Posts tagged revenue
Annual Golf Tournament Raises Thousands of Dollars to Address Hunger & Promote Volunteerism
 
 

Organization Snapshot

Million Meal Movement (MMM) goes beyond feeding the hungry, extending its impact to teaching the importance of volunteerism. By connecting with businesses, families, and community members in the Indianapolis area, the organization has packed over 32 million meals since its inception in 2007. In Indiana alone, over one million people—and one in five children—are food insecure and don’t know where they’ll get their next meal. Meals packed by MMM’s volunteers and corporate events go directly to local food banks where they’re distributed to families that need them.

For Chris Evans, who moved to Indianapolis in 2014, MMM was a way for his family to give back to the community in a meaningful way. “We wanted to do something more than just donate money, but volunteer to be part of something with a local impact,” Chris says.

The founder of MMM, Dan Hintz, was a client of Chris’s at American Century Investments. Intrigued by the organization’s dual focus, Chris and his family volunteered for a meal packing event on Thanksgiving and he found himself moved by the cause and wanted to get more involved. He’s served as a board member for the organization since 2018.

 

The Challenge

The Million Meal Marathon has traditionally been held each fall, which is a 24-hour event to pack a million meals and a major fundraiser for the organization. Chris and other board members wanted to bookend the year by adding a fundraising event in the spring. His passion for golf led him to explore a golf tournament fundraiser, though he had never planned such an event before. “I had golfed in a lot of charity tournaments in the past so I had a general sense of what was involved, but there were lots of nuances to figure out along the way,” Chris says.

 

Million Meal Movement Executive Director Nancy Hintz at the first annual Swing Away Hunger Charity Golf Classic in 2021.

 

Tournament at a Glance:

Private Golf Facility

Woodland Country Club

Number of golfers

108

Add-Ons & Extras

Contests, Auctions

Tournament Format

4-person scramble


 

The Solution

He teamed up with Chris Cimaglio, another MMM board member, who came across GolfStatus while researching golf tournament resources. The committee dug into it and decided the software was everything they needed. Since the golf event was a brand new endeavor, the committee leaned on GolfStatus to give the event structure, provide experience-based feedback, and above all, provide tools to save time and stay organized.

“Our fear was wasting time with having to use spreadsheets to keep track of everything,” Chris says, so using a golf-specific platform that kept everything—from golfer information to sponsor logos to hole assignments—organized in one place was a huge selling point. Plus, as a nonprofit, MMM qualified for GolfStatus’s Golf for Good program, which gave them full access to the platform at no cost.

 

The Results

In the fundraiser’s first year, the Swing Away Hunger Charity Golf Classic raised about $12,000. In its second year, the event doubled its fundraising, bringing in over $25,000. Perhaps most importantly, the golf event introduced MMM to new businesses and corporations that set the stage for transformational engagement and partnerships.

Using GolfStatus meant Chris and the rest of the planning committee didn’t have to spend their valuable volunteer time reconciling registrations and payments, processing a ton of checks and receipts, or managing multiple spreadsheets. Instead, they could focus on offering a top-notch event experience and stewarding sponsors. “We sent a lot of emails and letters and made a lot of phone calls!” says Chris.

 

The Swing Away Hunger Charity Golf Classic is held at the private Woodland Country Club in Carmel, Indiana.

 

Raising Money, Building Partnerships

As is typical with golf fundraisers, the bulk of the revenue was generated by sponsorships. “We didn’t raise a ton on the actual players, but hole and other sponsorships brought in dollars,” Chris says. The planning committee started by reaching out to companies that have participated in or sponsored meal-packing events in the past, then leveraging board relationships in the community to drive larger sponsorships.

Beyond the fundraising aspect, golf tournaments increase awareness for the benefiting organization and often lay the foundation for strong partnerships and relationships outside of the event. Such was the case for MMM. “The golf tournament has been a great way to introduce Million Meal Movement to people when they play,” Chris says.

MMM’s focus on volunteerism has been a draw for businesses looking to get involved with their community. Following the golf tournament, multiple companies signed on for corporate meal-packing events, further engaging with the organization and broadening the golf fundraiser’s impact.

 

The golf tournament raised a ton of awareness for the organization. It brought companies in to support meal-packing events throughout the year, helping fulfill the mission and get food to the people that need it.
— Chris Evans, Million Meal Movement Board Member / Vice President of Sales at American Century Investments

 

The planning team used social media to recognize event sponsors.

