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Walkathons are one of the few fundraising events that have stood the test of time. The appeal lies in their simplicity- easy to organize, open to everyone, and surprisingly effective. Whether organized by healthcare organizations, schools, or nonprofits, they bring people together for a shared cause while blending fitness, community, and fundraising into a single event.

Of the 30 largest peer-to-peer fundraising programs in the U.S. in 2025, which raised a combined $1.17 billion and engaged more than 2.63 million participants, many of them were walkathons.

In this article, we've rounded up walkathon ideas from successful healthcare campaigns, along with a few examples from educational institutions and nonprofits.

Amabase fundraising event planning template

15+ Walkathon ideas for better fundraising

Every successful walkathon has something that sets it apart. For some, it's the cause they support. Here are some ideas from real campaigns that you can draw inspiration from:

Sponsor- led walkathons

Walkathon sponsors have come a long way from logo placement and finish-line banners. They show up, bring employees, set up activities, and become part of the day. Here’s how they are doing it:

1. Corporate team sponsorships 

Outpour of participants at the start line of the American Heart Association's Heart Walk, 2025.

Rather than asking companies to simply sponsor the walk, the American Heart Association turns them into participants. Businesses register employee teams, set fundraising goals, and take part in Heart Walks across the country. Companies that raise $100,000 or more across multiple events are recognized through the National Teams program, with milestones reaching $1 million+. The model has helped bring companies such as AT&T, KPMG, Quest Diagnostics, Labcorp, and ADP into the campaign year after year. Heart Walk is now held in 300+ communities nationwide and continues to rank among the country's largest peer-to-peer fundraising campaigns. In 2025, the campaign raised $121 million, making it the country's largest peer-to-peer fundraising program for the sixth year in a row.  

2. Sponsors beyond event day

Teams facing off during Lurie Children's Corporate Cup, 2025.

Walk for Lurie Children's gives sponsors a much bigger role than simply putting their names on event signage. On walk day, companies run games for children, welcome families at activity booths, and send employee teams to volunteer. Many of those same businesses show up again at Lurie Children's Corporate Cup, a separate fundraiser where companies compete against one another, such as tailgate games and relay races in an effort to raise money that will help Lurie Children's patients and their families. Together, the two events give corporate partners more than one opportunity each year to support the hospital and involve their employees.

3. Sponsor-led activity zones

A participant visiting Survivor Lane at the 2025 Greater Washington Region Heart Walk. 

At the Greater Washington Region Heart Walk, sponsors were involved throughout the event, not just as names on banners. Companies formed fundraising teams before walk day, then showed up with employee volunteers, activity booths, and interactive exhibits. Participants could stop for Hands-Only CPR demonstrations, visit sponsor tents, take part in family activities, and spend time at Survivor Lane before and after the walk. In 2025, the event brought together 90 companies, 579 fundraising teams, and nearly 10,000 walkers, raising more than $2.1 million for the American Heart Association.

4. More ways to involve sponsors

A sponsor could match every donation made during a one-hour window on walk day. Another could take over a challenge along the route, with participants stopping to complete a quick game, trivia question, or fitness activity. Sponsors could also support a hospital program, scholarship fund, or community project chosen by participants.

A sponsor passport is another option. Participants collect stamps at sponsor booths during the walk and enter the completed passport into a prize draw at the finish line. They're all simple ideas, but they give sponsors a bigger role and give participants another reason to stay involved throughout the event.

Cause-based walkathons 

Cause-based walkathons are among the most recognizable fundraising events in healthcare. Each one is built around a specific mission, bringing together people connected by a shared cause.

5. Promise Garden

Participants gather at the Promise Garden ceremony before the Walk to End Alzheimer's, each holding a color-coded flower representing their personal connection to the cause.

The Walk to End Alzheimer's, held by the Alzheimer's Association, is held in more than 600 communities across the U.S. Each walk begins with the Promise Garden ceremony, where participants carry flowers representing those living with Alzheimer's, caregivers, advocates, and loved ones lost to the disease. Last year alone, the campaign raised more than $112 million to support Alzheimer's care, support services, and research.

6. Luminaria Ceremony

Candle-lit luminaria bags line the walking route during the Relay For Life Luminaria Ceremony, each dedicated in memory or honor of someone affected by cancer.

Relay For Life is the American Cancer Society's signature fundraising walk, held in thousands of communities around the world to support cancer research, patient services, and advocacy. One of its best-known traditions is the Luminaria Ceremony, where participants decorate paper luminaria bags with names, messages, or photos before placing them along the walking route. As evening falls, the bags are lit, and the walk continues by candlelight, creating one of the event's most memorable moments.

