1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
This listing may be outdated. Verify details at the official source before applying.
Find similar grantsMade in Minnesota is sponsored by Enterprise Minnesota. This program helps small manufacturing companies in Minnesota implement cutting-edge strategies to enhance productivity, deploy technology, improve management, grow talent, and develop effective business strategies.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Enterprise Minnesota” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
New Name, Same Great Program - Enterprise Minnesota New Name, Same Great Program ‘Made in Minnesota’ legislation will help small Minnesota manufacturers reduce the cost of improving their operations. Enterprise Minnesota has worked with state lawmakers for more than 15 years to fund an effort to help small- and medium-sized manufacturers expand and improve their operations.
Previously called the “Growth Acceleration Program” (GAP), the legislation will be re-introduced in 2025 as “Made in Minnesota,” a name that reflects the manufacturing-focus of the program. “Made in Minnesota” will help manufacturers with 250 or fewer full-time employees access funds that cover up to 50% of the cost of services provided through Enterprise Minnesota.
Companies have used the funding to implement quality initiatives, ISO certification, automation, expanded marketing and improved cybersecurity programs. Eligible manufacturers must be located in Minnesota, operate as independent profit centers, have a business plan for improvements, and demonstrate an economic need for funding.
Resources go toward business improvement services that increase job creation, job retention, and business growth, and all companies awarded funding match at least $1 for every $1 spent through the program. Independent auditors have shown that the program has generated an average $30-to-$1 return on investment. Manufacturers have created 12,556 jobs, generated $1.
4 billion in additional sales, saved $206 million in costs, and invested $583 million in plant, equipment, technology, and skills development. One in seven jobs in our state is directly manufacturing related, and each of these jobs creates two additional jobs. That means fully one-third of Minnesota jobs are dependent on the manufacturing sector.
The funding provided through “Made in Minnesota” couldn’t come at a better time. Manufacturers who participated in this year’s State of Manufacturing® survey expressed uncertainty about the future at a level not seen in the history of the poll. Concerns about a potential economic slowdown, costly regulation, and the inability to attract quality employees loom over Minnesota manufacturers as they enter 2025.
As manufacturers prepare to face these challenges, ensuring access to cost-effective services that spur growth and improved efficiency is vital. One encouraging sign amid this landscape is a growing understanding among legislators about the importance of manufacturing to the vitality of communities across Minnesota. We’ve made great strides in sharing the value of manufacturing with policymakers over the years.
Since its beginning, many of our clients have testified at the legislature in support of this program. Manufacturing leaders have shared specific examples of the value of funding for their companies and the positive impact on their communities when they thrive.
We have also benefited from more than 500 manufacturer-hosted tours of their facilities for state lawmakers, members of Congress and their staff, local mayors, and economic development leaders. Tim Penny, former state legislator and member of Congress and current president of the Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation, says, “It’s hugely important just visiting these plants and seeing what’s being produced.
You drive by, but you don’t realize what’s going on inside and how many local people are working there. I don’t think there’s anything better than bringing legislators right down on the plant floor. ” These legislative outreach efforts have led to a growing understanding of the critical nature of manufacturing across the state.
They are also a key reason this program has enjoyed strong bipartisan support over the years. We will continue to build on the relationships we have forged with legislators as we return to the Capitol in January to seek funding for “Made in Minnesota. ” Through support for this program, legislators can signal their understanding of how essential manufacturing is to the economy as they boost growth in their own communities.
Return to the Winter 2024 issue of Enterprise Minnesota® magazine. Record-breaking pessimism among manufacturers calls for a plan of action. Roseau-based Intercept has expanded to five plants in three countries.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Small manufacturing companies in Minnesota. Requires a 1:1 match of state investment. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Made in Minnesota is funded by Enterprise Minnesota. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Minnesota. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
HUD announced the FY25 Rural Capacity Building NOFO on May 18, 2026 with a July 6 deadline. Section 4 has three statutory intermediaries — Enterprise, LISC, and Habitat. RCB is a different door, and most rural housing nonprofits are misreading which one they qualify for.
Read articleUSDA opened a $27.7M Rural Business Development Grant NOFO on May 18 with two deadlines two weeks apart. The June 15 Strategic Economic and Community Development carve-out and the June 30 main pool fund different applicants under different scoring — and most rural cooperatives apply to the wrong one.
Read articleUSDA's FY2026 Rural Business Development Grant NOFO funds technical assistance and small-business support in rural communities under 50,000 residents — but the two-deadline structure (June 15 for Strategic Economic and Community Development applications, June 30 for everyone else), the enterprise vs. opportunity split, and the pass-through grantee model are what shape competitive proposals.
Read article