Posts in Revenue Enhancers
9 Ways to Upgrade a Corporate Golf Event
 

From opportunities to engage with vendors, partners, and clients to positive public relations and community outreach, a corporate golf event offers tons of benefits. It’s also an especially ideal way to gather as restrictions loosen, but social distancing and crowd limitations linger. But if you’ve ever put on a tournament—a first-year event or an established outing—you know there are a number of component parts to manage, and they don’t always function in sync. Here are some upgrades that can save you time, cast your brand in a positive and professional light, and make the experience all-around better for players and sponsors.

Golfers at a corporate golf outing event

1. Launch a website for the tournament.

An online presence for your event makes it easier to spread the word across all your marketing channels. The site should feature all pertinent information about your golf event, including available team packages and sponsorships. It should also show off sponsors, include a place for leaderboards during the event (and final results after), and pull in information about the course (namely its location and scorecard). In fact, a well-comprised event website can even typically replace most printed materials (mailers, paper registration packets, and other collateral that must be designed and managed). Instead, simply link directly to the site in event communications and invites, so potential participants can quickly and easily find the information they need and commit to participating in the tournament.

Event website powered by GolfStatus


2. Process registrations online.

The registration process is one of the most important touchpoints for any event. A clunky process soaks up your time, increases the likelihood of embarrassing errors, and can be especially frustrating. Having an event website sets you up to upgrade your registration platform and side-step issues. Be sure to choose a platform that functions seamlessly with the website, securely processes payments, and can accommodate needs specific to the golf event (such as the ability to collect handicaps and apparel sizes and the option for registrants to purchase add-ons like raffle tickets and mulligans). As the organizer, you’ll need to be able to access player and sponsor registrations in real-time, and you’ll want a platform that makes it easy to pass that information to the golf facility in the day or so leading up to the event. There’s bound to be last-minute changes, so you’ll want something that makes it easy for staff at the facility to track those and swap out names on cart signs and other materials so every player has a premier experience. 


3. Display your brand professionally. 

When it comes to showcasing your brand, think beyond tee gifts and goodie bags. Display your company logo (or the event’s logo, if it has one) across materials—starting with your event website and including the leaderboards, scorecards, cart signs, and other on-site materials. These subtle and professional impressions continuously associate your company and brand with the great experience of participating in a fun, well-run event.

4. Put the benefitting charity on display. 

Be sure to include information about the charity your event is supporting on your event website. This should include impact imagery and information that tells the story of the cause and the organization. Take a page from the nonprofit sector’s playbook and look for ways to quantify the impact of specific purchases so supporters know how their dollars make a difference. For example: The purchase of one team provides three meals per day for a child in need for three months. This shows people what they’re supporting and, more importantly, why it matters, and encourages them to give generously.


5. Include on-course contests. 

Adding the opportunity to win prizes is a fun and easy way to make a tournament more memorable. A putting contest is a simple addition. Players simply putt for a chance to enter the contest, where they win an exclusive prize if they ultimately sink the final putt. Hole-in-one contests are also worth considering. For these, one or more holes is designated for the contest, giving players the chance to win a prize if they ace that hole. If your event will be hosting vendors, partners, or B2B clients, consider offering a contest sponsorship that covers the costs of facilitating the package. Be sure to take the opportunity to recognize sponsors as well as folks who qualified for the putting contest, and look for opportunities to acknowledge them with on-course signage and other exposure. 


6. Offer live-scoring and leaderboards. 

At a typical golf event, players and/or teams tally their round, turn paper scorecards in at the end, and then congregate around the clubhouse until the final team finishes and scores can be tallied. Live-scoring improves this flow, allowing teams to input their score into a mobile app in real-time on the course; meanwhile, leaderboards display live scores. The upgrade makes the event more engaging; players check their standings and enjoy poking fun at other teams. Be cognizant that the live-scoring platform you choose is clean, sleek, and easy to use, so inputting a score is simple and not distracting for players. Leaderboards should provide an opportunity to showcase your branding as well as the benefitting charity’s branding—tying everything together professionally. It’s also a good idea to inform staff at the golf facility so they can plan to set up scrolling leaderboards on clubhouse TVs and at the on-course comfort station or halfway house.

