Posts tagged signage
7 Last-Minute Marketing Tips to Fill Your Golf Tournament
 

By Jen Wemhoff, Communications Manager

If your charity golf tournament is right around the corner but your golfer numbers aren’t where you need them to be, don’t panic. With the right outreach strategy (and a little hustle), you can still drive golfer registrations to fill your field.

Here are seven last-minute marketing tips to attract golfers to your tournament.

Three golfers appear in the foreground and four in the background at a golf fundraiser.

1. Segment Your List, Then Target Messaging

Blasting the same generic email to your entire contact list is a fast way to get ignored. Instead, break your audience into segments and tailor your messaging to the interests and needs of each group.

Think about your list in groups like:

  • Past golfers. These are people who played in your tournament but haven’t yet signed up. A “We miss you!” note with a specific call to action (maybe a deadline-driven discount code or special rate) can nudge them off the fence.

  • Other event participants. They’ve already had a great event experience with your organization, so a “We’d love to have you at the tournament” message with a link to your golf tournament website can go a long way.

  • Sponsors and partners. These folks are already invested in your mission, so ask if they have employees or clients who love golf and would benefit from a day on the golf course.

  • General supporters. Your broader donor or email list may include golfers who have never played in your tournament. Remind them what they’re missing!

Segmentation takes a little extra effort upfront, but it produces significantly better results than a one-size-fits-all approach. Your messages will feel personal and relevant.


PRO TIP:

Use your golf tournament management platform to access past years’ participant data.


2. Send a Text

Email is a great tool to market your golf tournament, but text messages are another opportunity to reach golfers where they already look multiple times a day—their phones. If you have an opt-in SMS list, now is the perfect time to use it.

Keep texts short and direct, and link to your registration website. For example: “Spots are filling up for [Tournament Name] on [Date], and we’d love to have you there. Register today at [website link]. Questions? Reply to this text!”

You can also use SMS for countdown reminders and to create urgency that prompts action:

  • “Only 5 teams remain!”

  • “Registration closes Friday!”

  • “Don’t miss the hole-in-one contest!

If you don’t have an SMS list yet, start building one now for future events. Add an opt-in checkbox to your registration form, donor forms, mention it at events, and promote it on social media. The investment will pay off every time you need to drum up last-minute interest.

3. Go All-In on Social Media

Between now and tournament day, leverage your social channels to bring in golfers. A mix of organic content and paid campaigns can quickly generate real momentum.

Free, Organic Tactics That Work:

  • Create a Facebook event. Invite your committee, board, members, and volunteers to 1. Mark themselves as “Going” and 2. Invite their networks. It’s free, it’s easy, and it’s underused by nonprofit event teams. Facebook Events show up in local search results and the feeds of attendees’ networks, giving you broad, free organic visibility.

  • Post daily (or close to it). Share photos from past tournaments, sponsor spotlights, highlights from past tournaments, tournament prizes, raffle prize previews, tease the theme, or even give away a free team to someone who likes and shares the post. Use language that conveys urgency.

  • Join relevant groups. Search Facebook and LinkedIn for local groups—golf, nonprofit networking, community events, etc. Post your tournament details (be sure to follow each group’s rules about self-promotion) and let members spread the word.

  • Don’t overlook stories or LinkedIn. A well-timed Facebook or Instagram story with a link or a LinkedIn post from your organization’s page can reach people that other channels can miss, especially corporate golfers and potential foursomes from local businesses.

Paid Tactics Worth the Investment

Even a modest Facebook or Instagram ad budget ($100 - $300) can deliver strong results:

  • Target ads by zip code so you’re reaching people who are local to your tournament

  • Narrow ads to specific interests, like golf, charity, fundraisers, outdoors, and your specific cause (pets, environment, literacy, youth, etc.)

  • Boost your highest-performing organic post

  • Run a dedicated registration ad with a clear call to action (Register Now!)


Free Social Media Resources


4. Pick Up the Phone!

There’s no more powerful outreach tool than a real human asking another real human to show up. In the age of automated emails, social ads, and AI, a personal call or text from someone they know stands out and makes them feel valued.

Here’s how to mobilize your committee for personal outreach:

  • Five and Five. Challenge every committee member, board member, staff member, and volunteer to send five texts and make five phone calls asking people to register. Provide a simple script so it’s as easy as possible to execute: “Hey [Name], I’m helping organize [Tournament Name] on [Date], and we’d love to have you join us. It’s a great day of golf for a great cause. Can I send you the link to register?”

  • Leverage your past participants. Pull a list of past golf tournament (or other event) participants and prioritize reaching out to people who attended one or two years ago, but haven’t yet registered this time. These are essentially warm leads, since they already know your organization and event, since they liked it enough to come once.

  • Make it a group effort. If you’re really close to a target number, consider a focused phone-a-thon day where your team spends a few hours making calls together. Friendly competition (“who can get the most registrations today?”) makes it more fun. People tend to respond to urgency when it feels genuine, so don’t be afraid to use language like “We need six more foursomes to have a full field, and I thought of you.”

5. Use AI to Find Community and Event Calendars

Local event calendars are an underutilized free marketing channel. Local news outlets, community organizations, chambers of commerce, visitors bureaus, and city websites often maintain community calendars that are actively browsed by people looking for things to do. Getting your tournament listed on as many of these as possible is a no-cost way to expand reach.

The challenge can be in finding them all. That’s where AI can help. Use tools like ChatGPT or Claude with this prompt: “Give me a list of community and event calendars in [City, State] and how to submit an event listing for each one.”

