The following is a description of a fund raiser used by the St. Mark Orthodox Church in Rochester Hills, MI. Their Cookie Walk is to raise money for their Building Fund, but it can be used to raise money for all kinds of projects. More than ever, homemade and home-baked food sells.
The
Christmas Cookie Walk is another opportunity to draw attention to the parish
in the community. Some literature
on the Orthodox Church and your particular parish, as well as flyers on upcoming
events open to the community can be placed where it can easily be picked up.
The church itself might be open, with a sign inviting people to stop
in.
1)
Pick your date and time for the affair.
We picked the 2nd Saturday in December, from 10 AM to 2 PM
It is scheduled for this time each year.
Your customers will become familiar with "the 2nd Saturday"
and will look forward to it. Set
a price per pound of cookies. We
started at $5. a pound 5 years ago and have gone to $8. a pound.
(We checked specialty cookie prices in the local area and priced ours
accordingly.)
2)
Have a separate Public Relations Chairperson.
Print up and distribute flyers.
Try to get announcements or articles in local papers.
3)
Ask parishioners to bake and donate a MINIMUM
of 5 lbs. of cookies. (This is
equivalent to a double or triple batch.)
Cookies can be made by people individually or in teams at the church
if it has a commercial kitchen. The
Youth Group might enjoy doing such a project together.
Emphasize that you will need small attractive cookies.
In our area ethnic cookies, festive Christmas cookies, nut and poppy
seed rolls are big hits. Oatmeal,
chocolate chip and ordinary cookies DO
NOT sell. Nor do the
huge heavy cookies. If someone
bakes the large gingerbread men or women, sell them individually.
Put up a sign-up sheet that also asks the kind of cookies the
bakers will make. In this way you
can give direction if you see that too much of one kind is being baked.
Variety is very important. We
have 20 or more different cookies at our Cookie Walk.
Cookies can be baked in advance and frozen, providing they are well wrapped
in plastic wrap to prevent them from drying out.
4)
Have the cookies dropped off and everything set up the night before the
event. When your bakers arrive
with their cookies, have them sign in, again indicating the kind of cookies
they've baked. (This information
will help you for the following year as you note what sells and what does not
sell.) Set the cookies out on trays
or seasonal plates. We put a little
card beside the platter indicating the kind of cookie.
You want the whole affair to be very eye-appealing.
In other nearby churches the cookies are just put out in the containers
they were brought in or in cardboard boxes.
5)
Make up a schedule for your workers, a morning crew and an afternoon crew.
You will need 2-3 people to refill the plates as they empty.
(Don't put all of the same cookies out at one time.)
You will also need one person weighing, one person taking money, and
perhaps 2 people tying ribbon on boxes.
A cleanup crew is also important.
6)
Three weeks prior to the Cookie Walk, we put out a huge sign announcing
the coming of the affair. Check with your city or township to see if there is an ordinance
on this. Our sign could only be
on church property so many feet from the road.
7)
Have a loose leaf notebook available for your customers to sign with
their name and address if they wish a flyer mailed to them next year.
It's good to have a person assigned to that post.
Good
Luck and Happy Baking!
Ann McKellan is Chairman once again of this year's Christmas Cookie Walk. She and her husband, Dennis are founding members of St. Mark Orthodox Church, Rochester, Michigan.
Taken from the OCA Resource Handbook for Lay Ministries
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Department
of Youth, Young Adult, and Campus Ministry |
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