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A Field Guide to Event Sponsors

Man made word SPONSORS with wood blocks

Fundraising events can be time-consuming and stressful to plan, but successful events can be game-changers for nonprofit organizations. That’s because they generate diverse sources of revenue — your nonprofit brings in money from participants in the community, but also engages sponsors. But the latter can be challenging for many nonprofits. How do you find event sponsors? How do you start the conversation?

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In this post, we’ll break down the art and science of getting event sponsorships. So, when it’s time to start planning your next event on Mightycause, you’ll know how to effectively pitch to potential sponsors and have an even bigger impact with your event.

Do Your Research

The trick to finalizing a sponsorship is understanding what speaks to them. And that is something you’ll learn when you’re reviewing potential event sponsorships. Before you reach out, make your first call, send that first email… you should be doing copious research.

This is how to get started.

Finding Prospective Event Sponsors

Just as your nonprofit’s work won’t appeal to every donor, it won’t appeal to every sponsor, either. You’ll need to create a list of prospective event sponsors before you start pitching. And to create that list, you’ll want to find business and sponsors that make sense for your event and your organization.

Getting the Right Information

When you’re in research mode, focus on finding a direct contact at the company. If all else fails, you can reach out to a general email address or phone number. But it’s worth going the extra mile to find a real person you can talk to about sponsoring your event.

Who that might be depends on the company. For mid-size or large companies, HR might have a staff member who handles that. At small companies, you might be dealing directly with the owner. If you have a contact at the company (say, someone on your board), you will want to have them get involved in routing your request or connecting you with the correct person.

Something you’ll also want to do some digging into is any other philanthropic efforts at the company. There are three basic things you’ll want to research:

Winding Up to Pitch

Research is the first step, but that doesn’t mean you can go straight from research to outreach. There are few steps in between you’ll want to follow to make sure that when you make your pitch, you are as strong as you can be.

Create a One-Pager

We can guarantee you that when you’re conducting outreach to sponsors, you will be asked once or twice for a document explaining your event and what sponsorship entails. So, save some time and stress by getting this ready upfront! And, as a bonus, developing a one-pager can be extremely helpful in thinking through your event and sponsorship levels.

What Should Be on a One-Pager?

Your one-pager should be a scannable overview of your event and why sponsors should get involved. Keeping things to a single page means you’ll need to be focused, clear, and concise. Here are some basic things you’ll want to include:

You also want your one-pager to be slick and professional-looking, so either work with a volunteer graphic designer, or utilize free programs like Canva to create a snazzy PDF.

Determine What You Can Offer Event Sponsors

Believe it or not, tiers for event sponsors are a little controversial. We know they work with individual donors, but with event sponsors? The jury is out on whether they are helpful or harmful. Some feel that a structure is helpful when approaching sponsors, while some feel that leaving the conversation open-ended and working with each individual sponsor is more constructive.

Whether you set sponsorship tiers or not is entirely up to your nonprofit! You can stick with the standard Gold/Silver/Bronze levels, or make custom asks. However, you do need to come to a basic understanding of what you can reasonably offer to event sponsors before you start reaching out.

Pricing

Determining pricing, or sponsorship valuation, can be tricky. You don’t want to price anyone out, but you don’t want to devalue your event, either. How do you strike a balance between being approachable and not selling your event short? Here’s what we recommend:

You can also find sponsorship valuation calculators online if you really get stuck! Don’t accept their calculations as gospel truth, but use them as a jumping-off point if you’re really not sure where to begin.

Consider What Appeals to Event Sponsors

To be clear, businesses usually don’t sponsor charitable events out of the goodness of their hearts. They do it because there’s something in it for them. Whether it’s advertising, opportunities to connect with potential customers, goodwill in the community, or brand-building… event sponsors are looking out for number one. So, to get sponsors, you’ll need to appeal to their interests.

Things like adding their logos to swag (such as t-shirts) can be appealing to sponsors, as can booth space, advertising at the event (on signs, on event collateral, and so on), and shoutouts on your website, social media, and your Mightycause page. (Mightycause has dedicated space to recognize your sponsors by adding logos and linking to their websites.)

Sponsors for Louisville Story Program’s 2019 Write-a-Thon on Mightycause

Out-of-the-box sponsorship perks like speaking at the event, free event registration for their employees, or even selling or promoting a key product of theirs at your event can help you stand out from the crowd.

Be sure to focus on things you can actually deliver, and don’t be afraid to get creative! Just make sure everything you offer takes into account what appeals to business sponsors, and what your nonprofit can reasonably agree to provide… and what makes sense for your event.

Outreach to Potential Event Sponsors

So, you’ve done all the prep work. You’ve researched your prospects, and have a solid list with some direct contacts. You’ve got a sleek one-pager and you’re confident in your offerings. Here how to pitch to sponsors.

Personalize Your Contact

We recommend emailing your contacts first, with the intention of getting them on the phone for a call or scheduling a meeting. But don’t do a blast email! Send personal emails to your contacts, specific to who you’re trying to connect with.

To make life easier, you can create a Google Doc with some text that you can copy, paste, and customize for each prospective sponsor.

Keep It Concise

Look, we’re all on email overload, so your emails are more likely to be read if they’re scannable, direct, and to the point. No one wants to read an essay. Include line breaks for readability, make it clear what you want, and provide next steps. Here’s an example of an email to potential sponsors.

You can attach your one-pager, or try to get them on the phone first — it’s up to you!

Stay Focused on the Benefits to Them

You don’t need to go into detail about your nonprofit and your work when reaching out. Remember, this isn’t about you, it’s about them. You’re trying to get them to see event sponsorship as a mutually beneficial partnership. So, stay focused on the big picture, and center the conversation around their needs and what’s beneficial to them.

That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t talk about your nonprofit’s work at all! Definitely including some information about who your nonprofit serves, who your supporters are, and any overlap with your potential sponsors’ concerns and target customers is helpful. But you’re not pitching your nonprofit — you’re pitching sponsoring your event. So, stay focused on that, and don’t get too in the weeds trying to explain the details of what you do or why your work is important.

Follow 👏 Up 👏

We can’t stress this enough: Follow up! We recommend taking a strategic approach to following up instead of playing it by ear. Keep a spreadsheet of your contacts with prospective sponsors, and set calendar reminders to follow up with them. You can also figure out how many times you want to follow up with prospective donors before calling it a day (for this event, at least).

The “Magic Email”

If you’ve followed up and haven’t gotten a response, hit them with the “magic email.” What’s that, you ask? Well, it basically looks like this:

Why is it magic? In many cases, it successfully nudges people to respond to you. And even if it doesn’t, you’ve politely closed out the correspondence.

Take No For An Answer… For Now

So, if a prospect says no, or simply doesn’t respond, move on with planning your event and engaging with responsive prospects. But don’t write them off entirely! Take notes, and plan to reach back out to them when you’re planning your next event or campaign. This event may not have been the right one for them, but you may be able to get them involved with another campaign, another event, or in a totally different capacity.

 

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