You’ll get a solid starting list of calendars where you can post your tournament details. Most of these submissions take just a few minutes to complete and can put your event in front of audiences you’d never reach otherwise. Once you have your list and links, divide them up among committee members and knock submissions out in an afternoon.

Golfers warm up on the driving range before a golf fundraiser.

6. Offer a Last-Minute Incentive

Sometimes people just need a little push or a carrot to spur them to action. A time-sensitive incentive can convert fence-sitters into registered golfers. Consider offers like:

  • A deadline discount. “Register by [Date] to save $25 per foursome”

  • A bonus. “Register this week and get five free raffle tickets” or “Register by tomorrow and get an extra entry in the putting contest

  • A complete team freebie. “Include all team members’ contact information to receive a complimentary mulligans package”

It’s a good idea to pair any incentive with a hard deadline, and promote it everywhere—email, social, text, and personal outreach. The combination of value and urgency can be a powerful motivator.

7. Rally Your Sponsors

Your sponsors benefit from a full tournament field as much as you do, so reach out to your top sponsors to ask if they would help you spread the word. Provide quick and easy suggestions to help, like:

  • Sharing the event website link on their company social channels or in an internal email to employees.

  • Purchase additional teams as an incentive for employees or to entertain clients and prospects.

  • Promote the event to their networks of customers, clients, and vendors. Since many businesses see golf tournaments as an opportunity to build relationships, having the sponsor reach out to ask might be the nudge they need to register a team.

Send a quick email or give them a call with the ask, framing it as a mutual win. Use this free Golf Tournament Sponsor Asset Kit, with ready-to-use messaging, graphics, and more, to help turn sponsors into event promoters.


Final Thoughts

Last-minute marketing pushes work best when they’re focused, personal, and multi-channel. You don’t need to do everything in this list. Choose two or three tactics that best fit your organization’s strengths and capacity, and execute on them consistently and with urgency.

Be sure you have a dedicated golf event website to use in these marketing campaigns. GolfStatus offers a free, professional event website with online registration, secure payment processing, digital sponsor exposure, and more, plus access to its golf tournament management software at no upfront cost. Book a quick meeting with a golf fundraising professional to learn more and get started!

Get a Free Golf Tournament Website!

Book a meeting with GolfStatus

 
 
11 Ways to Re-energize & Refresh Your Annual Golf Event
 

There’s something powerful about an annual golf tournament that’s become more than just a day on the course and has evolved into a tradition. The same course, the same time of year, the same group of supporters showing up year after year to build community.

That tradition is something to celebrate, but a tradition that doesn’t continue to improve can quickly become stale and a reason for golfers and sponsors not to come back.

Golf carts are lined up at a longstanding golf tournament.

If your golf event has been running for five, 10, or even 20+ years, you’ve done the hard part of building something that people care about and trust. Now the challenge is keeping it fresh and exciting enough that last year’s participants can’t wait to register again, while new golfers and sponsors are eager to join in.

You don’t need to completely reinvent your tournament to make it feel new. Small, strategic changes can elevate the golfer experience, keep sponsors excited, improve fundraising results, and keep people excited to show up year after year.

Here are 11 ways to refresh a longstanding golf tournament while honoring the traditions that made it successful in the first place.

1. Debrief After the Event (Every Year)

Before you think about next year’s tournament, gather your planning team and do an honest debrief. Discuss what went smoothly, what felt clunky, and what they heard from golfers and sponsors throughout the day.

You should also build feedback into your planning process so you hear directly from participants through a short post-event survey. Send it to golfers and sponsors to help glean:

  • What they loved

  • What they would change

  • What would make them bring a friend next year

  • What experiences or components stood out

Look for insights into which fundraising elements (raffles, auctions, on-course games, merch, etc.) performed best, which sponsor packages delivered the best value, and when (or if) the day lost energy. These responses tell you where to invest time and money for the future.

Make this a formal part of your planning process every year. You’ll find areas to improve because you’re paying attention to what participants are saying, and they’ll appreciate being heard.

2. Evaluate the Golfer Experience

An effective way to refresh a tournament is to consider the tournament—from start to finish—from the golfer’s perspective. Think through every touchpoint of the event:

  • Is registration simple and efficient?

  • Is communication clear leading up to the event?

  • Is check-in welcoming?

  • Is signage professional and easy to follow?

  • Does the pace of the day feel brisk and organized?

  • Is the awards ceremony or program engaging and celebratory?

Big improvements can come from fixing small points of friction. Ensuring the registration process is easy and communication is effective. Making check-in quick and painless. Offering great food and beverage. Keeping a steady pace of play. Maintaining high energy post-round. These details show participants that you want them to have the best possible experience.

Two golfers shake hands following a golf tournament.

Ensuring golfers have a great experience will elevate any golf tournament.

3. Introduce New Contests & On-Course Games

Adding new interactive tournament elements is one of the fastest ways to boost the event’s energy. There’s no need to completely overhaul the tournament’s format. A four-person scramble is the classic choice for charity events for a reason—it’s inclusive, fast-moving, and fun for all skill levels. But small additions can generate excitement. Some popular, low-lift options include:

  • Hole-in-one contests

  • Longest drive contest

  • Closest to the pin challenge

  • Putting contests

  • Beat-the-pro (or amateur) hole

  • Ball drop

  • Poker hand

  • On-course entertainment

  • On-course games or fundraising stations

These activities not only make the day more entertaining, but they also create additional fundraising opportunities. Even introducing one or two new elements each year gives returning golfers something to look forward to and gives sponsors new activation options.

