raptordad;132373 wrote: The hard part with the 10K or 20K profit is that you have to realize that an equal amount has gone bye-bye from your school community into the pocket of a big business.
Just to be fair, this "half our $$ has gone into the pockets of a big business" is a significant (though frequent and understandable) mis-understanding of the fundraising math.
What do I mean?
Let's take a typical catalog sale where your group gets 50% of the gross sales. You get that 50% without spending any other dollars. It's free and clear.
The fundraising company, on the other hand, has to -- first and foremost -- pay for the product itself. They also pay for shipping it to your place... plus all the catalogs used to sell the stuff.... plus often the prize programs.
So let's take a $10 catalog item.
You get $5.
The fundraising company pays $2.50 for the item plus $0.30 for shipping and $0.30 for the prorated cost of all the marketing materials plus $0.20 for the prize program. And I'm sure i'm missing some costs.
End result: You profit $5. FR company profits $1.50.
It may be a 50% split of gross revenue. But it's more like an 80-20 split of gross profit. And the gross profit number is far more relevant for a "fairness" discussion.
To take the example one step further, what if the local car dealer offered to give you $500 for every Mercedes your parents purchased? Your parents pay $50,000 for the Mercedes. Would you complain that you're only getting 1% and dealer is getting 99%? That would be the same math as the 50-50 math so often used for the fundraising biz.
Tim