Financial

There is no winning formula for getting sponsorship. Many people have theories based on their own experience. Here are mine.

1. Above all else, remember that sponsorship is a two-way street. You have to give as well as receive – in terms of publicity, exclusive photos of you using their product, motivational speeches to their workforce, links to their website from yours, logos on your boat, and anything else you can think of. Too many potential sponsors have been deterred by bad experiences with previous sponsor-ees who have been all take and no give. Make sure you deliver value, and don’t spoil it for the next sponsorship-seeker who comes along. And remember your manners – make sure you say thank you.

2. Donations of product are a LOT easier to get than cash, and can really help reduce the cost of the venture.

3. Go to manufacturers, not retailers, for the biggest discounts. You have a good chance of getting stuff totally free, in exchange for a listing and link on your website.

4. A few donations of product at least give you some logos to put on your website. Sponsors are reluctant to be first to the party.

5. Trade shows, boat shows, and outdoor shows are happy hunting grounds – great for networking with sponsors when they are in a relaxed and generous mood – especially if you track them down to the Guinness tent. Go to the shows, have fun, schmooze for all you’re worth, and pray that something comes of it.

6. Lots of small donations from private individuals seem to be easier than chasing corporate cash. Provide an incentive, like putting their name on your boat or on your website, to give them a sense of being appreciated, recognized and “owning” a small stake in your project.

7. If you do go for corporate sponsorship, offer to do a motivational presentation about your row when you get back. Quite a number of companies seem to like this.

8. Produce a professional-looking sponsorship proposal, giving an executive overview of who you are, what you intend to do, what your message is, how you plan to publicise your project (and hence gain exposure for your sponsors), what it will cost, and what is in it for them. Keep it brief and to the point – assume that everybody is too busy to spend ages reading every last detail. Hook them, and if they are interested they can always ask for more information.

9. Find out who you should address the proposal to. Ideally, use your network to get a “warm” contact rather than going in cold. One warm contact is worth 100 cold ones. Regardless of whether the contact is warm or cold, give them a call as well. It is a lot easier to convey your enthusiasm in a phone conversation – or better still, a face-to-face meeting (see point 5) – than in an email.

10. Don’t give up. It may feel like you’re getting nowhere for months on end, and then you can have a blinding week when everything suddenly comes good. Don’t take it personally when you get the setbacks – with enough determination and commitment, you CAN make it happen.

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Thank you to my supportive and generous sponsors, please click here for a full list.

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About Roz Savage

Roz Savage is a British ocean rower and environmental campaigner. Coupled with her solo row across the Atlantic in 2005-6, she has rowed over 11,000 miles, taken 3.5 million oarstrokes, and spent cumulatively nearly a year of her life at sea in a 23-foot rowboat. Her personal creed of taking life 'one oarstroke at a time', and her promotion of the EcoHero movement, has inspired countless people around the world. In 2011 she will set out to complete the "Big Three" by rowing solo across the Indian Ocean.


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