4. Refresh Your Branding & Introduce a Theme

Tournaments often use the same logo and look for years. And while consistency is important, a visual refresh can make your tournament feel updated and exciting without abandoning its identity. Consider tweaks or updates to colors and graphics, a more unified brand across digital and print, and an event website that reflects the caliber of the experience you’re delivering.

Introducing or updating a theme can complement a refreshed brand. You can do as much or as little with a theme as you want. Maybe a patriotic theme, a Masters-inspired tournament, a tropical or beach vibe, or team colors tied to a favorite sports team can all work beautifully. A theme can give golfers and sponsors something new to engage with, creating natural opportunities for fun on-course decor, social content, and creative sponsor activations that feel fresh each year.

A golfer lines up to hit a glow-in-the-dark golf ball as part of a glow golf-themed tournament.

Adding a theme, like glow golf, can significantly elevate a longstanding golf event.

5. Upgrade Player Gifts

Golfer gifts are remembered and used long after the tournament ends. If your event has been handing out the same golf balls and koozies for years, it may be time to rethink your swag strategy.

Today’s golfers want high-quality, useful items they’ll actually reach for. Rotating your gifts is a low-effort way to make repeat golfers feel like they’re getting something new, and thoughtful gifts elevate the perceived value of your tournament. Consider items like:

  • Premium golf accessories

  • Branded drinkwear

  • Custom headcovers

  • Branded golf towels

  • Performance apparel

  • Bluetooth speakers

  • Portable phone charges

  • Local products

  • Experience-based prizes (gift cards, tee times)

6. Improve the Sponsor Experience

Sponsors are the financial backbone of your tournament. You can help build strong partnerships with sponsors by helping them feel like active participants instead of just logos on a banner. Each year, think through how you can deliver more value, more visibility, and more engagement to the businesses supporting your cause.

Think beyond static banners and create interactive opportunities for sponsors to engage with golfers:

  • Branded tee box activations

  • Sponsored contests, on-course games, or giveaways

  • Product sampling stations

  • Drink or snack stations

  • Sponsored text messages or leaderboard placements

  • Social media collaborations before, during, and after the event

Digital sponsor exposure is increasingly valuable, so don’t overlook your event website, email campaigns, mobile apps, and live scoring platforms for visibility that extends beyond tournament day.

Consider personalized sponsorship packages instead of the same tiers every year. Add fun, new names to packages and work with the sponsors to design packages that meet the goals of the business and your event.

Sponsor logos on a golf tournament website are displayed on a laptop computer.

Give sponsors more for their investment, like digital exposure, to improve their experience with your tournament and keep them coming back.

7. Modernize the Event with Technology

One of the fastest and easiest ways to elevate your tournament is to modernize the experience. Golfers, sponsors, and our planning committee will benefit from tools that streamline management and execution.

It starts with a dedicated event website that gives your tournament a polished, digital home base where golfers can register in minutes, sponsors can purchase packages and upload logos, and supporters can make donations—all without a phone call, paper form, or any effort from your team. This frees you up to focus on the relationships and experiences that make your tournament stand out.

The right tech can also help with:

  • Team and sponsor management

  • Mobile scoring and live leaderboards

  • Auctions

  • Raffle tickets and mulligan sales

  • Donor tracking

  • Payment processing and receipts

  • Post-event reporting and accounting

8. Create Memorable Moments

The best tournaments leave people with stories that keep them talking. These might be:

  • A surprise guest

  • A heartfelt mission moment

  • An incredible raffle prize

  • A fun on-course challenge

  • A unique food or beverage experience

  • An emotional speech from a beneficiary

  • A dramatic finish

  • A hole-in-one contest winner

These transform a golf outing from just another fundraiser to an event that people circle on their calendars year after year. Think intentionally about where your tournament can create emotional peaks throughout the day. The goal is to go beyond simply entertaining golfers to creating memorable moments that they’ll talk about with coworkers, friends, sponsors, and future participants. They don’t have to be expensive; they simply have to be meaningful and well-executed.


Case Study: Credit Unions for Kids Golf Classic

For 17 years, U.S. Community Credit Union and Enbright Credit Union have joined forces to host the Annual Credit Unions for Kids Golf Classic. Keeping the event fresh and fun every year is a priority for organizers, who have added new games, tech tools, sponsorships, and more, while raising tens of thousands of dollars for Monroe Carrell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.

READ MORE


9. Keep the Cause Front & Center

For nonprofit or charity tournaments especially, one of the biggest opportunities is strengthening the connection between the event and the mission it supports. Longstanding tournaments, in particular, can sometimes get hyper-focused on logistics and tradition that the “why” beyond the fundraiser gets lost.

Golfers are more likely to give generously and keep coming back when they feel an emotional connection to the cause, not just the event. Keep the mission visible and personal to strengthen donor engagement and long-term support:

  • Mission-focused signage throughout the course

  • Videos or impact stories during meals or awards

  • QR codes linking directly to your event website’s donation page

  • Beneficiary speakers or testimonials

  • Updates on how last year’s golf tournament funds were used

  • Live fundraising appeals connected to specific outcomes

10. Use Data to Make Decisions

Every year, your tournament generates valuable data that can help improve future event iterations. The key is collecting, analyzing, and using this data to make strategic decisions instead of guessing.

Track and pay attention to:

  • Registration trends (when people register, how they pay, if they use discount codes, if they make an additional donation, etc.)