7. Honor beads

Volunteers ready with the honor beads before the walk.

Out of the Darkness Walks organized by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention include Community Walks, Campus Walks, and the Overnight Walk, gives people different ways to take part throughout the year. Before the walk begins, participants receive Honor Beads, with each color representing a different connection to suicide prevention. As the walk gets underway, the beads become an easy way for participants to recognize shared experiences and start conversations with others along the route.

8. Choose your cause walk

Instead of asking everyone to walk for the same cause, participants choose the one they'd like to support when they register. A healthcare organization could offer options like cancer care, heart health, or pediatric services. Universities could let participants walk for scholarships, student wellness, or research programs, while nonprofits could include different community initiatives. Participants receive a colored T-shirt, bib, or wristband based on their choice, making it easy to see the different causes represented as the walk gets underway.

Beyond the examples above, organizations have built successful walks around breast cancer, rare diseases, mental health, veterans, animal welfare, environmental conservation, and many other causes. When the walk rallies behind a cause people can get behind, it gives them a reason to come together and support it.

Challenge-based walkathons

A little competition can change the feel of a walkathon. Bring in team challenges, fundraising competitions, or step goals that start weeks before the event gets participants into the spirit of the event. Here are a few examples of how different organizations have used a little competition to build excitement around their walk.

9. Classroom challenge

Students during Bishop Chatard High School's annual Walkathon, 2026.

Every class had something to compete for at Bishop Chatard High School's Walkathon. Students tracked donations through class and student leaderboards, turning fundraising into a friendly competition across the school. The 2026 walkathon raised more than $54,000, reaching 155% of its fundraising goal with support from more than 1,000 donors.

10. Miles challenge

A group of walkers during the Susan G. Komen 3-Day.

The Susan G. Komen 3-Day turns the walk itself into the challenge. Participants can walk for one, two, or all three days, covering up to 60 miles over the weekend. Those taking on the full event average about 20 miles a day, making it as much an endurance challenge as a fundraiser. Along the way, walkers stop at pit stops for food and water, spend the night at camp, and return the next morning to continue the journey. Since 2003, the Susan G. Komen 3-Day has raised more than $915 million for breast cancer research, patient care, and advocacy.

11. Companion walk challenges

A woman with her dog participating in the 30 Mile Dog Walk Challenge

The American Cancer Society's 30-Mile Dog Walk Challenge puts a different spin on a traditional walkathon. Participants sign up online, create a fundraising page, and join the challenge's Facebook community before setting out to walk 30 miles with their dogs over the course of the month. Along the way, they share photos and progress updates, encourage donations, and celebrate milestones with other participants in the group. Everyone who raises the qualifying donation receives an official challenge T-shirt, and fundraisers can earn additional rewards as they reach higher fundraising milestones. They run multiple virtual fundraising challenges throughout the year, giving supporters different ways to take part from home.

12. Challenge cards

Give each participant a challenge card at check-in instead of the same route checklist. Create a mix of cards so no two participants have the same set of tasks. One card could ask walkers to collect stamps from every hydration station, while another could send them on fun 1k, 2k walks towards specific destinations apart from the finish line. Families could receive scavenger hunt cards with clues hidden along the route, and children could look for mascots, signs, or landmarks. You could also include simple community challenges, such as writing a message on a tribute wall, thanking a volunteer, or taking a group photo at the finish line. Completed cards can be exchanged for a small prize or entered into a raffle at the end of the event.

Themed walkathons

Adding themes to your event can change its outlook entirely. It shapes everything from the invitations and T-shirts to costumes, activities, and photo opportunities. Here are a few organizations that have done it well.

13. Pajama walk

Participants arrive in pajamas for the annual Pajama Walk,2025  in Charlotte. 

Friendship Circle and ZABS Place built their annual walk around one simple idea: everyone comes in pajamas. Families, schools, community groups, and local businesses all join the walk dressed for the theme. After the walk, the event continues with the Dreamland Festival, featuring carnival games, obstacle courses, inflatables, and live entertainment. An Ability Fair also gives local artists and makers with disabilities a place to showcase and sell their work. The theme carries through the entire day, turning the walk into a community event rather than just a fundraiser. The walk has become one of the organization's signature fundraisers, bringing the community together while supporting programs for children, teens, and adults of all abilities.

14. Candyland

Campaign artwork from St. Martin of Tours School's Candy Land Walkathon.

