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Hey guys I was just wondering what are some fundraisers everyone does to raise money. At my school we go in debt every year because we cannot charge admission to our games plus our school forced baseball and softball to join into one booster club because of Title IX. Until then I did a pretty good job of covering my bills except for umpires. My school lets that slide since we can't charge admission. Also, we play at a public park and do not have complete control over concessions. To make matters worse the park who has to give us a certain percentage of concession money doesn't give us what we are owed.

A few things we do to raise money is have Co - ed softball tournaments (they raise around $500 - $1000), powder puff football ($300 - $400) co -ed volleyball tournament ($300 - $400) and last year we had a haunted forest which raised almost $3000. All of those are good but when you have to split half with softball then that is a huge chunk of money gone there.

Just wondering if there is something other coaches do that I could start doing as well.

Thanks for the help guys and giving me a shoulder to cry on with my financial troubles.

Nothing can stop the man with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help the man with the wrong mental attitude. Thomas Jefferson

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We do a hit-a-thon. In a rural town of about 1450 people, we raised $2600 for a new machine. What we do is take pledges per foot of the kids longest hit. In practice one day we do this. Each kid gets 10 cuts, the others mark where they landed, and we measure the longest drive. So if you get $.10 per foot and hit one 300 ft, thats $30.00!! Our stands were packed that night with donors rooting on their kids! It was great!
Please allow me to vent some.

Like the changes in a season, we are always going to have this as a reoccuring discussion. WHY? Personally speaking, I don't have a degree in marketing. I deplore sales in general. I am (or at least I think I am) a baseball coach. Coach2709 welcome to those things they didn't tell you about when you thought you'd just get to coach. By the time you are done coaching, you'll know more about business than the people in business. LOL! Kind of like you also instantly become the only disciplinarian your players will listen to according to the faculty and so, all of your player's misbehaviors will instantly become the topic of discussion when you are trying to eat.

OK, enough on the venting stuff. In the past, we've done the Golf Ball Drop. You will have to make up a sign up sheet where you also issue "golf ball numbers" to the kids, a sheet for participants to fill out their contact information and a letter to the parents explaining what you are doing. An example of the Golf Ball Drop letter issued to parents!


Dear Parents,

For our fund raiser this year, we are going to do the Golf Ball Drop. Details would include:

• This promotion is based on the sales of 1,000 assigned numbers marked on donated golf balls.
• Donations of $5.00 will be requested for each golf ball number.
• Your child will be issued the numbers to 20 golf balls. (At 50 kids in the baseball program.)
• They will gather personal information such as name and contact address and phone number of the individual who purchases each number.
• Upon the completion of the collection of donations, your son’s issued numbers which are marked on donated golf balls will be placed into a trash bin.
• Prior to adding those marked golf balls to the larger bin, your child will put those numbered balls into a bucket and draw out one number. That person with that assigned number will win a Triad Baseball T-Shirt. So every person making a donation has a 1 in 20 chance of winning a T-Shirt.
• When 1,000 golf balls are sold, then these golf balls will be dropped from the high rise platform which the district uses to change the lights in the gym.
• A “pin” will be placed in the ground. The closest golf ball dropped from the platform which ends up closes to this pin will be the winner of $1,000 dollars.
• This will represent our major fundraiser for this year. If you have any questions at all please call me at #########.
• We would like to make you aware that Oakbrook Golf Course donated old range golf balls for this fundraiser.
• We would like to make you aware that Super-T’s has donated half of the cost of these T-Shirts. (50 in number.) These T-Shirts are the same shirts approved by the Seniors for this year that you purchased for $12 each.


Thank you,



Darrell Butler
Last edited by CoachB25
There are two ways I know of to raise REAL money successfully.

The first one is to ask for decent sized donations with no sales or other stuff involved.

The truth about fund raising is that most of the money you will raise will come from folks who figure they're just throwing away a few dollars to help you out. They are not the least bit interested in what you are selling. They don't want your candy, your magazines, your baked goods, or anything. They just want to help you.

What is more, most of what is sold -- dollar candy bars that cost you 50 cents, for example -- do not max out what a donor would really give you if you didn't give them the ability to feel like they've helped for only a dollar.

The truth is, many many people would willingly just give you money without all the sales stuff, if only you would just ask them for money!

What's more, if you let them just write you a check, they can take it off their taxes, whereas if you sell them something, they can only deduct the amount by which the price they paid exceeds the item's value (too hard for most to bother with). And if you sell raffle tickets, the price is a gambling loss, deductible only to the extent you have offsetting gambling winnings elsewhere (which most of your supporters won't).

So, believe it or not, the best way to raise money is simply to ask for donations. Instead of selling 50-cent M&M's for $1.00, you can get checks for $25 and $100 at a pop. You can even raise money from folks who don't have kids on your team.

If you put a boatload of work into a fund raiser that netted $3,000 and you had to split that with the softball team, you got $1,500 for all your work. But if you had 15 players assigned to ask for donations until they got $100 each, they could get it done going door to door on a weekend afternoon. Heck, kids raised more than that in the old days going trick or treating for UNICEF! It ain't that hard, folks.

I would suggest that you ask your team families to simply approach people asking for donations. Or, get a phone list (like your school directory) and hold a phone-a-thon one night. Or, have players walk through the local malls asking stores for sponsorship donations. (Those really work if you pair them with something like a program ad or a sign on the outfield fence.)

You might even consider asking a local business -- something like a car dealership -- to make an annual commitment in the thousands in exchange for naming the field in their honor or some such.