  • Sponsor renewal rates

  • Contest or game participation

  • Raffle ticket and mulligan sales

  • Golfer feedback

  • Auction and raffle engagement

  • Marketing response rates

  • Fundraising outcomes

  • Expenses

For example, if certain sponsorship levels sell out immediately, consider expanding or restructuring them. If early-bird pricing consistently drives registrations, invest more in early marketing campaigns. If golfers consistently rate check-in as a poor experience, prioritize fixing it next year.

11. Preserve Traditions While Embracing Change

Don’t worry—not everything needs to change! In fact, some traditions are exactly why golfers return year after year. Whether it’s a beloved course, a signature contest, a longtime emcee or auctioneer, or a post-round awards moment people genuinely look forward to, the goal isn’t to erase what makes the tournament the tournament—it’s to evolve it.

You’ll succeed by balancing consistency with innovation. Preserve what people value most while introducing enough new energy each year to keep the event exciting, engaging, and financially strong. And when participants and supporters feel like your tournament just keeps getting better, they’re the ones who help fill your field.


Modernize Your Tournament With GolfStatus

GolfStatus’ tech is built to help golf fundraisers stay fresh, relevant, and profitable. Its golf event-specific tools help organizers save time, raise more money, and deliver a professional experience that golfers and sponsors love year after year. Learn how you can get started at no upfront cost and get a free event website by booking a meeting with our team!

Keep Golfers and Sponsors Coming Back

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10 Ways to Ask for Donations During a Golf Fundraiser
 

Charity golf tournaments are opportunities for fun, connection, competition, and above all, fundraising. While team registrations and sponsorships typically drive the bulk of the event’s revenue, the most successful tournaments don’t stop there. They layer in thoughtful, well-timed donation asks before, during, and after the tournament to maximize impact and leverage the generosity of golfers.

The key? Make giving easy and aligned with the tournament experience. When done strategically, your asks won’t interrupt the round; instead, you’re simply enhancing the reason people showed up in the first place.

Here are 10 actionable ways to ask for donations during your next golf fundraiser.


1. Use Your Event Website as Your Fundraising Hub

Your golf tournament website should be the central engine for donations. Every ask, no matter where it happens, should point back to a simple, mobile-friendly donation site. This way, there’s no hassling with cash, reconciling Venmos, or processing checks after the tournament. Instead, all funds are kept in a centralized repository for easy post-tournament accounting.

Remove barriers to giving by making sure your event website:

  • Clearly communicates your mission, what the tournament is raising money for, and its impact

  • Includes a prominent “Donate” button across the site’s pages

  • Works seamlessly on mobile devices

  • Includes a donation tracker

  • Connects to and displays your live leaderboard with a donation call to action

PRO TIP: Incorporate storytelling on your golf tournament website.

Use photos, impact stats, and a clear call to action so visitors understand why their donation matters before they ever even set foot on the course.

A golf tournament website showing a donation tracking bar is displayed on a laptop computer.

Every donation ask should link to your event website, where golfers can donate with just a few taps and see progress toward your goal.

2. Send Strategic Asks Throughout the Day

Communication is one of your most powerful fundraising tools, so use it wisely. You’ll need an easy way to get in touch with golfers and donors at the right moments during the event, like email or push notifications. Timing matters, so spread your messages throughout the day so they feel helpful, not overwhelming.

Use your event management platform to:

  • Link to the donation page of your event website

  • Announce fundraising milestones

  • Highlight contests or challenges

  • Share any matching donation campaigns

PRO TIP: Pair donation asks with updates.

Fold your day-of donation appeals into useful updates, like lunch announcements, current standings, or on-course game or contest reminders. This makes them feel like part of the event flow, rather than a disruption.

3. Set a Day-of Fundraising Goal & Rally Around It

A clear, tangible tournament day fundraising goal gives golfers and sponsors something to rally behind and can motivate them to make an additional contribution. Instead of a vague ask, be as specific as possible. For example:

  • “Help us raise $5,000 today and feed shelter pets for three months.”

  • “We’re halfway to our goal of $7,000—help us close the gap!”

Leverage your event management platform’s donation tracker to keep attendees up to date on your progress, building momentum and urgency. What’s more, when the overall tournament experience is top-notch, golfers are much more likely to chip in to help you reach the day’s goal.

PRO TIP: Tie your goal to a specific outcome.

Donors tend to be more motivated to make a contribution when they can visualize its impact on your mission.

4. Use a Compelling Story to Help Make the Ask

Not every golfer at your event will have a deep connection to your cause. Many are there because they were invited to play by a friend or family member or to fill their company’s foursome.

Your golf tournament is an incredible opportunity to connect these new potential donors to your mission. Consider these ideas:

  • Share an impact story during the tournament’s kickoff

  • Feature a beneficiary’s story during the awards ceremony

  • Display signs, banners, or posters around the course that describe your work

  • Include brochures or handouts in golfer gift bags

Follow these up with an ask that helps attendees understand how their donation makes a difference.

PRO TIP: Keep mission moments concise and emotional.

A brief two or three-minute story from a beneficiary or your nonprofit’s executive director with a clear takeaway is much more effective and memorable than a long presentation.

A golf tournament organizer speaks into a microphone to ask for donations at the start of the event.

Tie donation asks to compelling stories to help the audience connect with your mission.

5. Have Donation Stations Around the Course

Make giving accessible—and visible—with designated donation stations in strategic locations at the golf facility. Staff them with knowledgeable volunteers, staff members, or even beneficiaries who can answer questions, share stories, and assist with donations.

