Anonymous wrote:Our DCPS had an admission price for its auction, but it also had an online auction where there was no charge to participate. We couldn't afford a babysitter + tickets to the auction and then buy something at the auction, so we just did the online auction. I thought it was a great way to get people like us to join in on the fun.
Anonymous wrote:The auction is a fundraiser. It needs to raise funds. Yes we charge for tickets. Our school does many other events that are free and inclusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Venues for a gala should not actually cost money. I know at least one brew pub offered it's space for free to a dcps... Although not its beer. Still, a cash bar isn't the worst thing.
If you are having trouble breaking even on your expenses for your gala, you are doing it wrong. Last time I helped organize one, we found a lot of restaurants to donate food, drink, dessert--a band to donate their time, and so on.
I would be very interested to hear how you got all of those businesses to donate food and drink. We tried and were turned down. It appeared that you needed some type of connections that we didn't have. Also, we were asking the same business that are being asked by all the other area schools to donate. Sorry we did it "wrong" but we are volunteers and no one gave us anything for free.
It is naïve of the original pp to think that just because one school could get something, every school could. Obviously you need connections, especially if you are not a neighborhood school. I highly recommend that you search your parent body to see who may have connections, even slight ones could help. Cold calls are hard for the reasons you note.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Venues for a gala should not actually cost money. I know at least one brew pub offered it's space for free to a dcps... Although not its beer. Still, a cash bar isn't the worst thing.
If you are having trouble breaking even on your expenses for your gala, you are doing it wrong. Last time I helped organize one, we found a lot of restaurants to donate food, drink, dessert--a band to donate their time, and so on.
I would be very interested to hear how you got all of those businesses to donate food and drink. We tried and were turned down. It appeared that you needed some type of connections that we didn't have. Also, we were asking the same business that are being asked by all the other area schools to donate. Sorry we did it "wrong" but we are volunteers and no one gave us anything for free.
Anonymous wrote:You are all absurd humans. Really!!!??? It's a fundraiser to support things that would not otherwise be available to students at that school. If excluding some people from an event gets their kids a better education and that bothers them (or you) then you and they are self centered a-holes who put adults before kids. And, PS, kids aren't invited so this isn't a situation where kids feel excluded. My lord, people in their 20s and 30s really may be as horrible as the press likes to report.
Anonymous wrote:Venues for a gala should not actually cost money. I know at least one brew pub offered it's space for free to a dcps... Although not its beer. Still, a cash bar isn't the worst thing.
If you are having trouble breaking even on your expenses for your gala, you are doing it wrong. Last time I helped organize one, we found a lot of restaurants to donate food, drink, dessert--a band to donate their time, and so on.