Sponsorships and
Underwriting Campaigns:
Would You Please Fund Our ______________?
Sponsorships and
underwriting are different labels for basically the same thing: funding donated
for the support of a project, program, event, initiative, activity, or even a
salary. In general, foundations are identified as underwriters and corporations
as sponsors. Individuals can be either, but in most instances underwriters and
sponsors will be foundations and corporations.
The amount of publicity
and recognition also helps answer the question of whether a funder is an
underwriter or a sponsor. The word sponsor connotes a higher level of
participation and consequently higher visibility than does underwriter. If one
of the benefits a funder is seeking in exchange for support is publicity and
recognition, then that funder is best identified as a sponsor. In very low
visibility situations such as the funding of a position -an executive director,
for instance ---- we would probably refer to the donor as an underwriter, even
if the donor was a corporation. In the end it doesn't really matter whether you
call a funding opportunity underwriting or sponsorship. Do what seems natural,
what is usual within your community, and always do what the funder wants. If a
corporation would rather be named an underwriter than a sponsor, then it's an
underwriter.
For the purposes of
this discussion, I will use the labels sponsor and sponsorship in instances
where we could be talking about either a corporation or foundation. Only when I
wish to restrict the application of what I am saying to a foundation will I use
the labels underwriter and underwriting.
"Package" Your
Programs, Services And Events
Sponsorship, especially
corporate sponsorship, is a relatively recent fund-raising strategy compared to
other fund-raising endeavors. A sponsorship campaign is like a capital
campaign, for example, in that it raises money for a specific purpose. Unlike a
capital campaign, however, the money raised is not used to purchase an asset,
but rather to cover an expense. Like a capital campaign, sponsorships can
provide naming opportunities---the ABC Corporation Lecture Series or the XYZ,
Inc. Neighborhood Improvement Program, for instance. Sponsorship opportunities
such as these often grow out of an organization's annual budgeting process,
allowing it to pay for things it would have done even if a sponsor hadn't risen
to the bait of a naming opportunity. These sponsorships permit an organization
to package a need, in effect, as a means of boosting its annual support. The
idea is to give greater credit and visibility to a sponsor in exchange for an
increased contribution. A corporation will look to a sponsorship with a
non-profit organization as the means for the corporation to:
Be Creative And Boost
Your Annual Fund Potential
At one end of what I
call the sponsorship spectrum are the donors who provide an organization's
bedrock annual support. It makes sense to give these donors as much recognition
and credit as possible. If their gifts are of a size to warrant, you can even
specify that certain programs, efforts, or activities have been made possible
because of their support. Once an organization has made a practice of linking
gifts from certain donors to certain of its activities, the next step is to
offer those donors sponsorships. Ideally, a single donor becomes the sole
sponsor of an activity. The activity may be new, or already in existence. The
sponsor gets the exclusive benefit of associating its name with the event or
program. Often a sponsor's name can become synonymous with an event. When I say
Thanksgiving Day parade, I bet the name Macy's jumps to mind. In a survey some
years back, 97 percent of the participants made that association.
The beauty of funding
something in this way is that you can ask for more money for a sponsorship than
the donor was contributing to your annual fund-raising campaign. You can also
ratchet up the cost of the sponsorship every few years: One that was available
for $10,000 three or four years ago now requires a $15,000 contribution.
At the other end of the
sponsorship spectrum are the companies and individuals who have shown no
interest in your organization in the past. They may even have turned down
earlier solicitations. A named sponsorship opportunity that provides high
visibility can be just the ticket to drawing in a prospect who has previously
been reluctant to give.
Be Alert For
Opportunities To Obtain New Or Increased Funding
- Examine, analyze and investigate at all times all that you do in
your organization to know what will appeal to prospective sponsors and
underwriters
- Advertise and promote the programs and services you have available
for sponsorship and underwriting through personal contacts, newsletters,
letters of inquiry, etc.