Live scoring and leaderboards powered by GolfStatus


7. Add the option to participate remotely. 

With social distancing lingering, it’s a good idea to continue to provide options for folk to support your event in both the traditional format and virtually. Essentially, you’ll plan your traditional in-person, one-day outing at the course, then tack on a virtual option that extends over the week, two weeks, or the whole month in which the traditional event occurs. Folks who aren’t comfortable coming out for the one-day event can register for the virtual round and come out to the course on their own time with their own group or alone. This way, they’re still able to participate, experience the outing, and support the cause, while also feeling safe and comfortable. You’ll need to employ some technology here, but—with the right platform—adding a virtual round is very simple and costs nothing. A hybrid event is also a nice option if you’re wanting to allow more participants, but traditionally have a sold-out field.

Live Scoring powered by GolfStatus

8. Collect and manage player information.

It’s often the case that the person who is tasked with running the golf event gets to know the people who attend over the years. When the event has been handed off to someone new, or there’s an effort to expand or evolve it in a more intentional and organized fashion, player and sponsor information becomes especially crucial. Who has supported the event in the past and how can they be contacted? The right technology helps you securely and responsibility collect player and sponsor information, so you know exactly who attends and in what capacity. After the event, that information should be imported back into your company’s CRM.

9. Follow up. 

Knowing who is participating and how allows you to follow up and continue to steward meaningful business relationships: thank employees for joining and supporting the event and the cause it supports; reach out to partners with follow-up communications and gifts; leverage the experience to advance and steward relationships with clients. When the time comes to plan next year’s event, the information you need is at your fingertips, and everything is infinitely easier.

Get Started 

GolfStatus provides all the above and more, making it especially easy to upgrade corporate events from start to finish. This includes a professional event website (that can seamlessly be integrated into your business’s site), secure online registration, the ability to manage teams and sponsors, premier branding opportunities, ways to showcase a cause, live-scoring and leaderboards, secure data collection, and much more. It also includes options for virtual events and rounds—so you’re ready for anything.

Best of all, if your event benefits a nonprofit, your business likely qualifies for no-cost access to GolfStatus through GolfStatus.org and the Golf for Good program.

 
 

 
5 Easy Day-of Digital Fundraising Options for the Golf Outing
 

Certainly teams and sponsorships make up the bulk of the fundraising revenue for your golf outing, but let’s not forget day-of efforts. Whether you’re keeping things traditional or planning a modified or virtual outing, the funds raised in the moment can quickly take an event from good to great. Digital options keep costs low, minimize extra work for organizers, and provide more opportunities to engage players, sponsors, and their networks. Here are some often-overlooked day-of digital fundraising options to consider for your upcoming outing.


1. Skins Games

Skins games are a great way to encourage friendly competition among golfers while simultaneously raising more dollars for your cause. In short, skins games create mini-competitions where teams (or individuals, depending on the event’s format) opt to compete against each other based on their score on a given hole, in addition to their overall score. Event organizers can use skins games to fundraise by setting a dollar amount where participants can buy in to compete. Displaying skins results on real-time leaderboards keeps things competitive and provides an easy way for participants and online spectators to instantly donate from their mobile device.

Two smartphones showing the Newman Center Golf Tournament in a mobile view.

2. Live Leaderboards

Whether your event is traditional, virtual, or a hybrid format, be sure to promote and display the live leaderboards for the outing online. This is as easy as posting a link to your organization’s social channels and sending an email to your supporters the day of the event or during the week of an extended play/virtual tournament. This opens the event up to a broad audience of online spectators, who can not only follow the event in real time, they can make a donation to your cause directly from the online leaderboard with the click of a button.

