|
Main
Date: 29 Sep 2007 06:48:11
From: samsloan
Subject: Efforts to Obtain Corporate Sponsorship for Chess
|
[quote="kbachler"]During the past 35 years there have been several major tournaments or events in Chicago. Money is always the issue and it is always difficult to do. A few years ago I met with executives of several major financial companies to discuss chess sponsorships. I even described the angle of being able to provide kiosks to ket products to parents at National scholastic events being that they were a captive audience with some means (since they were at the tournament.) There was absolutely ZERO interest. The only money they were willing to consider were very small amounts based on the personal relationships I had with people at the companies. The companies I spoke with were located on the left coast, the right coast, and the midwest. I had very high level introductions because of my contacts at each. Kevin Bachler[/quote] Thank you very much for this excellent posting, Kevin (one of the few times when I really liked what you wrote). As you may recall, two candidates for the recent Executive Board election claimed as a campaign promise that if elected they would bring in millions of dollars in corporate sponsorship. I have just been wondering what they plan to do that you did not do, and how they believe that they can succeed where you have failed. Sam Sloan
|
|
|
Date: 02 Oct 2007 21:08:41
From: Old Haasie
Subject: Re: Efforts to Obtain Corporate Sponsorship for Chess
|
On Sep 29, 1:27?pm, samsloan <[email protected] > wrote: > [quote="Brian Lafferty"]And FYI, I teach a graduate level (MPA degree) > course in grant writing and fund raising. I may be new to the USCF, > but I'm far from new to the field of fund raising. :lol:[/quote] > > George DeFeis was hired to be Executive Director in 2000 priily > because he claimed to be a qualified, experienced and successful grant > writer. > > Two years later and one million dollars down the drain, George DeFeis > had not brought in even one dollar in grant money, and so he was > finally fired. > > This did not stop the 2005 board from giving Michail Korenman $10,000 > to seek money from grants, with the same result. > > Sam Sloan ================ Corporations won't put up money for chess because chess players are too cheap and too dorkey. A dork is a geek without money. Old Haasie
|
|
Date: 29 Sep 2007 17:27:02
From: samsloan
Subject: Re: Efforts to Obtain Corporate Sponsorship for Chess
|
[quote="Brian Lafferty"]And FYI, I teach a graduate level (MPA degree) course in grant writing and fund raising. I may be new to the USCF, but I'm far from new to the field of fund raising. :lol:[/quote] George DeFeis was hired to be Executive Director in 2000 priily because he claimed to be a qualified, experienced and successful grant writer. Two years later and one million dollars down the drain, George DeFeis had not brought in even one dollar in grant money, and so he was finally fired. This did not stop the 2005 board from giving Michail Korenman $10,000 to seek money from grants, with the same result. Sam Sloan
|
|