual narrative CVs have in common? The four R4RI modules - your team still needs to address all four areas of contribution. The OCAR structure remains effective - it works at the same three nested levels (Team Statement, module narratives, individual examples). Word limits - funders don’t give you extra words for having more people (typically still a total of 1,500-2,000 words). Need for specifics - you still need concrete examples with numbers, outcomes, and impact. What’s different about team narrative CVs? The focus shifts from individual to collective. It’s not about showing that everyone is excellent; it’s showing how this specific team offers the right combination of expertise to deliver the proposed project. You need to demonstrate complementarity. Why does this specific combination of people create something greater than individuals working separately? A Team Statement replaces the Personal Statement. This opening needs to convey collective identity. Above all, you’re answering the question: “Why is this the right team for this project?”, not “Why are these good researchers?” Funders need to understand each team member’s specific contribution and expertise, and also get a sense that you can all work together successfully to deliver the project within the timeframe.
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