Friday, March 13, 2009

Don't Throw $$$ Down the 18th Hole!

Golf hole sponsorship -- $250

Spring Soccer League Sponsorship -- $400

Getting quantifiable ROI from any of these sponsorships – Doubtful


Stop right there! I urge you not to process that pile of sponsorship requests until you stop and answer some direct questions about why you are doing them and what you expect to get in return.

Yes, every company must support its local communities through charitable donations. However, sponsorships, as opposed to donations, mean you should get something back in return -- and a 5 inch one-color logo on a t-shirt just isn’t enough.

Take the time to look at all of your sponsorships with an objective eye and see if there aren’t better ways for you to build in a return on investment (ROI).

I used to do PR for McDonald’s and I can’t tell you how many sponsorship proposals came across my desk promising to give me logo exposure on banners and t-shirts. Well, there is a McDonald’s restaurant with huge golden arches every 4 miles or so in this country. We really weren’t looking for more logo exposure.

So, I rewrote the proposals and built in exposure that brought strategic value to McDonald’s. I used sponsorship of a community walk to promote a new line of salads and healthy kids meal options. I used sponsorship of a museum exhibit to showcase McDonald’s grants and activities in local elementary schools. Basically, I got strategic and creative and it paid off.

I urge you to look beyond logo exposure and build business drivers into your sponsorships.

  • Can you showcase cash management products like desktop deposit scanners to all of the small business owners at the golf outing?
  • When you sponsor the Spring Soccer League can you provide a bounce-back coupon for a free soccer photo frame to everyone who opens a child’s savings account?

Here are some questions that might help you be more strategic about your next sponsorship request:

1. What audience do I have access to with this sponsorship? Why is this audience important?

2. What do we MOST want this audience to know about us and what makes us different?

3. What business driver can I build into this sponsorship that will allow us to have another opportunity to touch this audience?

  • “We have innovative business products that save time for small business owners” – have a business banker on hand to showcase your business products
  • “We have online technology that saves Mom’s time paying the bills” – giveaway item that drives traffic to your online bill pay demo

4. How can I measure response to this sponsorship?

5. What plan can I put into place for my salespeople to follow up on these leads?


The bottom line – if you are creative you can do something good for the community and something good for your business at the same time. Make sure you take the time to make your sponsorships a win-win situation.

Post a comment and share great sponsorship ideas you’ve seen or implemented.

Deanna

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