Place donation stations in high-traffic, but unobtrusive, areas, like:

  • Registration/check-in

  • The turn or comfort station

  • A par five tee box that’s likely to get backed up

  • Near the clubhouse

  • Near the bar at the post-round gathering

PRO TIP: Use QR codes that link to your event website.

Place signage with QR codes that link golfers to your event website’s donation page at every donation station. This way, golfers can donate using their phones (and you won’t have to hassle with handling cash) and instantly get a receipt.

6. Leverage Live Leaderboards for Real-Time Giving

Live leaderboards aren’t just for tracking scores—they’re a powerful engagement and fundraising tool. Anyone, anywhere can follow along with the tournament’s progress via online and in-app live leaderboards, expanding your reach beyond the course and keeping people engaged in real time. Encourage giving by:

  • Sharing leaderboard links on social and via email before and during the event

  • Inviting spectators and remote supporters to donate while following along

  • Creating fun pledges (donate a specific amount for every birdie, eagle, or bogey)

PRO TIP: Use social media to engage donors.

Give social media shoutouts to online donors, consider having a special prize drawing for day-of donors, and be sure to follow up after the tournament with a thank you.

A live scoring app with a sponsor logo is shown in a mobile phone, over tournament standings from a live leaderboard.

Live leaderboards are a great way to engage donors throughout a golf tournament.

7. Turn On-Course Moments Into Giving Opportunities

Your golf tournament is full of natural pauses, so take advantage of these lulls (and captive audiences) to ask for a donation. Keep these asks light, fun, and optional. The goal is to invite participation, not pressure it.

Consider adding donation prompts at:

  • Contest holes (hole-in-one, longest drive, closest to the pin, putting)

  • High-traffic wait areas

  • Comfort stations

  • Driving range

  • Practice green

PRO TIP: Pair donation asks with games or incentives.

Keep the energy high and the atmosphere casual by pairing donation asks with on-course games, drawings, or other incentives.

8. Introduce a Score-Based Giving Challenge

Tie donations directly to the tournament by asking golfers to donate based on scores. It’s simple, memorable, and easy to execute! Some ideas include:

  • Donating an amount equal to their team’s final score (if they shot a 72, they would donate $72)

  • Matching the winning team’s score

  • Using the last-place score for a fun twist

PRO TIP: Make this ask during awards.

The awards ceremony, banquet, reception, auction, or other post-golf gathering is a great time to make this particular ask. When you announce the winning teams and scores, challenge attendees to get out their phones and donate.

Golfers get their food from a buffet at a post-golf tournament banquet.

A tournament’s post-round meal, ceremony, or reception is a perfect opportunity to make a donation ask.

9. Add a Post-Round Call to Action

Golf is over, but post-round gatherings are prime opportunities to raise additional funds. People are relaxed, engaged, and reflecting on the fun they had during the event, making it an ideal moment to ask for contributions.

Share impact stories, progress toward the day and overall event fundraising goals, celebrate the day’s successes, and make a final, direct donation ask.

PRO TIP: Display a live fundraising total during the reception.

Project your event website’s donation tracker on a screen during the reception, showing real-time updates towards your goal to encourage last-minute donations.

10. Follow Up After the Tournament

Some of your best donation opportunities can happen after the tournament. Not everyone will give on tournament day, but many will once they’ve had time to reflect. Within a week or so after the tournament, send a follow-up email that includes:

  • A thank-you message

  • Event highlights, photos, and videos

  • Fundraising totals

  • A clear link to donate

PRO TIP: Segment your follow-up messages.

Tailor your asks specifically for players, sponsors, and non-attendees who engaged online.


Raise More Money With Your Golf Event

When it comes to donation asks, success isn’t necessarily about doing more—it’s about doing it better. Strategic timing, clear messaging, and seamless tech make all the difference. The easier you make it to give, and the more connected people feel to your mission, the more likely they are to support your cause.

GolfStatus’ full-service golf event management and fundraising platform helps you do exactly that. From mobile-friendly event websites and live leaderboards to built-in donation tools and communication features, everything works together to create a smooth, engaging experience for your supporters.

Click below to book a meeting with GolfStatus’ team of golf fundraising experts to find out how you can get started at no upfront cost.

Save Time & Raise More Money

Book a meeting with GolfStatus

 
 
GolfStatus Announces Rewards Program to Better Support Charity Golf Tournaments & Nonprofits
 

GolfStatus kicks off the fundraising planning season with two new tools that nonprofits and charities can leverage to maximize the impact of charity golf tournaments

Lincoln, NE (March 3, 2026) - (BUSINESS WIRE)--GolfStatus, the industry-leading platform for charity golf tournaments and fundraisers, is proud to announce its new GolfStatus Rewards program to maximize fundraising outcomes for charity golf tournaments and nonprofits.

Golf tournaments powered by GolfStatus raised more than $32 million in 2025. Because golf tournaments continue to provide a viable, scalable fundraising and donor engagement option for all types of nonprofits, GolfStatus continues to improve its offerings, including the newly launched GolfStatus Rewards.

Tournaments that leverage GolfStatus’ suite of Fundraising Enhancers unlock thousands of dollars in valuable rewards from giving partners that can be leveraged as auction items, raffle prizes, or sponsor thank-yous to drive additional revenue from their golf events. Fundraising Enhancers include:

  • Technology Sponsorship: A GolfStatus exclusive, the Technology Sponsorship offers premier branding and exposure for the sponsor throughout the GolfStatus platform and app.

