The Audacious World of Grants, Tenders, and Awards with Robyn Baker

Robyn Baker, widely recognised in the professional space as The Boring Writer (even though she’s actually incredibly engaging), possesses more than 45 years of experience spanning the corporate, government, and community sectors. As the founder of Busy Connecting, a strategic funding specialist, mentor, investor, and host of the Connection Currency Podcast, her expertise lies in helping businesses secure funding, scale strategically, and achieve long-term sustainability. Her foundational understanding of structural evaluation began in 1980 when she joined the Brisbane City Council. At that time, the assessment of tenders and grants was heavily reliant on unorganised, ad-hoc methods. Recognising the inefficiencies and lack of transparency inherent in these practices, she developed a systematic, committee-based approach to assessing submissions. This rigorous framework was so effective that it eventually became the benchmark process adopted across the southern hemisphere. After 20 years of government service, a redundancy period prompted a significant career shift, leading her to transition to private consultancy. In 2016, she turned her focus toward small businesses, aiming to help them navigate the frequently convoluted landscape of grant applications and funding opportunities. However, moving from a secure institutional environment to the small-business arena presented immediate personal-branding deficiencies and challenges. In her government role, she had relied primarily on institutional reputation and her distinct positioning as a female voice in traditionally male-dominated environments. Stepping into corporate and small business networking required a completely new approach to visibility. To address this gap and expand her profile, she embraced platforms like LinkedIn, successfully shifting her networking style to connect with a broader, more diverse audience of small business owners who required her specialised insights. Through her transition to private consultancy and voluntary work as an awards judge, Robyn Baker has changed how small businesses approach funding and corporate recognition. Rather than treating award entries as a simple quest for accolades, she champions the process as a highly structured, strategic marketing activity. One of her premier insights is the clear categorisation of awards into "credibility awards" and "visibility awards". By helping business owners identify their specific desired outcome before entering, she ensures that their time and resources are directed toward programs that align with their overarching commercial goals. Her work highlights that the true value of an award submission lies within the journey itself, rather than the final announcement. Business owners are encouraged to leverage their entry from the moment of submission, utilising the process to drive immediate marketing momentum rather than waiting passively for results. Even when a submission does not result in a win, the associated events offer invaluable networking, profiling, and partnership opportunities. Robyn's unique experience allows her to educate applicants on the realities of the judging room, highlighting the intensive, unpaid volunteer workload undertaken by panel members. By sharing instances such as her 2021 judging commitment - where she reviewed 97 finalists across 13 distinct categories, accumulating 30 hours of interviewing during a period of global supply chain disruptions - she provides applicants with a new respect for the evaluation process. This objective, highly transparent approach has solidified her reputation as an assessor of impeccable integrity who eliminates unconscious bias from the judging panel. While Robyn Baker currently serves on judging panels and chooses not to enter awards herself to preserve opportunities for others, her past contributions to the business community have earned her significant formal recognition.