School fundraising should be a simple process that helps your school meet it's financial goals. It also should and could be something you do only once a year to raise all the money you need. If you have been disappointed with your school fundraising results lately, you should click on this link and see how you can improve your results.
Copyright (c) 2008 AIM Fundraising
Did your last school fundraising program fall short of your expectations? Do you know why this happened? There are many contributing factors to the success or failure of any fundraising campaign. Some factors occur from things that are out of our control like hurricanes and other disasters. Barring any of these unfortunate events, here are 4 tips to help you get the most out of your school fundraising efforts.
1.) Prizes / Incentives with Value
Your incentive program is the single most important factor when determining the success or failure of your fundraising campaign. It almost could be said that you could sell the most horrible product in the world and do real well if you motivate your students correctly. Of course no one is going to do that, but I'm trying to make my point by being absurd.
In order for your prize program to be successful in motivating more of your students to participate, you must target your prizes for the specific demographic that makes up your school. In short, your prizes need to be age appropriate AND something that the parents of the younger students can get excited about too. Most school sponsored fundraisers don't target the parents with the incentive plan. However, if you want to get their attention, do a prize program that will knock their socks off.
Simply put, if your school is filled with 5 - 12 year olds, then your incentive plan should include items that would appeal to that group of students that would also impress their parents. While trinket type prizes might go over well with the kids, moms will look at them and simply trash the brochure
Choosing the wrong type of incentive for your target group can have a huge negative impact on your school fundraising campaign.
2.) Make Sure The Word Makes It Home
It is not enough to simply have a great incentive package for the students. Remember, many of your students are so young that they will have a hard time communicating to their parents just what is being offered for certain sales levels. As a matter of fact, you might just say that your prize brochure and parent letter are the things that "sell" your parents on the incentive program.
One of the best things you can do to get the message home about your fundraiser and prize program is to show the prizes at school on the same day that the sales brochures go home. Also, have a parent letter or prize brochure that pictures the prizes so the students can show them to their parents. Dong both of these things will pretty much guarantee that the moms will get the idea that this is not your ordinary fundraising prize program."
3.) Sales and Safety Coaching
Most fundraising salespeople are little kids who are either going to have to sell Grandma and family friends some of the products that they have in their sales brochure, or they are going to have to convince Mom to do it for them. If you have a worthwhile incentive program, your students will turn on those big brown eyes and get it done! One of the best ways is to coach your students to ask mom and dad and mom's best friend and an aunt or two to take turns taking the sales brochure to work with them. If you coach your students to do this, you will go a long way on overcoming safety issues in fundraising.
4.) Safety
Personally, I favor structuring the prizes to motivate every student in the school to sale to 20 items max. Beyond that most students are going to have to go beyond family, friends of the family and people they know real well to make those higher sales numbers. That to me is a child safety issue.
We have been structuring incentive programs for years that are geared toward rewarding students heavily for just selling 5 - 15 things. For a school with over 250 students, especially if they have been plagued by low participation in past school fundraising efforts, this approach to the prize program will usually double your previous sales. Simple as that!
In fact if you have been having 25% participation in past fundraisers, a 15% increase in your participation will double your sale. I know this sounds odd, but that is the power of the numbers in large groups.
Safety is important no matter what age group your students are, but even more so if they are small children. I personally prefer to give prizes that are worthwhile for simply selling a few items to family, friends and people they know. Then mom or dad can carry the brochure to work to help out too.
Use these simple fundraising tips to make your next school fundraising event a complete success.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- The Effect Better Prizes Have On School Fundraising
- The 2 Most Important Things to Make Your School Fundraising Efforts Rock
- The Top Ten School Fundraising Mistakes
- School Fundraisers - Are You Thinking Outside of the Box?