  • Branded Pin Flags: Pin flags are one of the most visible sponsorships available for a charity golf tournament. GolfStatus’ top-of-the-line pin flags give tournaments a professional look and feel and provide sponsors with unprecedented exposure across the golf course.

  • Bundled Hole-In-One Contest: GolfStatus’ bundled hole-in-one package includes premium, high-value prizes at a fraction of the cost of other hole-in-one insurance offerings.

  • NEW | Hole Signage: High-quality, all-inclusive hole signage from GolfStatus boosts sponsor visibility and engages golfers at a reasonable price. The GolfStatus team handles production and shipping.

“Golf events play a crucial role in helping nonprofits fund their work and fulfill their missions,” said Steve Mattern, Chief Operating Officer at GolfStatus. “With our Fundraising Enhancers and GolfStatus Rewards, we’re reaffirming our commitment to helping nonprofits, charities, and causes maximize their golf fundraising outcomes.”

GolfStatus’ all-in-one platform makes tournament planning easy and efficient. From custom-branded event websites and online registration to efficient event management and integrated fundraising tools, GolfStatus helps tournament organizers save 40+ hours of planning time and raise thousands of additional dollars. Free tournament planning resources, including webinars, downloadable guides and templates, and case studies, along with expert guidance from Fundraising Specialists and PGA Professionals, ensure nonprofit fundraisers start and finish strong.

As nonprofits kick off event planning season, they’re encouraged to book a free demo of the platform to learn more about GolfStatus Rewards, explore how the software simplifies tournament planning, and discover how GolfStatus maximizes fundraising potential.

About GolfStatus

GolfStatus helps nonprofits leverage the giving power of golf to raise more dollars, engage supporters, and do more good. Its robust golf event management platform streamlines golf tournaments from start to finish to save time and enhance the overall event experience for golfers, sponsors, and golf facilities. GolfStatus combines powerful technology with practical golf fundraising resources and industry-leading support to make charity golf tournaments easy, approachable, and efficient for organizations of all types and sizes. Visit golfstatus.com.

 
 
7 Ways Technology Upgrades Your Nonprofit’s Golf Fundraiser
 

Golf has a ton of giving power. For nonprofits, a golf tournament is the chance to raise mission-critical dollars, engage supporters, build relationships, and ultimately, do more good. And while planning a tournament isn’t a small undertaking, the good news for nonprofit event planners is that the right technology can make it easier, more efficient, and more lucrative to organize a successful golf fundraiser.

So whether you’re planning your first golf tournament or your fiftieth, here are seven ways tournament management tech can upgrade and improve your golf fundraiser.

 

1. It Makes It Easier on Everybody

Golf tournaments come with a number of moving parts and specifics to handle that are much different than those that come with a gala or auction. Using tech tailored specifically to a golf event makes it simple to handle the golf details, like flighting, handicaps, tie-breakers, and live scoring. You’ll keep everything organized in one easily-accessible place, so you, your planning team, and even the golf facility staff are all on the same page and working with up-to-the-minute information and not bouncing between multiple platforms and spreadsheets.

Golf facilities love tech that makes it easier on them, too—they’ll spend less time in the back office creating cart signs, rules sheets, and alpha lists and more time out front assisting you and your tournament’s golfers.

 

2. You’ll Save Time, Resources & Effort

It starts with an event registration website with secure payment processing, where golfers, prospective sponsors, and supporters can learn more about your organization and event and commit to participating with just a few clicks. So instead of creating a costly promotional mailer, then asking supporters to fill out the form, track down a stamp, and mail it back, you simply share a link where folks can register online with a few simple, secure clicks.

Online registrations should automatically flow into the software’s backend, where you can instantly find golfer, sponsor, and payment information. That means no processing paper forms, checks, or receipts and no entering and re-entering information in different spreadsheets. What’s more, when it comes time to make team pairings and hole assignments, it can all be done right in the software. Your administrative burden is cut in half

 

3. Sponsors Get Better ROI

Sponsors get a ton of value out of the digital exposure provided by tournament management tech. Instead of being limited to signage on the golf course the day of the event, it’s amplified with the exposure throughout the platform before, during, and after the event. So every time someone visits your event site to register or just learn more about the tournament, sponsors get eyeballs on their brand.

Combine that with hole-by-hole exposure and push notifications in the live-scoring app, and businesses see even more value and ROI in supporting your tournament. Plus, sponsors can browse available packages, make a purchase, and upload logos and links right through the event website, eliminating time-consuming back and forth to collect assets and providing instant exposure.

 

4. You’ll Raise More Money

Any tournament management tech should come with tools that boost fundraising. At a minimum, you should be able to collect donations via the event website, but look for additional fundraising features like a donation tracker on the event site, multiple donation calls-to-action throughout the platform, the ability to round up and donate at checkout, exclusive sponsorships that can be sold at a premium, and fun add-ons that drive revenue (and bring fun and excitement to your charity golf tournament).

A colorful, informative banner at your golf fundraiser helps golfers understand your organization's work.

National Ag Science Center placed banners around the golf course to help golfers better understand their mission.

 

5. It Engages Golfers, Donors & Sponsors

Engagement—prior to, during the round, and following the tournament—is key to donor onboarding and stewardship. Instead of just sending golfers out on the course and not interacting with them again until after the round, look to technology to engage them in a variety of ways throughout the day. Live scoring is a great way to keep golfers engaged every time they check the current standings on the tournament’s live leaderboards (which also provides additional sponsor exposure and another opportunity for folks to make a donation).

