You people assume I am a rep for a company. Unlike many other people who blog on this site, I have never talked about one company. I would think the way some of you gush over one company, you might rep them. Perhaps I am a vendor, or an ex-rep, or maybe I am an art director that reps a couple of fund raising companies. I could just be an informed parent. Does it really matter?
Do prizes make a difference? Yes! My son's school never used prizes with their cookie dough sale. Once they did, their sales went up 50%. As parents, we knock the prizes, but the kids like them.
As in any other business, the sales rep can make all the difference. If a company stops giving their reps a draw, many of them may be forced to look elsewhere. Please remember, 80% of all fund raising takes place in the fall, so that is when most of the rep's income comes in. You might lose a good rep, and how can you stay with them when they no longer work for that company?
I do think local companies for the most part do a better job than national companies. One, they have a vested interest in what happens in their area. If they stub their toe, every school will know. Two, their service in normally much better. What if you receive a late order for cookie dough a day before your delivery. How many national companies can put that order on the truck? Not many, but your local company can probably help you. In addition, you know as well as me, that when you use ANY local company, you are helping your community and your state. More taxes go back to your state, local companies hire local people to work in their company, and many times, companies buy their supplies, trucks, and even products locally. It does hel to stay local. Heck, I think Otis Spunkmyer is not even a US company, but is based in Europe.
The fund raising landscape is littered with the wreckage of national companies that have gone under---Nasco, Henco, Nationwide, Top Ten, IFS, Morely,tThe original Red Apple, and many more. Many other national companies have been sold, resold, scaled back, and are on the brink of having major problems in the future. Why? They were all local companies, but then they all tried to be too big and expand across the country.