- The One Thing That Makes a School Fundraiser Successful
- What Most School Fundraising Companies Don't Want You to Know
- The Secret to Have the Best School Fundraiser Ever
- Planning Tips for School Fundraising Cookie Dough Sales




Moving Your Family To The Right Home
By: james kahn | 15/12/2009As the saying goes, there is truly no place like home. It’s used up cliché but a universal truth that is quite frankly, undeniable. Home is the place where you and your loved ones feel safe and comfortable, sheltered from the worries and hazards of the world. Which is why choosing the house you will eventually call home should be a meticulous and tedious process. After all, you only want what is best for your family.
Recipes: Easy Casseroles and Meat Pies
By: Patrick Carpen | 15/12/2009Running short on time or ingredients? Why not try one of these easy casserole or meat pie recipes?
Recipes: Delicious Sandwich Fillers
By: Patrick Carpen | 15/12/2009This article contains four great sandwich "fillers" that are terrific whether you're having guests over or just fancy a nice sandwich.
Are You Considering One Of The Available Naval Air Station Apartment Rentals In Pensacola, FL
By: Jean Warren | 15/12/2009Known as "The Cradle of Naval Aviation", the Naval Station located just southwest of Pensacola, Florida is considered to be the primary training base for flight officers in the Coast Guard, the Marines and, of course, the Navy.
Pensacola: Live the Good Life
By: Jean Warren | 15/12/2009Whether you are in the armed forces, joining a loved one who is in the armed forces, or doing business with the U.S. military; you may be visiting Pensacola for an extended period of time. If so, you’ll want to check out the Pensacola temporary furnished rentals
Finger Food Ideas For Babies and Toddlers
By: Denise Sanger | 14/12/2009At first, your baby will consume only milk or formula, and eventually you can work your way up to smooth baby foods. But what can you do to help your baby prepare for "real" food? In a way, small infants are easier to feed and care for than older babies...
Spicy Curry Recipes for the Adventurous
By: Patrick Carpen | 14/12/2009This article contains four yummy curry recipes for you spice-lovers out there!
A Dream Home Purchase with the Nightmare of the Moving Company Scams
By: PackingServiceInc | 14/12/2009You’ve been saving for years and finally have purchased the home of your dreams, you’re in the process of packing up all your valuable belongings to move from your old home to the new one, you spend days shopping around for reasonable moving company prices and somehow you stumble across an ad that is too good to be true. You get quoted $800 dollars to move your home and you are guaranteed by the sales person you will not be charged any additional costs.
How to Organize and Manage a School Fundraiser that is a Huge Success
By: Juan Franco | 31/08/2009 | BusinessHave you ever noticed how some fundraisers tend to run smoothly and meet their goal? What is it about those fundraisers that make them different than others?
Promote Your School Fundraising Program with Video
By: Juan Franco | 27/08/2009 | BusinessOne way to help ensure your school fund raiser is a huge success is to make sure the parents of your kids have a chance to be "engaged." Video is the new way to do just that!
Fundraising Ideas to Make Your Fundraiser a Success
By: Juan Franco | 26/08/2009 | BusinessHere is a simple set of rules to follow that will make your fundraising experience pleasant, enjoyable and profitable. Fundraising ideas to help you do just that on your next fundraising event.
Better School Fundraising
By: Juan Franco | 18/08/2009 | BusinessWant to make your next school fund raiser more profitable? Communicate better with the parents of your school kids. It's not hard and it's worth the effort.
School Fundraising and Smencils... A Good Mix?
By: Juan Franco | 15/08/2009 | BusinessThere are all kinds of ways to raise money for a school or non-profit organization. This article will be aimed primarily at school groups and how they might meet their school's fundraising needs.
The Effect Better Prizes Have On School Fundraising
By: Juan Franco | 14/07/2009 | Home & FamilyChanging the products you sell won't make school children sell more but changing the minds of the students and their parents who usually don't sell anything will.
Prizes Make a Huge Difference in School Fundraising Results
By: Juan Franco | 14/07/2009 | EducationIn a lot of cases where fundraising and school children are concerned the motivation to get fully involved can often be lacking. And it's not the kids lacking the motivation. Kids will get excited about the "Yard of Gum" but Mom will trash the brochure because "She" is not excited about it. Fix that and you fix sagging sales!