Post
by BBadger » Tue Nov 06, 2012 1:34 am
Use the 100% sanctioned method for all fundraising, no matter the context: RAFFLES.
On a more serious note, even applying for an honorarium grant is fundraising; so you have to do what you gotta do. Like the others, I feel the motives behind the fundraising help a lot.
Other things you can try besides what was mentioned before:
- Seek out donations of supplies instead of money. That way it isn't so much "fundraising" as "supply-raising".
- Make the cloth material supply-limited, afterwards it's a bring-your-own-scarf type thing.
- On-playa cloth-donations to stretch things. Don't count on them of course, but it can be easier for people to do rather than shipping it to you first, or sending you money. Clean clothes/cloth of course.
- Use the fundraising only after you know how much left is needed. Great to plan now, but also good to know the exact needs. It also makes it less a "help me fund the entire damn thing" fundraiser.
There is still something to be said about radical self-reliance with funds though. Maybe the solution is to reduce costs (and related to the above):
- Quantity purchases. I don't know how exactly you worked it this past year (sorry, I didn't follow that thread), but did you buy individual scarves, or use fabric cut from a roll? If the former, the rolls would probably help stretch things quite a bit especially if you can get them from large fabric stores.
- Dye other, less expensive stuff. Socks? Handkerchiefs? Arm-patches?
- Scale down. Plan to run out. Intend to run out! It makes the "commodity" more valuable and less apt to be discarded. You can even have your event at odd, short hours to reduce traffic.
- Advertise more heavily on the bring-your-own-scarf system. That way it's more about how much dye you can bring, less the cloth materials you bring in.
"The essence of tyranny is not iron law. It is capricious law." -- Christopher Hitchens
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