Days 1–7
Set the target
Write the amount, purpose, deadline, minimum viable outcome and consequence if not funded.
Fundraising plan
A club needs a pipeline, not a panic. Use this as the operating rhythm for a committee, subcommittee or fundraising lead.
Days 1–7
Write the amount, purpose, deadline, minimum viable outcome and consequence if not funded.
Days 8–21
Collect quotes, bank proof, photos, member numbers, community reach, legal status and outcome logic.
Days 22–50
Approach local businesses with packaged value. Use warm intros first, then direct outreach.
Days 30–90
Match funders to project type, submit complete applications and track decisions/acquittals.
Funding mix
| Lane | Best use | Weakness | Operating rule |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grants | Equipment, programmes, facilities, community outcomes. | Slow and uncertain. | Keep a rolling 6-month pipeline. |
| Sponsorship | Operational support, uniforms, events, local business relationships. | Fails if benefits are vague. | Sell packaged value, not charity. |
| Events | Member engagement, community visibility, unrestricted cash. | Volunteer-heavy and easy to overestimate. | Run only with a written profit model. |
| Donations | Community campaigns, alumni/whānau support, project appeals. | Tax benefits depend on donee status. | Be clear whether receipts are tax-credit eligible. |
| Membership / merch | Reliable recurring contribution from people already connected. | Can create affordability issues. | Offer hardship support or tiering. |
Evidence pack
Meeting cadence
Which funders or sponsors moved status since last meeting?
What missing document, quote or approval blocks the next application?
What has been banked, committed, declined or still at risk?