St. Martin of Tours School gave its annual walkathon a Candy Land theme, turning the campus into a colorful course with themed decorations, games, and raffle baskets. Families, students, and staff embraced the theme throughout the event, making it feel more like a school celebration than a fundraiser. The walkathon raised more than $28,000 from 400+ donors, surpassing its fundraising goal while supporting the school's mission of faith, learning, and inclusion.

15. One walk, many themes

A walkathon can be turned into a different experience based on what theme you choose. A school could turn each stop into a page from a favorite storybook or a different country to explore. Hospitals could bring in superheroes, teddy bears, or characters that children already know. Community walks could take on a glow theme, celebrate local neighborhoods, or invite participants to bring their pets along. Small details like themed checkpoints, music, costumes, and photo stations can tie everything together without changing the walk itself.

16. Virtual walkathon

Participant in the Panther Virtual 5K, 2025.

Following its inaugural event, the University of Northern Iowa Alumni Association is preparing for the second Panther Virtual 5K. Alumni, students, families, and friends can run, walk, or jog from wherever they are during September. Participants can register for free with a downloadable race bib and finisher certificate or choose the Gold Racer package, which includes an alumni-designed event T-shirt. Everyone is encouraged to share photos along the way, with a Panther prize pack up for grabs, while paid registrations support the UNI Alumni Association Engagement Fund.

17. Hybrid walkathon

Promotional poster for the Abby's House Hybrid 5K Run/Walk, 2026

For Abby's House, the annual 5K is one of the organization's largest fundraisers for women and children experiencing homelessness. The event starts in Worcester, but it doesn't end there. Anyone who can't make it on race day has the rest of Race Week to walk or run the same distance wherever they are. Whether participants join in person or virtually, they register through the same event, fundraise for the same cause, and take part as individuals or teams. The campaign also includes an online auction and fundraising awards that continue throughout the week.

18. Nationwide walkathon

Participants with their medals after finishing the UNCF Charlotte Walk for Education, 2025.

For years, UNCF's Walk for Education has brought communities together to raise funds for scholarships, strengthen historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), and help students get to and through college. Today, the series spans multiple cities across the country, with local walks feeding into one national campaign. The 2025 season included 14 Walk for Education events between August and October, all working toward a shared goal of raising $2 million for scholarships, internships, and student success programs.

The ideas don’t stop here. There are countless ways to put a fresh spin on a walkathon. You could build the route around local landmarks, turn it into a photo challenge, celebrate community heroes, add live performances along the way, create a farm-to-table walk with local vendors, host a twilight walk under the stars, or partner with museums, parks, and neighborhood businesses to make each stop part of the experience. Take inspiration from what others have done, adapt it to your audience, and build a walkathon that feels like it belongs to your organization and the people who support it.

How Almabase helps bring event fundraisers to life

From nationwide walks and virtual challenges to campus traditions and themed events, the examples above show that there is no single idea to make a walkathon successful. Bringing them to life means giving participants an easy way to register, create teams, share their fundraising pages, and invite friends and family to support the cause.

That's where Almabase comes in. It helps foundations manage registrations, sponsorships, donor engagement, and event communications in one place, making it easier to deliver a walkathon that's memorable for the right reasons.

Whether you are hosting a neighborhood walk, a hospital-wide tradition, or a nationwide fundraising campaign, Almabase will ensure end-to-end logistics, so your team can focus on creating a meaningful experience for your community.

If you’d like to see how Almabase can power the next event for your foundation or institution, feel free to book a personalized demo below! 👇

Book a demo with Almabase for events

Wrapping up

Walkathons have become a lasting part of healthcare fundraising because of how they grow and change with the communities they support. Whether it's a local hospital walk, a patient-led fundraiser, or a large community event, there's always room to make it your own. We hope these ideas have given you a few new ways to think about your next walkathon. If you're exploring platforms for your next walkathon fundraiser, we'd love to show you how Almabase can help. Book a personalized demo, and let's talk about what you're planning.

15+ Walkathon Fundraiser Ideas

15+ Walkathon Fundraiser Ideas

Walkathons are a great way to raise funds for your foundation, institution, or cause. With inspiration from real world fundraisers, we bring you the best walkathon ideas.

Sharada Koti

July 15, 2026

12 minutes

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You may notice that throughout this article, we use the term “investor” when referring to “donors.” This is because Convergent believes in reframing charitable institutions as valuable community assets worthy of investment. By positioning donors as investors, we focus on sustainable funding rather than one-time gifts.

