2007 OREGON EXECUTIVE GOLF GUIDE: COVER STORY

{safe_alt_text} Golfing for charity

Forget the big-ticket raffles or bingo nights. Golf has become the vehicle of choice for raising funds for deserving organizations around the state.

It happens every year about this time. Invitations start appearing in mailboxes. Fliers get the position of honor on company bulletin boards. Calendars start to fill up. ‘Tis the season — for golf. Specifically, for the benefit golf tournaments that are scheduled every weekend all over the state.

Forget big-ticket raffles or bingo nights. Golf has become the vehicle of choice for raising funds for deserving organizations. In Medford, the RE/MAX Invitational puts cash — lots of it ­— in the coffers of the Children’s Miracle Network. In Bend, the Sagebrush Classic benefits a host of children’s programs. In Portland, the Safeway Classic made more than a million dollars for charities last year. The Oregon Dental Foundation, the Providence Child Center Foundation, the United Way and Parkinson’s Resources of Oregon are just a few of the nonprofits benefiting from annual golf tournaments.

And for every large, professionally plan-ned event there are dozens of smaller tournaments benefiting local groups. You don’t have to start big — Bend’s Sagebrush Classic, one of Oregon’s largest golf events, started out in 1989 as a modest outing for Deschutes Brewery pub patrons. Last year, the event raised nearly $250,000 for Central Oregon organizations serving children and families.

There are lots of reasons for sponsoring a benefit golf tournament. A well-publicized event gives sponsoring companies a chance to demonstrate their commitment to the community. It’s a lot of fun for participants, who also get to support favorite charities. In the end, though, there’s only one reason to host a tournament, and that is to make money. And that takes skill.

“Charitable dollars are always tough to come by, especially in the last few years,” says Tom Maletis, president of Tournament Golf Foundation, the nonprofit group that operates the annual Safeway Classic. “But if you have the right formula, benefit tournaments can work out very well.”

Timothy Mort, founder of Medford’s Tournament Golf Solutions and director of the RE/MAX Invitational, agrees with that assessment. “There is a huge difference and much larger financial gains in the outcome of a golf event if it is structured properly to start,” he says.

It takes a lot of work to pull off a successful golf tournament, one that is fun for players and lucrative for the benefiting charity. We talked to organizers of a few of Oregon’s most successful golf tournaments about what it takes to make money at these events. In the following pages, they generously share their secrets to success.


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Golfers practice by the lake at Broken Top Club before the Sagebrush Classic in Bend.
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The course

Finding the right venue is a lot more work than you might think. Many courses are booked a year or more in advance, particularly during high season for golf — June through September.

Finding the right fit for an event involves a couple of different factors. If this is your first time planning an outing, Maletis recommends choosing a course with an experienced staff that is willing to help you with ideas on how to make money.

Another hint: Consider the advantages of debuting your event at a smaller course. The nine-hole Hidden Valley Golf Course in Cottage Grove plays host to several golf events each year. “We get smaller tourneys when they are just starting out,” says owner Dan Nord. “They like to come here because we can accommodate more readily.”

It’s more fun to have the golf course to yourself, and smaller courses can accommodate smaller groups. “We’ll shut our place down for 45 people,” Nord says, “where others require 100 or so.”

When choosing a course, be sure to also check out its benefits. Hidden Valley, for example, gives 10% of its fee back for charitable events. Other courses commonly provide cash or credit in the pro shop for prizes during the event.

The players

The single most important key to a successful tournament is getting the players signed up –– the right players, the ones with the connections and the resources to really make your event pay off.

How do you do that? By working with the right people. “On the charity end, you really need to get the board of directors behind you in the effort,” Maletis advises. “They always have a lot of connections, a lot of people on their speed dial willing to play a round of golf for a good cause.”

Getting a full roster of players is essential to the bottom line. Registration fees should cover the costs of the golf course and a meal, should you choose to serve one. The rest is gravy.

Golfers compete at the local qualifier for the 2006 RE/MAX World Long Drive Championship at Centennial Golf Course in Medford.

Photos courtesy of Medford Mail Tribune.
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The sponsors

The national average for benefit golf tournaments is $3,000 to $7,000 in profits. Timothy Mort, who has been organizing large golf events for years, has developed a formula for increasing that return. One of the key components has to do with sponsorships.

“I learned a long time ago that if you treat sponsorship as an investment rather than a donation, companies will step up and spend more money with you,” Mort says.

For example, RE/MAX organizers typically spend $40,000 to $50,000 in advertising the month prior to the event. The goal of the coverage is not to attract participants, since the event usually is sold out well before that. The goal is to publicize the cause, the Children’s Miracle Network, and to get the names of the corporate sponsors out there.

Another key to success is to make those sponsorship opportunities available at all levels, so as many businesses as possible can participate. The big bucks come in on the title sponsorship, of course, but that is only one of the branding options. “You can sell sponsorships for your lunch or dinner, so you cover your expenses there,” Maletis says. “You can have a sponsor for the driving range where golfers warm up, for the golf carts, the drink carts, even the putting green.”

Hole sponsorships are relatively low-cost and, times 18, can significantly offset tournament expenses.

The prizes

With so many golf tournaments out there, there is a lot of competition for players. Mort credits the “wow factor” with the success of many events. “Year after year, it’s all about that wow factor,” he says. “When people come to play in one of my events, I want them to walk away with their hands full of stuff and saying, ‘Wow, I’m coming back next year.’ You always want to be building toward next year.”

Contests within the tournament provide the opportunity for golfers to win prizes while increasing revenue. Tournament registration fees are often paid by employers, so golfers are usually willing to spend a little more out of their own pockets. “You don’t want to nickel and dime them to death, but there are some definite revenue possibilities you want to take advantage of,” Maletis says.

Putting competitions are a favorite, since skilled and amateur golfers alike can participate — for $10 or so a try, of course. One of the most popular contests at Langdon Farms Golf Club in Aurora, which Maletis owns, was the chance to win a ski boat. For a fee, golfers got a chance to put their ball into a plastic swimming pool floating on the lake alongside the ski boat, right off the 18th hole. “That was a lot of fun, and someone actually did win the boat,” Maletis says.

All the trimmings

Once you have the course, the players and the sponsors, you can take your golf event to whatever level you want. At this point, sometimes it’s not even about golf anymore.

The Sagebrush Classic, for example, has morphed from a small golf outing into one of the Northwest’s premier culinary events. Twenty celebrity chefs from around the world come to Bend to cook for more than 1,300 guests, who also sip handcrafted brews from the event’s sponsor, Deschutes Brewery, and enjoy local wines. The best-ball golf tournament at Broken Top Club is scheduled for one of the event’s two days.

“The golf tournament is a lot of fun,” says Judy Anderson, executive director of the event, “but the celebrity chefs are the big draw.”

Many golf tournaments find huge success with dinners, raffles and auctions. These events aren’t limited to golfers, which encourages more participation and can double the take for the charity. “You can make anywhere from $20,000 to $40,000 more if you tie your function into an auction,” Maletis says.

With the right structure, your golf event can make money for your favorite charity, and provide a lot of fun at the same time.

“The great thing about these tournaments is that players get to come out and compete with their buddies,” says Dan Nord of Hidden Valley. “Usually, they pay almost twice the fees in a tournament — half of it is just a give on their part.

“Golfers are the most charitable people alive.”


 

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