School Fundraising
School Fundraising Information
It may seem when you’re on the school fundraising committee that coming up
with school fundraising ideas is an impossible task. The events have already been done, the items to sell are too expensive and yield too
low a profit, or the amount of time and the level of complication is greater than you and your group have to spare.
But you can make use of the volunteers to brainstorm for ideas for school fundraising efforts…and you might be surprised with what the team
comes up with, piggybacking on each other’s suggestions, modifying the results, and sharing the excitement of positive outcomes.
In one session for schoolfundraising ideas at a community college learning center one year, for example, a small group of five staff members
played around with the following possibilities:
Hold a Scrabble Tournament – Those involved with words, language, writing, or learning, really, can start chatting with “English” peeps,
generating interest, getting volunteers, and even soliciting for sponsors.
Hold a Bingo Tournament - Hold the Bingo tournament the same time as the Scrabble Tournie for those who dislike or could care less about
language or word games but like numbers, so to speak. Sponsors might fund the prizes and refreshments, and entrants could pay a buck or two
to compete.
Conduct Chocolate Bar Sales - Have someone who is connected—who used to work for an incentive sales company, or knows the CEO of
an own incentive company, for example—provide some informal stats on how utterly lucrative this is (we’re talkin’ thousands of dollars
profit). Or get access to the Sales Reps for those fundraiser chocolate companies such as Sees Candies (on the West Coast), for
example.
School Fundraising - Tips and Advice
Raffle off a Car? A Computer (Desktop System)? The car might be a reach, so you may want to leave that to the Lions or Elks—who do
so to donate proceeds to the school anyway—but if your school fundraising budget allows for the purchase of a popular and useful piece of
electronic equipment—pc, ipod, TV, boom box, Palm Pilot, etc.—the one to five dollar raffle tickets will sell out in a matter of hours or
days!
These ideas aren’t even all that original, either. You could get as creative as your organization’s protocol will allow. That is,
I recall in my first year of college, as a kind of orientation and schoolfundraising effort to benefit the fraternities and sororities involved,
we participated in a “Slave” Day. Students bid on freshmen, sophomores, and juniors, who, once “won”, would spend the day with the highest
bidder, taking out the trash, cleaning the dorm room, or just hanging out and partying, really. Of course, that was the seventies in a
school in the woods, and we hadn’t gotten so hypersensitive to politically incorrect implications, blah blah blah.
You will use your discretion, follow the rigors and rules, and take advantage of the cleverness of your students…I’m sure. Best of luck
to you.
|