Articles with Tag ‘Nonprofit Resources’

Fundraising Tip:Plan Ahead

Monday, January 24th, 2011

The start of the new year is the perfect time for your club or organization to sit down together and plan your 2011 fundraising strategy. With a solid plan you can venture into the new year knowing that you are ready for the tasks that lie ahead. When planning ahead, there are a few things to consider:

  • What holidays fall when? The holidays are undoubtedly the best time of year for fundraising. Sweets for Valentine’s Day, flower seeds and pots for Mother’s Day, cookie dough for Christmas, go ahead and fill in your major holidays and plan for them now.
  • What about planning the rest of the year? While the holidays are an excellent choice for fundraising, don’t neglect to plan for your other months. There are many different ideas for these months also, so don’t let the ease of holiday planning stop you from devising a strategy for the rest of the year.
  • Look back on last year. What fundraisers performed the best for your club or organization last year? Which ones didn’t meet your expectations? By looking back, you cannot only see what worked best for you, you can also analyze the fundraisers that didn’t work as well as you thought. By analyzing these, you can make the proper corrections to ensure that your fundraising goals are met each month.
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New Year’s Fundraising Part.1

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Failure to plan is planning to fail. It’s an old saying, but it holds true for just about any major project, including school fundraising. Now that spring is unfolding and summer vacation looms on the horizon, it’s understandable that next year’s fundraisers are not at the top of your list of priorities right now. You may have already signed a contract with a professional fundraising company for next fall’s fundraiser. Hidden away in a file folder somewhere, you may even have a list of other fundraising ideas that you’ll revisit sometime in the future. This is a start, but unfortunately it’s not enough. Fundraising experts and experienced PTA leaders say spring is an ideal time to develop a solid game plan for the following year’s fundraisers – and helps eliminate headaches down the road.

The latest research on school fundraising shows parent groups try a lot of different things to raise money. Eight out of 10 parent groups are collecting box tops and selling popular consumer items, such as gift wrap and cookie dough, each school year, according to an online poll of more than 300 parent groups. The research, conducted by the Association of Fund-Raising Distributors and Suppliers (AFRDS), also found that nearly half of all parent groups are collecting soup labels, running school carnivals and aligning themselves with well-known retailers for a share in profits. Other school-wide fundraisers include direct donations, restaurant family nights, raffles, auctions and “thons” (i.e., Read-a-Thon).

With so many fundraisers overlapping each other, school groups should have no problem raising all the money they need, right? Research suggests it’s just the opposite. According to the AFRDS survey, parent groups that conduct fewer school-wide fundraisers raise more money. Among parent groups that raise more than $15,000 through school fundraising events, the majority (54%) limited the number of school-wide fundraisers to no more than four.

“The more fundraisers you do, the less participation you get on every one,” said Ryan Cady, a fundraising professional in Florida. “Schools and communities would be better off if parent groups ran fewer fundraisers with better participation.”

As you begin to plan for next year, it’s important to take steps to prevent your PTA/PTO from getting stuck in the fundraising traffic jam and channel your energies toward projects that yield real results.