CharityGolfEvent.com

Free resource

A better sponsor packet starts with clearer value.

Outline sponsor packages, benefits, visibility, pricing, and follow-up proof.

Field note

Sponsors do not just buy logo placement. They buy confidence that the event is real, organized, and worth associating with. A good packet makes that confidence easy.

A sponsor packet should answer the quiet questions a business owner is asking: Who is this for? Who will see us? What exactly do we get? Will this organizer follow through? The best packets are clear enough to skim and specific enough to trust.

Do not make every package sound equally important. Give sponsors a simple ladder of value, then make sure each promised benefit is something the event team can actually deliver and show afterward.

Printable resource

Download the matching PDF checklist with owner fields, field notes, and repeat-organizer reminders.

Download PDF

What this prevents

Sponsors need to understand the audience and cause quickly.

Package benefits are often vague or hard to fulfill later.

Post-event proof is easier when planned before the sale.

How to use it

  1. 1

    Frame the cause

  2. 2

    Describe the audience

  3. 3

    Define package levels

  4. 4

    List visibility placements

  5. 5

    Promise proof you can deliver

What experienced organizers learn

Keep package names and benefits simple enough that a busy local business owner can compare them in one minute.

Only promise visibility you can actually deliver and prove afterward.

Ask for logo files, website links, and contact details the moment a sponsor says yes. Waiting creates a chase later.

Mistakes worth avoiding

Offering too many package levels with tiny differences.

Promising vague visibility like “promotion” without saying where it appears.

Forgetting to capture proof during the event while sponsor placements are visible.

Printable checklist

Use this as a working list. Add owners and dates before you share it with the committee.

Download PDF

Packet basics

  • Event date and venue
  • Cause or beneficiary story
  • Expected player and audience profile
  • Primary contact details

Package design

  • Presenting sponsor
  • Hole sponsor
  • Prize or contest sponsor
  • In-kind sponsor

Visibility inventory

  • Event page logo
  • Leaderboard or QR material placement
  • On-site signage
  • Social or email mentions

Proof to capture

  • Screenshots of digital placement
  • Photos of signs or prizes
  • Attendance or fundraising result
  • Thank-you message sent

What sponsors need to understand

Sponsors want to know who benefits, who attends, what visibility they receive, and what happens after the event.

  • Cause story
  • Audience summary
  • Package levels
  • Visibility placements

Package structure

Keep packages easy to compare and easy to fulfill.

  • Presenting sponsor
  • Hole sponsor
  • Prize sponsor
  • In-kind sponsor

Follow-up proof

Make the post-event thank-you easier by planning proof before the day.

  • Logo screenshots
  • Leaderboard visibility
  • Event photos
  • Fundraising outcome

More organizer resources

Use these free planning pages to shape the event before the platform does the heavier lifting.