- Identify prospects and their products and services which could
have a mutually beneficial connection to your organization
- Develop, with the assistance of all appropriate staff, the
necessary elements for preparing proposals to prospects and seek trustee
involvement through their peer contacts and presentations of
proposals
- Establish with the sponsor or underwriter the desired goals and
objectives of the proposed association
- Develop with each sponsor or underwriter a detailed and realistic
action plan and calendar with clearly defined responsibilities
- Be responsible for the full "servicing" of the
sponsorship or underwriting program, including employing all necessary
organization staff support and participation. You must do everything you said
you would do. The number of times and where the sponsor's logo is to publicly
appear, entertainment opportunities, access to your leadership, etc., and other
promises and agreements, must be fulfilled.
- Evaluate ongoing and completed sponsorships and underwriting
programs to the satisfaction of the donors to maintain and continue support and
to perfect models for future proposals and presentations
The first step in
seeking sponsorships is to identify likely projects, programs, events,
initiatives, and activities. I can't think of an organization that would not
have some underwriting or sponsorship opportunities. Remember, creating a
sponsorship often requires nothing more than a rethinking of the means by which
you fund something. Nearly any discrete endeavor can be pulled from a general
budget and packaged, such as underwriting six months of a scoutmaster?s service
to 20 inner-city children, three months of computer training for a welfare
mother to help prepare her for employment, or sponsor an education outreach
program enriching the lives of 100 students, etc. A "grass-roots"
organization sheltering abused children could have donors sponsor a child or
underwrite the cost of a social worker's service for a year, etc.
Finding the best
opportunities for sponsorship campaigns requires fund-raisers to
"mine" their organizations by looking hard at what activities are
planned. Fund-raisers should meet regularly with other staff to keep abreast of
developments and to solicit their opinions about which activities might be
viable for sponsorship. Once a sponsorship opportunity has been identified, a
full-fledged proposal needs to be developed. This should include a budget, a
case for giving which shows how the community and the organization will
benefit, and a complete explanation of how the sponsor will benefit from the
relationship.
Next comes the rating
and evaluating of prospects. The goal is to narrow the field to the single best
candidate and a handful of backups. A standing sponsorship committee of the
board of trustees can be a great aid here and provide better leadership of this
task than a committee formed separately for each sponsorship project.
Committee members,
other fund-raisers, and organization management should keep well informed about
both the kinds of endeavors that area foundations are willing to underwrite and
which corporations are likely to be attracted to a sponsorship opportunity.
That means staying on top of local and national business news. A firm that may
have shown no past interest in supporting your organization (or any other, for
that matter) can suddenly find itself needing the recognition and publicity a
sponsorship opportunity can deliver. A marketing or public relations agency can
be a useful advisor for identifying potential sponsors, and an organization
should try to involve such a firm on a volunteer basis or perhaps even hire
such services.
Once a sponsorship
opportunity has been identified, a general proposal has been developed, and a
candidate or candidates have been identified, the proposal must be tailored to
fit each prospective donor. In this age of desktop publishing it is easy to
produce a professional-looking prospectus targeted to each sponsorship
candidate.
In general, sponsorship
solicitations should be sequential. Only rarely, if ever, would you offer a
sponsorship opportunity to two or more prospects at the same time. The danger
is that more than one will accept. However, if the sponsorship is one of a
number of similar opportunities, then one prospective sponsor may be able to be
moved. If the organization is offering a unique named opportunity, then having
to go back to a prospect who is in the process of accepting the offer and say
you gave it to someone else has the potential for permanently damaging that
relationship.
However, each
sponsorship opportunity is its own campaign, and you can undertake several
sponsorship campaigns simultaneously with other fund-raising campaigns.
You would do well to
allow as much time as possible for a sponsorship campaign. Even a turndown
takes time, and a sponsored endeavor usually has a "drop-dead" date
--- the point after which it becomes impossible to recognize and publicize a
donation and include the donor in sponsorship publications such as brochures,
schedules, and programs and in activities such as dinners, cocktail parties,
and openings. Fund-raisers need to plan backward from the drop-dead date in
order to allow time to solicit more than one potential sponsor if that becomes
necessary.
