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April 16, 2026

Nonprofit Video RFP Template: How to Write One That Gets You Better Bids (2026)

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The RFP is where most nonprofit video projects go wrong

Before the first frame is shot, before the first agency pitches, before a single dollar moves — the video RFP either sets the project up to succeed or guarantees it will disappoint. Most nonprofit RFPs we see are one of two things: a three-sentence email that says "we need a fundraising video, send us a quote," or a bloated 40-page procurement document copy-pasted from IT. Neither gets you good bids.

This post is the middle path — a tight, purposeful nonprofit video RFP template, plus the twelve questions you have to answer before you send it. Use it and you'll get apples-to-apples bids, a better partner, and a video that actually moves donors.

Why most nonprofit video RFPs fail

An RFP has one job: make it easy for the right production company to say yes at a fair price, and easy for the wrong one to self-select out. Most RFPs do the opposite — vague enough that every agency bids, but missing the detail required to price the work. The result? A pile of proposals you can't compare, and a winner chosen on feel (or price) instead of fit.

The fix: treat the RFP as a decision document, not a shopping list.

The 12 questions to answer before you write your RFP

Answer these twelve in writing first. If you can't, you're not ready for an RFP — you're ready for a scoping call.

  1. What is the ONE outcome? Raise $X by Y date. Grow email list by Z. Get 100K views on a specific campaign hashtag. One metric, not five.
  2. Who is the audience? Major donors, monthly donors, corporate partners, grant officers, beneficiaries, media. You cannot write to all of them at once.
  3. Where does the video live? Gala screen, donor email, Instagram Reel, YouTube pre-roll, website hero. Each format demands a different edit.
  4. What's the call to action? Donate, subscribe, attend, share, apply. One CTA — not a footer of seven.
  5. What footage exists? Raw event b-roll, past interview reels, beneficiary photography, drone shots. Reusable archive is the single largest lever on cost.
  6. Is there new production? One shoot day, two, a multi-country trip? How many interviews? How many locations?
  7. What's the budget range? Give a range. Agencies won't share theirs. If you hide yours, you get guesses instead of strategy.
  8. What's the deadline — real and padded? Gala night is real. "We'd like it in Q3" is padded.
  9. Who signs off? Name the final approver. Committee-based sign-off kills timelines.
  10. What's out of scope? Translation? Captions? Social cutdowns? Music licensing? Paid amplification? Spell these out or you'll pay extra later.
  11. What are your non-negotiables? Consent protocols for beneficiaries? Only women-led crews on certain shoots? Union talent? Say it up front.
  12. What does good look like? Three links to videos you love. One link to a video that makes your skin crawl.

Most nonprofits can answer 5 of 12. That's fine — it tells you what to work out internally first. Send the RFP once you can answer all 12, and your bids will be dramatically better.

Free nonprofit video RFP template (copy this)

Section 1 — Organization snapshot

  • Legal name, EIN, and one-sentence mission
  • Annual budget range and primary funding source (grants, major donors, monthly giving, corporate)
  • Current staff size and comms team structure
  • Top three 2026 priorities

Section 2 — Project objectives

  • The ONE outcome
  • Primary audience and where they live (channel, city, segment)
  • Supporting KPIs (view count, completion rate, CTR, donation conversion)

Section 3 — Deliverables

  • Hero video length and format (e.g. one 90-second cut for gala, one 30-second cut for Instagram, one 6-second pre-roll)
  • Supporting assets (social cutdowns, GIFs, thumbnails, subtitle files)
  • File specs required (4K master, 1080p web, vertical 9:16)
  • Language versions and subtitle languages

Section 4 — Content and creative

  • Story direction if known, or "open to recommendation" if not
  • Must-include people, moments, or quotes
  • Hard excludes (topics, people, imagery)
  • Brand guidelines (link to PDF)

Section 5 — Production logistics

  • Location(s) and expected shoot day count
  • Travel required and who pays (usually the nonprofit covers travel for crew; the producer books)
  • Access required (permits, releases, chaperones)
  • Any sensitive consent protocols

Section 6 — Budget and timeline

  • Budget range — be honest. $20K vs $80K are different agencies.
  • Final delivery date and milestone dates (shot list due, rough cut, final)
  • Payment terms (standard is 50/25/25; push back on 100% up front)

Section 7 — Response format

  • Proposal sections required (approach, team, sample reel, line-item budget, timeline)
  • Max length 10 pages
  • Submission deadline
  • Evaluation criteria and weighting (e.g. 40% creative approach, 30% team experience, 20% budget, 10% timeline fit)

What to look for in the responses

Do they push back? A good agency questions your brief. If every bidder says yes to everything, you're getting yes-men, not creative partners.

Can they show similar work with comparable budget? A Coca-Cola reel doesn't predict a $35K church documentary. Ask for case studies in your lane — education, faith-based, international aid, whatever fits.

Do they own the distribution? In 2026, shipping the final file is the easy part — getting it seen is the work. Ask every bidder how they plan to help you hit view targets. If they shrug, they're handing you a finished asset and walking away. Distribution strategy is where most nonprofit videos die.

Red flags to reject immediately

  • No line-item budget (lump-sum quotes hide margin)
  • Demands full payment up front
  • Won't name the producer or director working on your project
  • Stock-footage-heavy reel (suggests they can't shoot original)
  • No client references from the last 12 months
  • Promises "viral" results with no specifics on how

The budget question — what should a nonprofit video actually cost?

This is the question every RFP issuer asks and no agency wants to answer. We publish our full pricing framework in our nonprofit video production cost guide. Short version: a single production-quality nonprofit video in 2026 runs $8,000 for a stripped-back testimonial to $80,000+ for a multi-location documentary short. Retainer models (4 videos/month, unlimited edits) reset those economics — ask every bidder about them.

The one change that triples your bid quality

Include a specific story or person in your RFP. Not "we help communities" — name one beneficiary (with their consent), share one quote from them, and ask bidders to propose how they'd tell that story. You'll instantly see which agencies think visually and which just process briefs. Great fundraising video is about specificity. Our fundraising video guide walks through how we build a whole campaign around one beneficiary's story.

How Happy Productions responds to nonprofit RFPs

We respond to every nonprofit RFP that fits our lane. We bring three things most agencies don't: a retainer model that ships 4 videos/month instead of one big deliverable, a guaranteed view count tied to paid amplification, and nonprofit-exclusive focus — we don't work with for-profit brands, so every lesson compounds in your sector.

If you're building an RFP now and want a sanity check before you send it, email atdhe@happypeople.me with a one-paragraph brief. We'll either bid, or tell you who to send it to instead. Either way you get a second opinion.

Next steps

  1. Answer the 12 questions above in a shared Google Doc
  2. Copy the template sections into your RFP
  3. Send it to 3–5 bidders maximum (more is diminishing returns)
  4. Give bidders 2–3 weeks to respond
  5. Schedule 30-minute calls with top 2 before deciding

Related reading: Best nonprofit video production companiesNonprofit video shoot planning checklistHow to create a fundraising videoNonprofit video production services 2026