Direct folks to the event website at the end of the tournament and challenge folks to make a donation, perhaps equal to that of the winning team or what their team shot. You can also leverage push notifications and email communications to share information and updates throughout the day. After the event, export your golf tournament donor data for inclusion into your donor CRM for additional follow up and stewardship.

 

6. You’ll Be Ready for Next Year

Rather than starting from scratch, you can simply copy your event in the golf tournament software platform, update the date and key details, and push it out to your audiences to save the date and keep it on their radar for next year. If you have a date set, include the link to your new event website in any post-tournament thank yous and follow-up communications to get a jump on promotion and sponsor sales.

 

7. You Don’t Have to Know About Golf

It doesn’t matter if you’ve never picked up a golf club, you hit the links a few times a week, or fall somewhere in between, you can plan a successful, lucrative golf fundraiser with the right tools and resources behind you. Your tech platform should come with a responsive, knowledgeable support team that’s there to coach you, answer questions, and troubleshoot issues for you and your event’s participants.

 

Golf for Good with GolfStatus

GolfStatus works with nonprofits and charities of all types and sizes to launch or level up their golf fundraisers. The robust platform streamlines the process from start to finish and is backed by an in-house support team available seven days a week.

Through the Golf for Good program, qualifying 501(c) organizations and others planning golf events that benefit a charity can use GolfStatus’ tournament management software at no cost, including an event website, online registration and secure payment processing, digital sponsor exposure, robust reporting, and more. Visit golfstatus.com/demo for more information or to get qualified.

 
 

 
10 Ideas to Create Cause Connection at Your Charity Golf Tournament
 

When golfers decide to play in a charity golf tournament, they often reach out to their friends, family members, neighbors, or colleagues to fill their team. This is good news for your organization—not only does it fill your tournament’s field, but your mission gets exposure to a brand new audience of potential new donors and supporters.

Take full advantage of this opportunity to introduce your organization to a captive audience at your golf event. Create a cause connection by helping golfers understand what your organization does, who it serves, and how their participation is a key part of fulfilling your mission. They may have come to golf, but when they see the tangible impacts of what the tournament is raising money for, it’s easier to convert them into donors.

Here are 10 ideas for your next golf fundraiser to connect golfers to your mission:

 

1. Add compelling photos and videos to your event website.

A picture is truly worth a thousand words, so take advantage of your event website’s customization features to add photos that illustrate your organization’s work and impact. If possible, add video too—anything from a simple slideshow of photos set to music, an impact story, or a polished marketing video are effective in telling your organization’s story visually.

Photos help tell your organization's story on your golf fundraiser's event website.

Help golfers connect to your cause with powerful images and videos on your event website.

 

2. Invite a guest speaker to share their experience.

Kick off the tournament with a speaker who has benefited from your nonprofit’s services. Or add a presenter to a luncheon, banquet, or awards ceremony. Hearing first-hand from a beneficiary drives home the impact of your work. For example, Riverside Ranch, a therapeutic horse riding program, invited parents of riders to speak at their golf tournament’s luncheon and share what the Ranch meant to their family.

 

3. Include promo materials in player gift bags and golf carts.

A one-page flier, brochure, annual report, or other collateral can help golfers understand the depth of your mission. Be sure to include QR code on any printed materials with a direct link to the donation page on your event website where folks can donate right from their phones! Drop these in player gift bags or leave them in golf carts for golfers to peruse at their leisure. If your golf facility has carts with video capabilities, inquire about showing a video or photo slideshow on the screens. RiseUp Malawi, which provides educational opportunities in the African country of Malawi, played a video with a welcome message from some of the children the organization serves. They also provided each golfer with a book about Malawi with handwritten notes from the kids and on-site staff.

 

4. Place signage and banners around the golf course.

These pieces should be placed strategically around the course for maximum visibility. High traffic areas such as registration, driving range, putting green, and inside the clubhouse (near the bar or front door are good choices) are all guaranteed to get golfers looking. You can also place smaller signage unobtrusively on the golf course with information about your organization, facts related to your cause, or ways to take action. QR codes are a great addition to these as well to solicit donations.

A colorful, informative banner at your golf fundraiser helps golfers understand your organization's work.

National Ag Science Center placed banners around the golf course to help golfers better understand their mission.

 

5. Highlight your organization’s beneficiaries.

Depending on the work your nonprofit does, you could invite beneficiaries to attend or participate in the event. Personal connections are incredibly powerful, so provide opportunities for them to engage with golfers and sponsors throughout the day. For instance, if your golf tournament benefits a school, teachers or administrators could greet golfers as they arrive or even be added to teams. This isn’t limited to human beneficiaries, either! For example, pet rescue organizations could have adoptable pets at the golf course and an accompanying adoption drive.

 

6. Take advantage of downtime.

Downtime is a great chance to engage with a captive audience! Whether folks are waiting on the tee box, to check in, for a turn on the driving range, or for final results to be announced, your organization’s staff, board members, beneficiaries, or even volunteers can mingle with golfers to chat and have a conversation about your mission. You could also strategically station these folks on various tee boxes throughout the golf course (perhaps on a par 5 that might take groups longer to play through) to talk with golfers as they play their round or rethink your format to add in more opportunities for face time with participants. For example, Breckenridge Outdoor Education Center, an organization that removes barriers to outdoor experiences for those with special needs, used tee times rather than a traditional shotgun start to give them a few minutes to visit with each group as they waited for their turn to tee off.