 

Leveraging Technology to Save Time & Create Processes

The GolfStatus team built an event website for the Swing Away Hunger Charity Golf Classic, working closely with Chris and the planning team. “The website definitely saved us a lot of time,” says Chris. “It made it easy for people to register and sponsors to see available packages, commit, and upload logos. Plus, it made it easy to run the event from an administrative standpoint.”

In the tournament’s first year, Chris notes how they were not only planning the event from scratch, but creating processes at the same time. “GolfStatus helped us create good processes from the get-go,” Chris says. “That made it easier in subsequent years, knowing the framework is in place—sponsorship packages, signage, software, promotion plans, and so on—so we could just execute.”

 

GolfStatus helped us create good processes from the get-go.
— Chris Evans, Million Meal Movement Board Member / Vice President of Sales at American Century Investments

 

GolfStatus worked with Chris and the planning team to build an event website to collect registrations, share information about the organization, and onboard and recognize sponsors.

 

Learning & Improving

Chris is preparing to step down from the MMM board and prepping another board member to take over as the Golf Event Chair. Having GolfStatus in place ensures a seamless transition for the new contact, who will work closely with the GolfStatus in-house customer success team to simply copy the event each year. “There’s no need to start from scratch, they can just take it and run with it,” Chris says. “The customer success team at GolfStatus is such a great resource. They were always available and got back to me right away, no matter how big or small the issue or question.”

 

The customer success team at GolfStatus is such a great resource. They were always available and got back to me right away, no matter how big or small the issue or question.
— Chris Evans, Million Meal Movement Board Member / Vice President of Sales at American Century Investments

 

With a couple tournaments under the committee’s belt, Chris says they’ve learned something each year and found ways to improve. A small silent and live auction were added for its second year, plus a raffle and more tailored sponsorship packages and better communication with golfers ahead of time about the live-scoring component.

“I think it’s really important to involve people on the planning committee who are well-connected in the community and those who have time to devote to the tournament,” he says. “GolfStatus was fantastic. The website, online registration, and golf-specific features made the details easy to handle.”

 

 

Golf for Good

GolfStatus is committed to helping nonprofits do more good through golf. As part of its Golf for Good program, nonprofits and those holding events that benefit one can qualify for no-cost access to the GolfStatus platform, plus exclusive sponsorships, add-ons, and dedicated support to help you save time and raise more money. Click below to get qualified or email [email protected].

 
 

 
First Tee Omaha Uses Technology for Annual Memorial Golf Fundraiser
 

Golf may be the medium, but the mission of First Tee extends far beyond the sport itself. Its approach uses golf as a metaphor for life—a game with unexpected challenges and ups and downs that help build strengths beyond the technical skills to play the game. “That’s what sets us apart from someone just offering junior golf lessons,” says Jeff Porter, PGA, First Tee Omaha’s Executive Director.

Part of the larger First Tee network with chapters in all 50 states, First Tee Omaha focuses on resiliency, building self-confidence, and a sense of belonging through golf. Its nine core values of honesty, integrity, sportsmanship, respect, confidence, responsibility, perseverance, courtesy, and judgment serve kids well beyond the golf course. 

First Tee of Omaha.jpg

The Steve Hogan Memorial Golf outing is held annually to raise money for the First Tee of Omaha’s Golf and Life Skills youth development programming, but also to remember the contributions of founder Steve Hogan. A passionate advocate for junior golf in the area, Steve was the first African American PGA professional in the Nebraska Section and had a vision of using golf as a way to instill the values of being a good person, citizen, and student in kids from all walks of life. He founded Hogan’s Heroes Junior Golf Heroes, which later became First Tee Omaha.


Sponsor contributions

20% increase

Revenue

30% increase


Elevating the Event and Maximizing Fundraising

The 11th annual Steve Hogan Memorial Golf Outing was originally planned for July 2020, but precautions related to COVID-19 prompted it to be rescheduled for September. Jeff had already signed on to use the GolfStatus platform for the event, but credits the technology with helping them quickly adapt. “Like everybody else, we rolled with the punches and made the best of the situation that we couldn’t control,” says Jeff.

Like many other nonprofits, First Tee Omaha’s golf event is a huge part of its fundraising portfolio. One of Jeff’s goals for upgrading the outing with technology was to be more efficient while still offering the best possible experience for golfers and sponsors. “We want to honor Steve’s legacy with a great event,” he says. “That meant looking at what we have been doing for years and what we can do differently and do better.” 