3. Consider extended play in comms plans

If you’re planning an extended play and/or virtual outing, be sure to outline a communications plan that capitalizes on the fact that the event will occur over a longer duration—so you can raise dollars the whole time. Start in the months and weeks leading up to the event by explaining the modified format. Leverage social media, your organization’s website, and the event registration website to keep players and sponsors informed and clearly outline when, where, and how they can participate and support the event in other ways. Leverage opportunities to thank sponsors and acknowledge their commitments. Put out a press release and aim to engage local media in the creative approach your organization is taking to the golf fundraiser. Time a communication in the days leading up to the event announcing its kickoff, and periodically share news about rankings as the event happens over multiple days/weeks. The key here is to get people engaged and following the outing; certainly, the easiest way to do that is with live, shareable leaderboards. Unfamiliar with live leaderboards and how they work? Check out this article on live scoring.

4. Mobile Sweepstakes

The mobile channel is the most viewed and, when utilized properly, the most effective exposure avenue for brands. Work with sponsors to go mobile with on-course prizes that add a little excitement and help bring in more dollars. With the right technology, you can time in-app, sponsor-branded exposure to engage participants at specific moments during the round. When you’re working with sponsors, ask them for in-kind donations of services or gift cards that can be given away through mobile sweepstakes the day of the outing. Use this as a way to further engage with sponsors and raise more dollars through digital placements.

5. Timely Asks & Thank Yous

Remind participants to make a donation during the event through in-app messages either delivered to all participants at a certain time or triggered during a key moment in the player’s game. In app messages are also a great way to thank participants for supporting the cause and remind them of the impact their generous donations make. When you post final results, be sure to link players directly to the event’s leaderboard, where they can instantly make a donation from mobile with a few simple taps.

Get Started

GolfStatus offers all the technology event organizers need to capitalize on each of these opportunities, and it’s backed by an in-house customer success team that can help you get any and all of these options up and running quickly and easily.

Through GolfStatus.org’s Golf for Good program, this technology is available to qualifying nonprofits at no cost. Follow the link below to learn more.

 
 

 

Submit an inquiry here to get qualified or email us directly at

[email protected].

 

 
Go Virtual with Live Leaderboards
 
Event-Site-NewmanTournament-1.jpg

Now more than ever fundraisers must find creative ways to leverage technology to combat the challenges presented by COVID-19. When it comes to your golf outing, going virtual is easier than you think. Open your event up to a global audience of spectators ready to donate to your cause with live leaderboards!


How it Works

Live scoring is an easy process that adds value to your event and makes it accessible to a global audience of donors. Players simply enter their scores (or one player enters the team’s score in the case of a scramble) for each hole using the free GolfStatus app. Scores display in real time on a live leaderboard unique to the event. Players can access the leaderboard in the app during the event, and anyone can share a link to the leaderboard online. This means that, whether you live-stream it on your organization’s facebook account or post it on your website, spectators anywhere in the world can follow along and engage with the event.

Accept Dollars from Virtual Donors

It’s easy for virtual spectators to submit a donation directly from the live leaderboard. Donors just click Donate Now and enter their gift amount. With the ability to share and even live stream leaderboards via email, on your organization’s social channels, and through direct messages, your golf event goes virtual in an instant. After the event, you can also post the final results and encourage participants to engage and share to get more exposure and support for your cause. It’s also easy for supporters to donate directly from results pages, ensuring that your organization continues to rally donations even after the event concludes.

Event-Site-NewmanTournament-Donate.jpg

Key Advantages

Of course, live leaderboards also make the event more fun. Participants are actually able to see where they stack up against other players in real time instead of having to wait around after the event for course staff to tally scorecards. Live scoring and accessible leaderboards certainly upgrade the player experience and the overall professionalism of the event, and they also make the outing more fun and competitive. Perhaps most crucial, a leaderboard provides the opportunity to sell a premier, high-value opportunity: the leaderboard or “title” sponsorship.

Easy, Accessible Tools for Nonprofits

Live leaderboards and the ability to go virtual are just the beginning. GolfStatus.org offers all the tools tournament organizers need to save time, stay flexible, and stay up and running in the uncertain months ahead. What’s more, many of these tools are available to qualifying nonprofits at no cost!


 

Ready to get started? Submit an inquiry here or contact us directly at 

[email protected].