 

7. Hold an accompanying event.

If it makes sense for your organization, hold an event in conjunction with your golf fundraiser that drives home your mission. Outlook Enrichment, a nonprofit that serves the visually-impaired, holds a blind golfers clinic alongside its annual charity golf tournament. The clinic features instructors and volunteers helping visually-impaired golfers putt, chip, and play a few holes. Many organizations also hold events targeting non-golfers, such as golf lessons, a wine tasting, blanket-tying or meal-packing event.

A coach helps line up the golf shot of a visually-impaired player at a golf fundraiser.

A volunteer coach helps a participant line up their shot during Outlook Enrichment’s blind golfers clinic.

 

8. Send push notifications.

Your golf event management platform should be able to send push notifications to golfers via a mobile app for easy communication. These notifications can help connect golfers to your mission by including a link to your website, testimonials from beneficiaries or volunteers, or even solicit donations for a specific program or outreach effort. Keep the notifications short, impactful, and time them strategically.

 

9. Display photos or memorabilia on the course.

Golfers want to know what the tournament is raising money for—what better way than to display photos or related memorabilia on the golf course. For instance, the Pat Neal Memorial Golf Tournament raises money for brain cancer research in honor of the tournament’s namesake, Pat Neal. A photo of Pat was placed on the course and golfers were encouraged to sign the photo as a keepsake for Pat’s family.

Three golfers pose next to a photo of their dad at a memorial golf tournament fundraiser.

Pat Neal’s three children post with his picture on the golf course at his memorial golf tournament fundraiser.

 

10. Provide opportunities to take action.

The ultimate goal of helping golfers understand your mission is to have them take some sort of action, so give them the opportunity to do so. You could set up a donation station where folks can contribute, solicit volunteer sign ups, have a pop up shop to sell branded merchandise or products, or let folks start the process of adopting a pet.

 

Wrapping Up

First and foremost, technology is a major asset in creating cause connection. From your event website to push notifications to impact videos, leverage tech tools to be effective (and make it easier). Use tech to tell your organization’s story; engage with golfers before, during, and after the tournament; and ultimately, compel golfers and sponsors to further support it through a donation or future events. In doing so, you can demonstrate the impact your organization has on your community at large.


 

Get Qualified for No-Cost Event Technology

GolfStatus’ Golf for Good program gives back to nonprofits by providing access to its full golf event management and fundraising platform at no cost, so event planners can focus on building relationships, stewarding donors, and doing more good. Get qualified by clicking the button below!

 
 

 
Options for your Upcoming Golf Tournament
 

Event Organizers Adapt to Hold Safe & Successful Traditional, Virtual & Hybrid Events

Whether you’re looking for a way to hold an event postponed from the spring or hoping to keep your annual golf tournament safe and successful, you’ll need to adapt. That means social distancing, eliminating touchpoints, offering new sponsorship options, utilizing technology to potentially go virtual, and finding ways to attract donors and sponsors. Here are a few actionable options to consider for your upcoming outing.

A golf course framed by a blue sky and trees.

1. Adapt a traditional in-person event to minimize contact and allow for social distancing. 

With this approach, you will still host teams at a designated golf facility on a particular day at a particular time, but with some rule changes, potential format changes, and technology to allow for social distancing and minimize contact. Communicate with the golf facility about any pertinent rule changes, especially those that might affect the format or field size for the event. You’ll need to streamline registration and minimize mailers, check processing and handling, and other touchpoints. Do so with an event website, where you can list all pertinent information about the event alongside all available team packages, individual registrations, and sponsorships. You’ll likely need to plan to skip a banquet or other gathering after the event, which means you’ll need to find new sponsorships to sell. You’ll also need touch-free scoring options. Use a reliable live-scoring app with an option that will make it possible to sell additional digital sponsorships (such as a leaderboard sponsorship and in-app exposure) so you don’t miss out on critical sponsorship dollars. 

2. Hold an extended play event over multiple days, a weekend, a week, or longer. 

An extended play outing extends the length of time over which your outing is played to limit the number of players at the facility at once and keep everyone safely distanced. You’ll need to introduce some technology—namely online registration and an aggregate live leaderboard that collects scores as participants get out to the course and play for your cause. Leverage a holistic communications plan to share the leaderboard, collect online donations, and keep participants and spectators engaged before, during, and after the event. Not only does this ensure a good turnout and more sponsor exposure, but it also casts a broader net to bring in donations from folks following along online. Digital sponsorships will also be important here, as some of the traditionally used sponsorship options for your outing may not be possible (such as dinner sponsors and on-course hole signage).

A golfer swinging their golf club on a golf course.

3. Hold a virtual event across multiple courses. 

Another virtual/hybrid option is a multi-course outing that allows organizations to designate several courses where participants can play in support of your organization—essentially on their own time. Like an extended play outing, participants schedule and play their round when convenient. One key benefit of this approach is that your organization is less limited when it comes to the number of participants. Live leaderboards are also crucial here; you’ll need options that display scores at each course and across multiple courses and you’ll need to implement a thoughtful communications plan to keep people interested in the relevant geographic area interested in your outing. Take advantage of online registration to keep information organized and process participant information, and be sure to sell digital sponsorships—another great source of revenue. 


Whether you host a modified traditional outing or get creative with formats, scheduling, and locations, the right technology makes all the difference. GolfStatus.org can help! Our technology streamlines golf outings to save you time and keep your organization flexible.

Are you with a nonprofit or planning a golf outing that benefits one? No-cost access to our technology is available to qualifying nonprofits through our Golf for Good program.