Charity Golf Network

Your source for information about hosting a charity golf tournament.

Tom King's Comments

Comment Wall (11 comments)

You need to be a member of Charity Golf Network to add comments!

Join Charity Golf Network

At 11:10am on November 7, 2012, Laura Metro said…

Thanks Tom! Happy to be here. Gonna need a lot of advice for my first tournament! http://www.theclayfoundation.org/events.php

At 10:58am on July 20, 2012, Cheryl Milano said…

Hi,

I wanted to ask you a question totally unrelated to golf, but the site wouldnt let me unless i joined......are you the one that about 3 or 4 years ago, advertised you had compiled all of Steve Marshall's sermons on a CD???  I would give my eye-teeth to get ahold of one!!! 

At 8:22am on August 19, 2010, Lorna Shuford said…
Hey, Tm. this Lorna with LIGA out of MIA. We change our event for Oct. 30 and want to be able to chang ethe event dateon our LIGA site, but we can't sign on now. We hadtrouble witour ema adress, how can we correct or up date this site. Maybe we should create a new website? Pleasehelp imediately. You can personally contat e at ls33150@aol.com. Thanks.
At 8:15am on August 19, 2010, Maida Malby said…
Hi Tom!

Thanks for checking up on us. The Asian American Association of New Mexico's 1st Annual Autumn Moon Golf Tournament is doing good. We have modest goals and as of right now, we have already achieved our profit objective just from sponsorships and sales of ad space in the program booklet. We're now trying to get more raffle prizes, meaningful gifts for the goodie bags and recruit up to 15 more foursomes to register. Even though I was in a Charity Golf Tournament Committee previously, I realize that things are very different when you're the one running it rather than just doing one aspect of it (I was in charge of publicity before). So, keep sending us positive thoughts.
At 4:42am on May 5, 2010, Donnie Woloszynek said…
thank you Tom, you can bet on me using the resources...I have done charity golf events in the past, but am always open to the best ways to get er done!
At 7:22am on April 15, 2010, Nina Renaud said…
Not at all.
Though I'd like to fix the run-on sentence at the end.
"You will not hear complaints about cheating if you put at least one nice gift in the goodie bag every player receives just for registering and supporting your cause, award the winners symbolic prizes, and use all donations of real value to generate additional proceeds for the charity. Auction those off, or use them to help sell tickets for a prize drawing. Everyone will feel like a winner - who had a fair chance of being a big winner."
At 4:29pm on April 14, 2010, Nina Renaud said…
Tom,
Yep, I'm your friend. I liked you the second I read an excerpt from your book that said something like "just DON'T do it" about awarding valuable prizes to the winners of a charity golf tournament. A charity tournament is a flipping amateur event, and I can't believe how many morons post "advice" that publicizing big prizes for the winners will attract players.
What that does is attract cheaters and sandbaggers, and guarantee speculation, if not outright accusations and complaints, about rules violations, creative scorekeeping, team-stacking, unfair handicapping, or all of the above, at the banquet. Not to mention that such talk harms the charity's reputation, and makes it more difficult to recruit players the following year. That goes at least double if the "goodie bag" that all players receive was a plastic sack with some donated trinkets and coupons no one will ever use.
Amateur golfers who respect the rules play for the honor of winning. And planners need to realize that there is very little correlation between the value of supporters and donors to their cause and their golf skills or performance on the course on any given day.
You will not hear complaints about cheating if you put at least one nice gift in the goodie bag every player receives just for registering and supporting your cause, award the winners symbolic prizes, and use all donations of real value to generate additional proceeds for your cause by auctioning them off or using them to help sell tickets for a prize drawing. Everyone will feel like a winner - who had a fair chance of being a big winner.
At 12:50pm on April 13, 2010, Nina Renaud said…
Thanks for the welcome! But I'd put myself in the "considerable experience" category. I ran my first company golf outing back in the 1970's, was on my first charity tournament committee soon after - and have been in the business of supplying merchandise and services to corporate and charity golf events full time for almost 15 years now. Always happy to help newbies.
I feel for you on the spam - my blog attracted online casino spammers. Fortunately, I had it set so I have to approve all comments before they go up. Boom - right into the trash.
At 10:56am on February 22, 2010, Tom King said…
Kevin,
I'd love to talk with you about sponsoring our website. If you watch the slide show on the front page, I actually show your website. The slide show is a temporary deal I put up in lieu of advertisers. The site is ready to go and start doing some serious promotion. What I need badly are sponsors to help get us going. I wrote the book: "Going for the Green: An Insider's Guide to Making Money with Charity Golf". I've created Charity Golf Network as a way to communicate with my readers and to help them help themselves as they put together tournaments. I think, linking them to good sponsors is a wonderful way to do that.

Once I get a sponsor or two, I'll take down the slide show and put real links to actual sponsors on the site. I'd love for sponsors to get involved on the forums when people ask questions. It's a great way for the sponsor to find customers and the tournament planners to find resources they need. It's a win/win for everyone.

Contact me by e-mail at tom@charitygolftournament.net and let's set up a phone call. I'm really excited about the potential for the site. With my book, I've been able to help people double and triple the take on their tournaments. At this time, charities need to not waste effort on unprofitable special events. We can help them be more profitable. To do that, sponsors and vendors are essential participants.

I look forward to talking to you.

Tom
At 7:17pm on October 25, 2009, Letta Meinen said…
Hi Tom good to see your web site up and running. Will try to work up an interview of it for my golf editor site. Always looking for more interesting web site about golf and golf tournaments.
At 8:16am on October 20, 2009, Erin Salehiamin said…
Thank you for the warm welcome. Glad to be a member. I represent a non-profit organization that is fairly young in my city. The org itself is over 20 years old, but here in Denver, it hasn't had much representation. StandUp for Kids is an org that helps at-risk and homeless youth. This has been a cause that is very dear to me and I want to do all I can to help. Although, don't we all say that (smile)?
I just took over the "Fund Development" for the Denver chapter and am brainstorming on ways to help raise money for the org. I would really like to put on a Charity Golf event, I just don't know enough about it to know whether or not I can pull it off. Your book excerpt made it sound, I'll say doable, but I'm a realist and don't want to get in over my head or drag what little resources our org has down. Any help and direction you can provide me would be great.

I've helped organize other charity events like auctions and luncheons, but nothing the size of a Golf event.

I've rambled enough. Thanks for a great website so far. I look forward to contributing and getting a lot out of it as well.

Cheers,
Erin

© 2024   Created by Tom King.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service