As a nonprofit organization, First Tee Omaha qualified for a free event registration website, along with no-cost access to the GolfStatus platform through the Golf for Good program. The GolfStatus team built the site and worked with Jeff to set custom team and sponsor packages. The built-in online registration capabilities saved the planning team a ton of time. Instead of dealing with piles of mailed in registration forms, checks, and hand-written credit card numbers, folks registered online where their information was securely captured and stored in the software’s back-end. “It was great not to have to deal with checks, processing credit cards, and handling receipts for those that registered online,” Jeff says. “This was just another way to maximize the technology to make things easier and more efficient.”


This was just another way to maximize the technology to make things easier and more efficient.
— Jeff Porter, PGA, First Tee Omaha’s Executive Director

Jeff notes that the simple, attractive website made it easier for sponsors to want to sign on to support the event, and digital exposure added even more value to their investment. “For sponsors and potential sponsors to see their options and purchase them right there on the website was huge,” he says. The 2020 event saw an increase in sponsor contributions by 20% over previous years, much of which Jeff credits to the broad digital exposure provided by GolfStatus.

Organizations can build custom sponsorship packages and sell them right on the event website.

Organizations can build custom sponsorship packages and sell them right on the event website.

Saving Everyone Time

Jeff has been in the golf business for years. He spent 10 years as a golf course general manager before becoming First Tee Omaha’s Executive Director. His years of experience running golf events from the facility side makes him uniquely qualified to understand the work that goes into running a successful golf tournament. He points out that golf staff often have to do tedious, time-consuming tasks leading up to a golf event. But GolfStatus automates much of that work, freeing up staff to assist event organizers and golfers the day of the tournament. “GolfStatus is basically another pair of hands to help with event prep and execution,” he says, noting that the software eases their burden. Instead of having to enter golfer information for cart signs, tee sheets, and alpha lists, the pre-formatted printouts in the software were ready to go. “Really, there’s no downside to using it. It saves everybody time and manpower, elevates the event, and provides a great experience.”


It (GolfStatus) saves everybody time and manpower, elevates the event, and provides a great experience.
— Jeff Porter, PGA, First Tee Omaha’s Executive Director

The outing used GolfStatus’s reliable live-scoring feature to not only reduce the touchpoint of paper scorecards, but provide real-time standings throughout the day. “Having the standings ready to go on the live leaderboards literally cut an hour off the end of the day,” Jeff points out. Teams used the GolfStatus mobile app to record their score with a few simple taps, which automatically synced to the live leaderboards that anyone could follow on the event website.

Not only did live scoring and leaderboards provide digital sponsorship exposure during the tournament, but they saved golf facility staff, event organizers, and even golfers time when the event was wrapping up. “People are anxious to get to the outing and play, but they’re also anxious to go home,” Jeff says. He points out that thanks to the live scoring functionality, the results were available as soon as the last group finished their round. “This is just one more way we can streamline the process to be most efficient, and people liked checking the standings over the course of the day,” Jeff says.

A young boy determinedly planning his putt surrounded by other team members.

Better Outcomes Thanks to Better Tech

Jeff credits GolfStatus’s premium features with elevating the overall professionalism of the annual outing. “GolfStatus did everything that we wanted it to as far as elevating the product and experience that we are offering,” says Jeff.

What’s more, the event saw an impressive increase in revenue—up 30% from previous years. “The overall workload on the fundraiser went down and our revenue went up. That’s a win-win!” Jeff says. “We were really excited that we saw an increase in proceeds from the golf event and I credit that to GolfStatus.”

To learn more about First Tee Omaha, visit firstteeomaha.org.


The overall workload on the fundraiser went down and our revenue went up. That’s a win-win!
— Jeff Porter, PGA, First Tee Omaha’s Executive Director

 

Planning a memorial tournament or other golf tournament fundraiser? Get qualified for our Golf for Good program and get a free website and no-cost access to GolfStatus’s golf event management technology.

 

 
Adding a Virtual Option for Your Golf Fundraiser: What You Need To Know & How To Do It
 

If 2020 has taught fundraisers and event organizers anything, it’s that they have to be able to adapt on the fly. Organizations pivoted traditional golf fundraisers to virtual events and leaned on technology to adapt in-person golf tournaments and salvage them as fundraising opportunities. This approach paid dividends, providing a much-needed revenue boost in an already challenging financial year for nonprofits and paved the way for event fundraisers to head into another uncertain year with more options. With spring events still up in the air, many are going completely virtual, considering virtual elements, or simply looking for a back-up plan in case they have to. For golf tournaments, it turns out that all three scenarios are surprisingly easy to plan for. Here’s what you need to know about virtual options for golf tournaments and how to leverage them.

