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This listing may be outdated.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 Program is sponsored by Enterprise Minnesota. Provides funding to support small manufacturing companies in Minnesota, offering expertise to enhance productivity, deploy technology, improve management, and develop 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.
Made in Minnesota - Enterprise Minnesota The funds enable manufacturers to avail expertise from Enterprise Minnesota. The 2025 Minnesota Legislature authorized $1 million to help small manufacturing companies remain viable amid the roiling economy.
The grant, split evenly over two years, will primarily fund the “Made in Minnesota” program, an initiative that will help manufacturers take advantage of cutting-edge strategies from Enterprise Minnesota. These include enhancing productivity, deploying technology, improving management, growing talent, and developing effective business strategies. “Made in Minnesota” received bipartisan support.
Lawmakers from both rural and urban districts recognized the critical importance local manufacturers contribute to their communities, according to Bob Kill, president and CEO of Enterprise Minnesota. “We had strong advocates in both the House and the Senate who helped push this through, even in a tight budget year,” Kill says. “Made in Minnesota is a hand up, not a handout,” Kill adds.
“These resources help companies invest in themselves — whether that’s getting certified, providing skills development for workers, or implementing new technology. ” All grant recipients will have “skin” in the game. For every $1 of state investment, manufacturers must also invest $1.
The funding comes at a time when many Minnesota manufacturers are still navigating pressures of a post-pandemic economy, ongoing workforce shortages, and other uncertainties around world trade. Despite those challenges, manufacturing remains a crucial part of the state’s economy, responsible for 11% of Minnesota jobs and 14% of wages.
Kill says that 84% of Minnesota’s 8,600 manufacturers employ fewer than 50 people, and a significant portion have fewer than 10. These small shops, often located in rural communities, face steep hurdles when trying to modernize or expand. That’s where Enterprise Minnesota’s services come in.
Since 2008, Enterprise Minnesota has applied state funding to help Minnesota manufacturers create or retain more than 12,000 jobs and increase or retain company sales of $1. 46 billion. Enterprise Minnesota has historically deployed such funds to help manufacturers reduce the financial burden of key services.
For example, a nine-person machine shop seeking ISO 13485 certification — a requirement for entering the medical device market — might pay $50,000 out-of-pocket. With this grant, that cost could be reduced by 20%. “For a small company trying to break into a new market — like medical devices — ISO certification might be the barrier between growth and stagnation.
Made in Minnesota resources can make breaking into new markets possible. ” “These kinds of investments can lead to expanded markets, new jobs, and stronger communities,” Kill adds. “And once a company earns that certification, we know companies will use it to grow.
” Kill also points out the ripple effect manufacturing has on other industries. For every dollar spent in manufacturing, about $2. 70 is generated in economic activity across related sectors, such as trucking, accounting, and logistics.
“It’s not just about the factory floor,” Kill says. “Manufacturing creates good-paying jobs and supports an entire ecosystem of businesses. ” Kill says the momentum in the manufacturing sector has also been buoyed by increased enrollment at technical colleges, as more people begin to recognize manufacturing as a viable and rewarding career path.
“The perception of manufacturing is changing,” Kill says. “It’s high-tech. It’s innovative.
And it’s essential. ” For now, the focus is on using the $1 million wisely, ensuring that the funding reaches as many small businesses as possible. Return to the Summer 2025 issue of Enterprise Minnesota® magazine.
Boat building leads to successful careers in trades and manufacturing. National supply chain authority Willy Shih offers durable solutions. Boat building leads to successful careers in trades and manufacturing.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Small manufacturing companies in Minnesota. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Made in Minnesota Program 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