Summer is ending, the fall season is kicking into high gear, and whether or not you have kids it always feels like it’s time to get back to school. September, October, and November events are in the final days of their planning, and spring events only have a few months to ramp up before the holidays are upon us.
As we shake the sand out of our beach towels and put down the trashy page-turners, here are some keys for getting back in the classroom.
Know Your Crowd
Whatever your crowd’s tendencies, you need to acknowledge them and work with them, not against them. School events tend to have some of the hardest-partying crowds in the world of fundraising auctions. Parents of young children don’t get to spend a lot of time hanging out without their kids, so they treat their gala like a once-a-year chance to really cut loose. But they aren’t the only crowds that like to party hard, and we’ve seen plenty of other examples across organization types.
If your crowd leans in to having a good time, keep your program short, entertaining, and impactful. Create auction lots that celebrate and leverage your crowd’s tendencies. And be extremely strategic in the run of show and timing of your event as a whole. A heavy drinking crowd does not do well with a late-running auction.
Offer Something for Everybody
Auctions, by definition, are not egalitarian, but we can make them feel that way by offering auction lots, games, or even night-of experiences for everyone in the room. On our podcast, Michelle Holman of Greater Giving discussed a buy-in party for kids that had a price of $40 / kid and has underwriters to ensure that every kid in the grade got to attend. Other options include inexpensive or even free games, auction bingo, and the like.
Where Appropriate, Utilize Buy-In Lots
Buy-in parties, also known as sign-ups or count-me-ins, are an integral part of the fundraising auction world. They succeed at most every type of fundraising auction we do, but especially schools where there is built-in community. Buy-ins can be sold in the live or silent auctions, and run the gamut from fun and silly to incredibly sophisticated and gourmet. [Click here for some ideas on creative buy-in lots.]
You can have multiple buy-in parties in a single auction, as long as they offer a variety of experiences and target a variety of your crowd. In a school event, for example, it is advisable to have some buy-ins for the parents, and some for the students; to have some that are hard-partying, and others that are more mellow or even educational.
Create a Sense of Tradition
Audiences like having something familiar to look forward to every year. Whether it is a particular auction lot, experience, or even auctioneer! Foster traditions at your event and encourage your crowd to embrace them.