How Virtual golf Events Work

A virtual golf event powered by GolfStatus doesn’t get played online; instead, it takes place at one or more golf courses over an extended period of time. Golfers register online to donate their round in support of a cause, play when it’s convenient for them instead of congregating at one facility on a given date and time, and enter their scores into the virtual event’s online leaderboard, all without the typical crowds of a one-day in-person event. Virtual events present more fundraising opportunities through digital sponsorships, and organizers share the event’s leaderboards over the course of the extended-play tournament to drum up online donations from participants and those following along.

Golfers submit scores via the GolfStatus mobile app that instantly syncs to an aggregate online leaderboard to keep supporters engaged.

Golfers submit scores via the GolfStatus mobile app that instantly syncs to an aggregate online leaderboard to keep supporters engaged.


Given the uncertainty ahead for traditional gatherings and fundraising events, options and flexibility are especially crucial. Indeed, virtual formats can be leveraged in a number of ways, including going completely virtual, running a virtual event in tandem with a traditional on-site event, or keeping the virtual event in your back pocket in case you need to change directions last-minute and cancel your traditional on-site outing. 

In fact, adding a virtual option to a traditional, in-person tournament is a built-in backup plan. In the best case scenario, both events move forward and you’re able to attract more players and sponsors to the outing than you would normally be able to with a regular one-day outing at the course. Golfers who feel more comfortable playing a round in support of the tournament on their own, have a scheduling conflict, or weren’t able to register for the traditional outing before teams filled up are still able to participate and purchase a team or individual registration. Sponsors can also support the live leaderboards for both the virtual and day-of competition in exchange for digital exposure through the GolfStatus-powered event website, live-scoring app, and online leaderboards.

What’s more, if the in-person event ends up needing to be canceled or modified, the virtual event can oftentimes proceed without missing a beat.

No Risk, High Reward

With golf’s popularity surging (the National Golf Foundation reports that September 2020 rounds were up 26% compared to 2019 and golf equipment sales topped $1 billion in the third quarter of 2020, an all-time record), people will continue to be eager to hit the links in any way they can in 2021, making now the perfect time to add a virtual element to your golf tournament—with little to no risk and a ton of fundraising potential. 

Mobile Registration

If you’re working on behalf of a nonprofit, or if your event benefits a 501(c) organization or established social cause, you likely qualify for GolfStatus’s Golf for Good program, which makes it possible to add a virtual round to your existing event or go completely virtual with your tournament at no cost. Further, the costs incurred with virtual events and added virtual rounds are typically minimal, making virtual options low-cost and low-risk. Unlike a traditional golf tournament, you won’t need to rent the whole facility on a specific date and time, which can limit or altogether eliminate green fees (usually one of the most substantial expenses associated with the golf event).

For St. Luke’s Health Foundation (which raises money for St. Luke’s Children’s Hospital in Boise, Idaho) a virtual outing was a way to keep its 35-year golf event going safely and successfully amid COVID-19. “We quickly realized that the number of participants in a virtual tournament is only limited by the number of people that can play at the course each day,” says Maegan Krahn, director of special events and director of Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals at St. Luke’s Health Foundation. Ahead of 2021, Maegan and her team will use what they learned to add a monthlong virtual round to their usual one-day outing. Live-scoring technology makes both possible, with online registration and in-app scoring to eliminate touchpoints plus the virtual round that allows hospital staff, foundation leadership, board members, and other supporters more opportunities to play in and sponsor the tournament.


We quickly realized that the number of participants in a virtual tournament is only limited by the number of people that can play at the course each day.
— Maegan Krahn, director of special events and director of Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals at St. Luke’s Health Foundation

Technology is the Key to Success

The right technology makes successfully executing the add-on of a virtual round or a completely virtual tournament surprisingly simple. GolfStatus makes it easy—with free custom event websites equipped to streamline registrations for virtual and traditional events, plus options for touch-free live scoring, live leaderboards, digital sponsorships, easy event promo, and more golf event-specific features.


 

Ready to get started? Email us at [email protected] or follow the link below to learn more about our Golf for Good program and get qualified.