We just earned $7000+ from those $1 candy bars. I'm allergic to chocolate so I didn't see which company (I kept well away

), but I'm sure the fundraising section on this site has several.
They said the easiest way to sell was to leave the box with in a breakroom where there are a lot of women in the office. There was a little box left for the money. I know in high school, we sold them to each other like mad.
Another thing I just found but haven't tried is the Schwan's fundraiser. They have two options.
1. Send one of their small catalogs home with the kids. They park a truck outside the school on delivery day and hand everything out and handle the money. They take credit cards so you don't have to. You also don't have to collect $. sort, deliver or worry about spoilage or orders not picked up (or paid for).
2. This one is new and quick: You send home a flyer and a catalog. You get $5 for each order, $2 for each person who says they're interested even if they don't order and $1 if they return the form signed "not interested". 1-888-724-9267
Schwan's might be easier but I think the chocolate would be more profitable. Just keep close track of who has how much and get signed permission slips before sending anything home. Other PTOtoday members have mentioned losing money because chocolate was taken and not paid for.
We're still collecting but they made it clear to us that if we don't sell it, we pay for it ourselves.
Oh, and penny wars. During a spirit week would be great to do this:
Each class gets a "bank". (One they can't open) Each penny is a point for that class to win the contest. Each silver coin is that many cents worth of points against their total.
Put it where everyone can see and keep promoting who's can is heaviest. The opposing groups put in dimes and quarters, ect to bring the points down. The class with the most points wins.
We've done that at conventions and earned about $200 from 100 participants in an hour. I don't know how much that pulls in over a week but it's fun. You could keep a daily talley to make it easier. $200 worth of change weighs a lot

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[ 02-19-2004, 12:24 PM: Message edited by: nonsequitur ]