Now I've got another concert coming up and have been tallying cookie dough orders, which I have to turn into the company tomorrow. And at some point I need to put together a presentation on a paper about phytochemicals in olive oil for my biochemistry class (which means I should probably read the paper). And I heard back from UW (got accepted into the MS, but wait listed for the RD program, so that was disappointing and I'll probably be reapplying this coming December). I've signed up to volunteer for a Cooking Matters class again, which means I need to find someone to watch Mal for those six weeks. And the food science class I was thinking I'd take in summer is actually being offered in spring, so I'm now signed up for that and microbiology for spring quarter. UW starts a week before NSC for spring, so I won't get much of a spring break (which is when we are planning to do taxes; I'll have about 3 days off).
Anyway, here are some things I've learned thus far while doing this fundraiser.
- Don't assume people will know who to write the checks to. I really didn't want to write who to make the check to on 450 forms (nor did I have time to do so, as forms went home right between our basement water discovery and my concert) and thought this was obvious. We made announcements through the school newsletter and the 3rd grade newsletter, but still had people make the check to the cookie company or leave the check blank (by far the easier issue of the two to solve).
- Definitely have someone help with the tallying. Having two sets of eyes counting the money and orders is helpful. And makes the process go quickly.
- I really like when people are able to just write a single check for the order, whether it's because they're the only ones who ordered or because they collected money from others and then wrote a check. They're the fastest orders to tally and verify.
- Don't let little kids fill out the order form themselves. This inevitably ends up difficult to decipher at best, with lots of mistakes at worst.
- In the same vein, don't let a little kid do the entire process all alone. If this happens and things don't quite match up, it's impossible to verify what's going on if the parent hasn't been involved in any way.
- Basic "chocolate chunk" is by far the most popular cookie dough flavor of our sale, selling 3x as many tubs as the next highest-selling dough.
- While this seems to be a successful fundraiser, I'm not a huge fan of selling something perishable. I'm already mentally stressing about the people who are going to forget to pick up their order, meaning we have to find a freezer to store it in until they get it.
3 comments:
I've been feeling swamped with birthdays (Kendra and Camille), Kendra's upcoming baptism, and the Blue & Gold Dinner (tonight!). But compared with what you've got going on, I feel quite lazy in comparison!
(And can I just gripe-- I HATE fundraisers!!! I seriously wish they'd just ask for straight up money rather than forcing kids to sell stuff. My kids are all excited for some jumprope for heart thing that's coming up, and I keep wondering to myself, Can't the American Heart Association figure out a better way to raise money than harrassing kids???? I'm a grinch.)
Good luck with your classes and everything now! Kill me before I ever have to be in charge of a fundraiser!
I was "in charge" of the cookie dough fundraiser for two or three years, my last time being last year. Your cookie dough experience was so much different from mine. The flyers going out with the order catalogs had the check payment information on them (we gave the info to the fundraising company and I even proofread the copy before they printed it). There were two or three other mothers who helped me every step of the way because they had done it or helped do it before. Because I'm a school employee, I can no longer help count the money, but we had two or three "counting days" when all PFO members (our equivalent of PTA) who could come would gather at the school and do the counting. I would do the calling of family members when orders didn't match. Our PFO bought a chest freezer for storing the cookie dough orders that didn't get picked up. We did not send orders home with the students--an adult family member had to sign for it. With morning announcements, backpack mail, and robocalls home reminding families about the distribution day, we generally got most of the orders picked up on the delivery day.
I was grateful to have the help of several parents throughout the process. I'm also glad that's behind me. Although now I'm involved in band stuff (concerts, fundraisers, trips, etc.), again. Knowing this is my last time and having been through it before, it is much easier. It really is a great way to get to know other parents as well as the students.
I'm so glad you're willing to get involved with the school in some way. The teachers who see parents involved are more likely to go the extra mile for their child.
I hate fundraising as well--good on you for heading it up!
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