Sponsorship campaigns
have no ideal length, and because they are conducted behind the scenes, they
can go on for as long as it takes to elicit a positive response, or until the
drop-dead date has passed. The invisibility of this kind of campaign means that
failure causes little real damage, other than the missing funding. Since
failure in a sponsorship campaign is "private" and there is no
hard-and-fast time frame beyond the final drop-dead date, organizations need to
be very careful about not letting sponsorship opportunities slip away.
Sponsorships need to be pursued with the same vigor as annual, endowment, and
capital campaigns.
Don't "Give Away The
Store"
Perhaps the most common
mistake made in a sponsorship campaign is to let ancillary expenses rise by
making overly generous commitments to the sponsor. Corporate sponsors are
particularly likely to suggest expenses which are covered by the sponsor's gift
but which are not part of the sponsored endeavor's regular budget. Items which
the sponsor may ask for as part of its benefit package can include, but are not
restricted to:
- Advertising
- Parties and other free entertainment for customers, clients, and
employees
- Hundreds of free tickets, which could otherwise be sold, to an
event
- Special publications, posters, and other printed
materials
- Elaborate press functions
There is a tendency on
the part of fund-raisers to promise special considerations to sponsors. That
inclination must be resisted, but with as much tact as possible. Out-of-pocket
expenses can destroy the value of a sponsorship donation if they are allowed to
get out of hand.
A sponsored endeavor
that does not meet the organization's or the sponsor's expectations poses
another potential danger. Neither foundations, nor corporations, nor
individuals want to have their names attached to negative publicity.
Controversial endeavors do not make good sponsorship opportunities. Be sure
there is no hidden potential for controversy in those activities for which you
seek sponsorship.
Determining What To
Offer Sponsors Is A Team Effort
In my experience, the
biggest problem fund-raisers are likely to encounter with sponsorships is that
there is always somebody back at the shop --- a staff member or trustee --- who
objects strenuously (and, to my mind, often unreasonably) to some of the
benefits given in exchange for sponsorship. The impact of these objections can
be diminished by having the key players clearly define in advance what
courtesies and considerations will be extended to a sponsor. If a non-profit
organization earns a portion of its income, then the people running the
marketing operation need to be apprised of and in agreement with just how much
of what they sell is --- from their point of view --- going to be "given
away" to a sponsor. Good relations between an organization's fund-raisers
and marketers are very important. They need to work together as a team to
produce the income which is their common goal.
Most Sponsorships Are
Philanthropy-Driven
It is important to
remember that all donations, including sponsorships, are basically
philanthropic in nature. What we do to recognize a sponsor's contribution is
just that --recognition. Be careful how you tout "market value" of
sponsorship benefits. An organization should not look at a sponsorship as a
quid pro quo arrangement with each contributed dollar "buying"
additional benefit for the sponsor. All but the most inexperienced sponsors
know they are making a donation. Don't work so hard to convince sponsors of the
value they will receive that they cease to see their sponsorship as a
philanthropic endeavor.
An organization mounts a
sponsorship campaign in order to increase its donated income. Sponsorships are
an effective way both of enlarging existing annual gifts and of drawing in new
corporate donors. There are secondary benefits as well. One is the credibility
to be gained when a company or foundation allows its name to be associated with
that of the organization. This quite plainly and simply amounts to an
endorsement, and the bigger the company or more highly regarded the foundation,
the greater the impact of that endorsement. An organization establishes a
richer, more complex relationship with a donor who is also a sponsor. In the
case of corporate sponsors, this often leads middle and upper-level corporate
management to deeper involvement with the organization, resulting in the
expansion of its volunteer base and the development of potential leaders for
its fund-raising campaigns.
Often, one of the
benefits extended to sponsors is a reception or entertainment event. When this
happens the organization's trustees, administrators, and fund-raisers have the
opportunity to rub shoulders with corporate executives and other invited
guests. It is a chance to meet and get the ears of some of a community's most
important people. Suddenly, you are sitting at a table with the company's CEO
and spouse or the public relations VP and spouse, and that is a true networking
opportunity.
Those are my views on
the subject. What are yours? I welcome your comments and suggestions:
tony@raise-funds.com
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