Breathe California of Sacramento-Emigrant Trails has been certified by MissionFish for the eBay Giving Works program.
Here’s how it works:
- Community seller lists an item on eBay and requests that 10-100% of the final sale price be donated to Breathe California.
- eBay sellers are encouraged to give a percentage of their proceeds to a nonprofit certified by MissionFish each and every time they list an item for sale.
- Participating sellers are rewarded for their generosity with special eBay Giving Works features that help them get more bids and higher sale prices.
- The nonprofit receives recognition in the listing and benefits from the seller’s success.
- MissionFish and eBay do the heavy lifting – we collect and distribute the donation, issue tax receipts and keep everyone informed along the way
Nonprofit organizations across the United States received $36 million in 2008, by using eBay’s Giving Works. EBay’s Giving Works program is administered by MissionFish which allows eBay sellers to give proceeds from their sales to a favorite nonprofit, and helps nonprofits raise funds by selling on eBay. MissionFish was launched in 2000 and provides crucial services like screening all nonprofits wishing to become members, processes all of the donations that result from successful eBay Giving Works listings. MissionFish ensures every donation makes its way to the intended nonprofit, ensures compliance with government regulations, manages the tax benefits of giving through eBay Giving Works and powers the technology that makes it all possible. To date, over 12,000 nonprofits have registered with MissionFish and since November 2003 over $66 million has been raised for nonprofits.
The idea of e-Bay Giving Works is simple; an eBay seller can donate all or part of his/her listing’s final sale price to a participating nonprofit organization. First, nonprofit organizations are certified by MissionFish for the eBay Giving Works program. Next, the Community Seller chooses how much of the final sales price to donate to their favorite nonprofit. After the listing ends, the Buyer pays the Community Seller; subsequently the Community Seller ships the item to the Buyer. MissionFish then collects the donation amount from the Community Seller. After the Buyer and Community Seller provide feedback to one another, MissionFish delivers funds to the selected nonprofit (less a small deduction for donation processing costs.) Finally, MissionFish provides the Community Seller with a tax receipt to the Community Seller on behalf of the nonprofit.
Click here to get started fundraising through MissionFish!
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Donations must be collected and turned in by August 26, 2011.
Donations can be submitted via credit card on our Web site. Checks should be made out to BCSET (which stands for Breathe California of Sacramento-Emigrant Trails) with the Trekker's name on it and mailed or hand delivered to our office at:
Breathe California of Sacramento-Emigrant Trails (or BCSET for short!)
ATTN: Judy Bruguier
909 12th Street, Suite 100
Sacramento, CA 95814
If you are using our online services, you can log into your Personal Page and enter checks you have received. Then, stop by or mail the checks to our office. Once the checks are confirmed by our office, the donations will show up on your progress page.
We cannot be responsible for or give a Trekker credit for checks mailed but not received by our office. Therefore, it is a good idea to hand deliver your money (especially cash) to the office if possible. That way you can pick up any incentives that you have qualified for as well. Our office is open from 9 am to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday at the same address listed above. Click here for a map/driving directions. Money received by our office will appear on your Web site totals when the site gets updated (usually Tuesdays and Fridays).
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Sue Schooley - Silver Dollar Sue to many of you - is consistently one of the Trek’s top fundraisers. We thought it would be helpful to find out how she does it.
Breathe: Every year, you are one of, if not the top, fundraiser. How do you do it?
Sue: I have a few suggestions. The first is to make a donation to yourself. This shows the people you’re asking that you are committed to the cause. I think it takes money to make money.
The second tip is to remind yourself of who your audience is. A portion of mine is older, from out of town, and I don’t see them everyday. For them a letter with a self addressed stamped envelope works best.
Breathe: What do you put in your letter?
Sue: I always try to insert humor into the letter – it may not be good humor, but it’s my humor! I always make the letter personal – I talk about why I ride, what I did on last year’s ride, how I’m training for this year, etc. I also give everyone options: join my team or donate. I give them options on donating too – everything from “I’m sending you good thoughts” to a monetary donation. I start it at a $1 as every dollar counts, but no one ever sends just a dollar. For previous donors I remind them what the donated last year and ask them to increase or double that.
Breathe: Would you be willing to share your letters?
Sue: Of course. You can find my letters and other samples by clicking here.
Breathe: You always write a letter, what about e-mail or the online tool?
Sue: For younger tech-oriented audiences, the online tool is great. It saves you time, money and printing. But for my audience, they all still get a letter.
Breathe: You mentioned the stamped self addressed envelope? Other suggestions?
Sue: I think it’s important to make it easy. I also give them a deadline. I usually send out letters in May and June and give them a July deadline. After that July deadline, I start to get obnoxious. I send notes messages like “did you forget me?” or “did you peel off that stamp and use it for something else?”
Breathe: How many letters do you usually send?
Sue: I mail about 100-150 letters. I send them to friends from school, work, family, parents of my children’s friends, parents with asthmatic children, pretty much everyone I can think of. Of those 150 requests I usually get about 100 donors.
Breathe: What about those big donors?
Sue: Anyone who donates more than $100 to me gets some kind of additional thank you – I’ve purchased the Macy’s community shopping day tickets for them, put in the Breathe wrist bands, sent a special photo, that type of thing. And this year, anyone who donates $100 or more will be entered into the Breathe raffle for a chance at some great prizes.
Breathe: What about after the event?
Sue: I ALWAYS send a thank you letter. I send it after the trek so I can tell them about the ride. It’s usually some humorous take on the trek. One year it was all about numbers: the number of flat tires I got, the number of hills I walked, the number of road kill I saw, the number of miles I rode, etc. I always include a picture or two in the letter.
Breathe: What other advice do you have?
Sue: The number one thing to remember is ask, ask, ask. The worst thing that can happen is they say no. And I get a $1 from just about everyone.
You also should start as early as possible, and set your goal for $1000 or more. If you feel like that’s too much of a stretch you should still try to raise more than you did in previous years. You also need to make sure you know you’ve shared that goal with everyone you’re asking.
Breathe: What’s the quickest way to raise money?
Sue: Make that 1st $50 donation yourself. Then ask 10 family members to donate $40. There’s your $450. Or ask 40 people to donate $10.
Breathe: Any other fundraising ideas?
Sue: I haven’t tried all of these as the letters and e-mails work really well for me but some other ideas I’ve heard of are:
- Bring goodies into your workplace and put out a donation jar with an explanation. If you don’t bake, buy candy bars, bakery cookies or even licorice
- If you are a service provider, put out a tip jar for donations
- Hold a dinner party for 20 friends and charge them $20 per person
- Have a garage sale or participate in the Breathe garage sale
- Sell things through Craig’s list or on E-bay.
- Ask your employer if they have a matching program
- Wear your t-shirt or jersey from past years, a bike pin, anything that might generate a conversation
- For business sponsors tell them you’ll put their sticker on your bike or wear their t-shirt in camp to promote their business
- Fundraise as a team – you can work at the River Cats or ARCO concessions, golf tournaments, etc. for donations
Breathe: Wow, these are some great tips. Thanks Sue for you time and all your amazing efforts on behalf of Breathe California.
If you have more questions for Silver Dollar Sue, please send them to judyb@sacbreathe.org and we’ll get them answered and posted. And if you want to see Sue’s sample letters along with others, click here.
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