Jan 29 2009
Military Dogs Enjoy Treats
In the spirit of the holiday season, treats were donated to military working dogs on behalf of 4-H. Best In Show Pet Treats reached the hard-working canines serving in Iraq on Christmas Day!
Jan 29 2009
In the spirit of the holiday season, treats were donated to military working dogs on behalf of 4-H. Best In Show Pet Treats reached the hard-working canines serving in Iraq on Christmas Day!
Jan 21 2009
Our Peanut Butter Honey Flavor Dog Treats are a delicious snack for dogs and one of our most popular products. Recent news accounts of salmonella tainted peanut butter has understandably raised questions about the safety of every product that includes peanut butter, including our treats. Although there is a potential risk for canines, salmonella is rare in dogs. The raw peanut butter is the main risk. Salmonella is killed at 150 degrees Fahrenheit. We bake our treats at 185 degrees Fahrenheit. In addition, our supplier is an American company and is not included among the suppliers of this recent salmonella outbreak. We are confident, therefore, that our Peanut Butter Honey Flavor Dog Treats are both safe for our customers’ dog and safe for individuals to handle.
Jan 21 2009
Add community service to your Best In Show Pet Treat sale by asking your customers to purchase an extra bag of treats as a donation to a local humane society, rescue group, or animal sanctuary! It’s easy. Just use the designated column on the order form, ask you customers to order a bag of treats to donate, and at the end your sale your club members can have fun delivering the donated treats.
Looking for a local animal group that would welcome your donation? Humane societies and rescue groups always welcome donations, but there are others as well. Did you know that there are animal sanctuary organizations that offer foster care for military pets while their owners are deployed? The Today Show just featured Canine Corps, a group in PA that offers care and sanctuary for the pets of deployed military personnel. Check your local listings there may be a military pet foster group in your area. They’d welcome a donation of pet treats, and it would give your customers a chance to support 4-H and our troops at the same time.
Send us your ideas on other great organizations that would benefit from pet treat donations and we’ll post them.
Jan 21 2009
Jan 03 2009
By Jeanne Hilt
4-H members, club leaders, volunteers and Extension Agents all across the country are meeting right now to make plans for a new year chock-full of great youth development programs. To raise the cash needed to fund all of the opportunities available, some clubs are also tempted to plan a year of product sale fundraising campaigns too.
Are constant requests to members’ families to help sell a variety of products for fundraising throughout the year really the best way to achieve your group’s financial objective? It makes sense to put as much thought into your annual fundraising plan as it does your group’s activity plan. In fact, the fewer times you ask a member and their family to sell products for the organization, the more successful your fundraising efforts will be.
Research indicates that families find it easy to ignore requests to participate in a product sale campaign when they are asked to sell too often. When it comes to fundraising, less is more. Fewer requests to sell a product to raise money typically leads to more participation, greater financial success and ultimately higher satisfaction for all participants.
One or two well-planned and focused sales campaigns, combined with appropriate activities designed to help youth and their families have fun while raising money, are the key ingredients to a fundraising plan of action that will help fund the needs of your 4-H group without overly taxing participants and their families.
A few key things to consider when planning, executing and maximizing your group’s product sale fundraising campaign include:
So, go ahead and plan for a year chock-full of great 4-H activities, but keep your fundraising focused. You will raise more money, avoid “fundraising burnout” and give as many kids as possible the time to take full advantage of all the opportunities the best youth development program in the world has to offer.
Jeanne Hilt is President of Best In Show Pet Treats, a licensed supplier of superior-quality pet treats for 4-H fundraising. Check out the company’s website at Best in Show Pet Treats and visit their blog for valuable information on fundraising.
Jan 03 2009
Pet Treat sells offer great community service opportunities for your 4-H group. Here is press coverage of the Highland Voyagers community service efforts following thier pet treat sell in Louisville, Kentucky:
http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20081217/PETS/812170708