Just find a way to get multiple people each asking multiple people for donations. People shy away from this simple act, but once they get over it they find out it's easy and folks don't mind at all. The key is, be ballsy. Don't start out asking for $1.00. Ask for $25 or $50. That way you can suffer lots of turn downs and still come out OK based on the folks who do respond favorably. I'd rather have 10 checks for $25 than 100 donations of $1.00 each.

The only other thing that really works to bring in substantial funding is Bingo. If you have a way to do Bingo and you can staff it, go for it. Our school's boosters group is making six figures annually off Bingo and funding all the sports programs off of it. We do just one session per week, all year long, at a local Bingo hall run by a private businessman. Don't kid yourself, it's a lot of work. And some people don't like profiting off of gambling for moral reasons. But it works and it is a dependable money stream.
Hey Rob, yes, we clear about that much. We charge $40.00 per person. On top of that, we run a bar which usually clears more than $3,000.00 and have a sports memorabilia auction that will give us another $1,500.00 or so. We also have a small raffle that clears about $1,500.00 or more and a separate cash box raffle. The cash box itself clears $1,000.00. The cash box is a large plexiglas box in which we've stuffed $1,000.00 in various denomination bills. We raffle off 100 lock combinations at $20.00 per chance. The winner gets $1,000.00 and we clear $1,000.00.

All told, in a slow year we'll make $10,000.00 and in a good year we've made over $13,000.00. It helped to have Barry Bonds memorabilia to raffle off when he was more acceptable to society.

For some reason that totally escapes me, our HS boosters club decided to discontinue the crab feed this year. I am continuing on with one for our summer club, though. It'll be a bit smaller, about 250 people.
When you have a school field you definitely have more control over things. I would ask if you could hang removable signs on the outfield fence and backstop. Then get some parents to knock on the doors of local businesses, restaurants, doctors, lawyers and parents who have businesses. You can usually get between $250 and 500 a sign. But, instead of paying a sign company big bucks to make them, you employ your art department to make you signs and have them involved in the program as well. In my 1st year in a local highschool, we had a town field, and we were able to get 14 donators at an average of 300 per sign. Art classes made the signs at a cost of $35 each. That was $3700 + to the program. Then, because we couldn't charge and all of our competition could, we would have the players pass the hat in support of the program. We would average 100-125 a game doing that. Always remind the other schools supporters that you pay a set fee at their games and they are likely to contribute. By the way, in order for the businesses to have their signs up every year, they must renew at $250.
Worked for us.
Coachric I hate to be negative person (actually I am in a pretty bad mood right now over football - I am asst. coach and its a long story) but I tried the signs.

First problem was the park board does not let us keep them up all summer - the businesses want them up all summer. So at the end of our season I have to take them down and businesses get mad.

Second problem is when I started selling signs I tried to sell them at $225 start up and renew yearly at $125. We have a computer class which makes them for about $60 each so I was figuring that would be great profit. So when I pitched it to businesses they said it was too much and would not pay it. I did not sell a single sign. So I lowered it down to $125 every two years and I only sold about 7 signs.

I could tell you stories about football and baseball that would make you not believe me.

Of course I am in a bad mood right now and that is probably explaining why I am negative.

Sometimes I hate this place.
Some great ideas.

We run a coaching clinic every November. We bring in 4-5 college, minor, or major league coaches, scouts, etc., to speak.

We open it up to pretty much anyone who wants to attend which includes players and coaches of all levels.

We feel it is a win-win situation. We raise money for our program plus we promote and educate others on the game.
Last edited by CatchingCoach05
2709, WELL, we did a "donation/giveaway" (out here, we're not supposed to call them raffles) of a Mercedes last year to raise money for a new infield. I don't know if that makes us unusually affluent, or just ambitious and hard working to raise money for the program. 500 donations at $100.00 per ticket. Some guy won a C240 for $100.00.

This year, we're offering a Harley...wanna buy a ticket? $20.00 per chance, or 7 for $100.00. Big Grin
Thanks catcherdad but I am not much of a motorcyclist. I would have bought a couple of those Mercedes tickets though.

How does a raffle (donation / giveaway) work? Do you buy the car and hope to make the profit or does a dealership give one away and you provide the marketing for them?

If you buy it what happens if you don't see enough to pay for it?

Something like that would SCARE me.
quote:
The first one is to ask for decent sized donations with no sales or other stuff involved.

The truth about fund raising is that most of the money you will raise will come from folks who figure they're just throwing away a few dollars to help you out. They are not the least bit interested in what you are selling. They don't want your candy, your magazines, your baked goods, or anything. They just want to help you.


Amen - As a parent - I would just rather cut a check then do the sales stuff
2709, don't worry, it scared the hell out of us on the Mercedes. We got started on the project when a good buddy who I coach with called and said " I want to do one final fundraiser for the baseball team before my kids graduate. Do you think I'm crazy if we give away a Mercedes?" Of course, I told him he was out of his mind...and then we proceeded to figure out how to do it. We were on the hook for purchasing the care whether we sold enough tickets or not, so you can bet your you know what that we hustled like mad to get them sold. We had to sell three hundred tickets to break even, and we sold 500 which was the limit that we imposed on our sales. We took a big risk, but figured we could get it done and we did.

The post-script to this story is that we cleared a bit over $20K. This would have taken care of putting in a new bermuda infield; but the varsity coach found a way to get his hands on the funds and used all of the money for other purposes with not a single dollar going toward the intended purpose. He didn't have any parent fundraising this year, and I'll bet he still wonders why.

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