I’m sure a lot of organizations will be interested in your question, thanks for asking.
Advocacy (i.e., influencing policy, systems change, public-decision-making) is often central to Community Psychology/Community Development work — not only when it comes to service delivery but also for changing underlying structures. The Community Tool Box defines legislative advocacy as one key way for groups to push system-level change. Community Tool Box
But many funders and traditional program grants focus on direct service delivery rather than advocacy or infrastructure (such as staff time for policy work). Without dedicated staff time, advocacy tends to be ad hoc or layered on top of service work, which could contribute to burnout and undermine the sustained impact of the organization.
Here are some strategies Community-Based Organizations (CBOs) use for funding staff time for advocacy:
Some of the challenges you could face include:
Challenge: Funders restrict advocacy/lobbying or are uncomfortable funding policy work.
Mitigation: Clarify distinction between “educating policy-makers” and “lobbying for/against specific legislation”, and ensure compliance. Chapter 33, Section 10 of the Community Tool Box provides guidance on what counts as lobbying.
Challenge: Staff burnout if advocacy is layered on top of heavy service loads.
Mitigation: Protect dedicated time for advocacy in job descriptions, monitor workload, build partnerships to share advocacy commitments.
Challenge: Advocacy outcomes can take longer than service outcomes, making it harder to demonstrate immediate deliverables.
Mitigation: Set short-term indicators (meetings, policy drafts, coalition formation) and frame them as steps toward longer change. Using an evaluation dashboard can help track the indicators.
Challenge: Sustaining funding for advocacy staff across funding cycles.
Mitigation: Build diversified funding streams, showcase impact, and foster relationships with funders who value systems change.
There are some practical steps you can take when you are building a plan to fund staff time for advocacy.
Clarify the advocacy role and time allocation
Budget advocacy time explicitly in grants/contracts
Seek flexible/unrestricted funding for infrastructure
Collaborate and share advocacy roles
Track and report advocacy time and outcomes
Make the case to funders
I asked ChatGPT for a list of U.S - based funders that support advocacy, policy change, systems change, capacity-building or staff infrastructure in nonprofit/community-based settings, and here is the list it generated:
Ben & Jerry’s Foundation: Offers unrestricted operating grants for grassroots organizing (typically budgets under US $350K). Designed for community-based groups doing advocacy and systems-change work.
Campbell Foundation: Provides capacity-building and operational support that can include staffing, infrastructure, and professional development for advocacy.
Carnegie Corporation of New York: Funds work advancing education, democracy, and civic engagement — including policy and advocacy initiatives.
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation: Offers capacity-building grants (US $100K–$250K) for nonprofit organizational development, which can include staff time for advocacy.
Ford Foundation: One of the largest social-justice funders globally; supports advocacy, equity, and systems-change work through general operating and multi-year grants.
Foundation for Systemic Change: Dedicated to supporting organizations promoting deep, structural social change — flexible funding that can cover advocacy staffing.
Meyer Foundation: Focuses on organizations using advocacy, organizing, and base-building to challenge inequitable systems. Provides flexible, general-operating support.
Nonprofit Finance Fund (NFF): Provides financing and consulting to strengthen nonprofit infrastructure — helping organizations sustain staff time and operations for advocacy work.
Open Society Foundations (OSF): Global leader in funding advocacy, governance, human rights, and justice work; supports NGOs engaging in policy and systems reform.
Public Welfare Foundation: Supports justice, worker rights, and systems-change advocacy; funds organizing, policy development, and leadership roles.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF): Major national health-equity funder supporting policy and systems-change initiatives that improve community well-being.
Smith Richardson Foundation: Funds public-policy research and advocacy aimed at strengthening democracy and effective governance.
William & Flora Hewlett Foundation: Supports civic engagement, education, and environmental advocacy; offers flexible funding for policy and systems-change work.
William T. Grant Foundation: Funds capacity-building and policy research focused on youth and systems improvement — often includes staffing and evaluation roles.