Your educational institution is a pillar of your community. However, you may undermine its stability by approaching your alumni annual fund with a transactional mindset, focusing solely on raising funds rather than on developing relationships with supporters. As a result, you may exhaust your investors and create volatile cash flows in your nonprofit’s financial accounts.

For this reason, it is necessary to shift away from a transactional relationship (in which giving is driven by the expectation of receiving something in return, such as a tax write-off) and toward a sustainable partnership, which is rooted in shared values and strategic alignment.  

This guide provides actionable steps to realign your alumni annual fund giving with long-term, mission-critical outcomes. When you treat alumni as true financial partners, you can secure robust, predictable funding that sustains your institution for decades to come.  

Understand why alumni give

Different investors have their own reasons for giving, so analyzing giving behavior is an important step to tailoring your investment-driven approach. For example, the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy reported that younger generations tend to support causes tied to social impact and advocacy, so if you want people in this demographic to give more, you have to highlight your mission and the impact you’ve had in your community in your outreach materials.

No two investors are alike. To understand why your supporters choose to contribute, try the following strategies:

  • Conduct surveys and interviews. Directly asking your investors about their philanthropic priorities removes the guesswork from your outreach strategy.
  • Analyze past data. Review your organization’s past feasibility studies to discover historical trends in your investors’ preferences and capacity.
  • Collaborate with development officers. Development officers spend a lot of time cultivating relationships with investors, so they have valuable insights regarding what drives their investments.

Incorporate these insights into your nonprofit’s constituent relationship management system (CRM), so your team can segment your audiences accurately. By the time the alumni annual fundraising comes around, you can deploy tailored messaging, thereby drastically improving conversion rates.  

Realign your alumni annual fund with strategic outcomes

Establish your institution’s value by demonstrating strict alignment between your mission, fundraising objectives, and the outcomes delivered to the community. For example, if your organization is planning a STEM initiative for first-generation students, you can frame it like this:

  • The mission: Empower first-generation students to graduate debt-free and enter high-demand STEM fields.  
  • The fundraising objective: Raise $500,000 through the alumni annual fund to provide full-ride scholarships and stipends for a cohort of 50 local students.
  • The delivered outcome: Provide an impact report showing that 100% of the funded cohort graduated on time, with 85% immediately securing employment at local companies, thereby boosting the regional economy.

When sharing the impact report with your investors, spotlight a specific narrative (e.g., a student who benefited directly from the funds), then pair that with hard numbers (e.g., “we’ve helped 100 students achieve their dreams like [Student X]”). By incorporating data in the narrative, you’re showing investors that their contributions fund tangible results.

Realigning your alumni annual fund with strategic outcomes can be challenging because there are several moving parts to consider. For this reason, Convergent recommends conducting a development audit, which provides a clear, objective assessment of your current fundraising efforts and a strategic roadmap to improve them. The result is that everyone in your team is aligned with your goals, and you can build a stronger case for investment.

Shift from a donation mindset to an investment value proposition

Shifting from a traditional donation mindset to an investment value proposition fundamentally changes the dynamic between your institution and your alumni. When you operate with a donation mindset, you inherently position the educational institution as a charity in need of a handout. Additionally, a donation mindset relies heavily on emotional appeals and transactional exchanges (e.g., giving a t-shirt or a tax write-off in exchange for money), which ultimately exhaust supporters.

When you reframe your outreach and treat alumni as long-term investors and stakeholders, you unlock distinct benefits that secure sustainable funding, such as:

  • Clearer ROI: Transactional models historically struggle to demonstrate the rational, value-based ROI that modern investors require. An investment mindset forces your team to clearly articulate the tangible, real-world impact of the funds, providing stakeholders with the proof of success they demand.
  • Engagement with younger generations of investors: As we mentioned earlier, younger demographics are highly analytical with their philanthropy. They are likely to stop investing if they do not clearly understand the strategic outcomes of their financial contributions. Presenting an investment proposition speaks directly to their desire for measurable impact.
  • Preventing supporter fatigue: Relying on small-scale emotional appeals and staff-intensive events only leads to investor burnout. When you treat alumni as true partners, you can focus on continuous, data-driven stewardship rather than bombarding them with relentless, piecemeal appeals.

To complete your shift from a transactional to an investment-driven mindset, you’ll need to audit your current communication templates and eliminate passive phrasing. For example, refer to gifts and donations as “partnerships” instead. So, rather than saying “Your gifts are needed to help maintain our current programs,” you can say, “Your partnership with our organization has helped expand our scholarship endowment and directly funds our new STEM initiative.” This subtle linguistic shift empowers alumni, making them feel like co-architects of the institution's future.

Encourage other forms of giving

In addition to launching capital campaigns, your organization should integrate workplace giving into your alumni annual fund strategy. This is because corporate philanthropy programs, such as matching gifts and volunteer grants, significantly amplify the ROI of each contribution.

That said, not many people know about workplace giving initiatives; in fact, studies show that nearly 80% of donors are unaware of whether their company offers a matching gift program. Because of this, you must educate your investors about these programs by:

  • Integrating workplace giving awareness into appeals: Do not treat corporate giving as an afterthought. Advise your development teams to actively educate alumni about corporate matching gift programs as part of your standard outreach, noting that many investors may qualify for workplace matching without realizing it.
  • Reminding investors about these programs on their thank-you receipt: When someone contributes to your fundraiser, encourage them to check their matching gift eligibility to maximize their investment. You can set up these automated reminders on your nonprofit’s donor management software.
  • Adding workplace giving to your “Ways to Give” page: Provide a brief explanation of how certain corporate giving programs work so that investors know how to participate.
  • Creating educational content about workplace giving: For example, you can write a long-form informational post or create video tutorials on how to check matching gift eligibility.

By leveraging corporate philanthropy programs, you’re shifting the giving narrative away from individual charitable donations toward larger-scale, sustainable institutional investments. In other words, you’re ensuring no money is left on the table, while maximizing the impact of your existing investor base.

As an educational institution, you’re an indispensable community asset, and your funding strategies must reflect this vital role. Transitioning from transactional appeals to a sustainable, investment-focused model ensures that you maintain long-term partnerships with alumni investors. By prioritizing data-driven stewardship and clear ROI, your future fundraising efforts will build a resilient foundation for generations to come.

Transforming Your Alumni Annual Fund for Sustainability

Transforming Your Alumni Annual Fund for Sustainability

Transition alumni giving from transactional exchanges to sustainable investments. Discover how to rethink your alumni annual fund for long-term ROI here.

Brian Abernathy

July 10, 2026

12 minutes

Read

Your university’s marketing strategies shape whether donors feel connected to you. They also determine whether a prospective student finds your institution when they start searching, or finds a competitor instead. Done well, they benefit both enrollment numbers and campaign totals. Because guess what? Advancement and admissions teams now compete for the same audience's attention, trust, and money, whether they've coordinated around that fact or not.

In this blog, we’ll go over the best marketing strategies for your university whether you're trying to improve brand awareness, grow donor participation, or get more out of your digital marketing efforts.

Almabase CASE Insights on Giving Days

What is University Marketing and What's Driving it?

University marketing is the set of strategies used to attract new students, retain and engage alumni, and build relationships with donors and community stakeholders. It spans paid advertising, content, events, email, social media, and direct outreach.

Several forces are shaping how universities approach marketing right now. One of the main factors is in how students and donors find and evaluate universities is changing. A school's digital presence, its website, search ranking, social media, and reputation on review platforms all influence decisions and are questions frequently asked on AI tools.

Over 80% of students now use AI tools to research programs. They ask questions about costs, outcomes, and campus life. A university website that doesn't answer those questions effectively to help AI-assisted searches or feed Answer Engine Optimization gets skipped.

Generation Alpha in particular, who entered high school in fall 2024, grew up watching short-form videos and expect two-way conversations. They want to know what a degree leads to in more specific terms. In this case, personalized and outcome-focused communication works well with them.

For advancement teams, the same principle applies. Alumni and donors expect to feel like the institution knows who they are. When communications feel mass-produced, engagement drops, and donor participation follows.

Why University Marketing Matters More Than Ever

Advancement raised money. Marketing recruited students. For a long time, those were separate jobs with separate teams. But that separation is not so clear cut in 2026.

American colleges and universities received $61.5 billion in voluntary contributions in FY24, according to the CASE VSE report. That number grows at institutions that stay visible and credible all year round, and not just between campaigns.

Here's where the connection between marketing and fundraising becomes inevitable:

  • Digital presence affects donor confidence because donors research institutions online before they give.
  • Alumni expect personalized communication. Generic emails see lower engagement and higher unsubscribes.
  • A university's reputation is influenced by its students, parents, faculty, and donors. This reputation has an impact on donor confidence.
  • Brand awareness through digital channels keeps the institution visible in the gap between campaigns, so donors haven't gone cold by the next giving day. It also creates familiarity for new donors, which affects their confidence to give again.
  • Digital channels give fundraising teams real data on what's driving engagement and gifts, so campaigns get progressively smarter.

Advancement, alumni relations, admissions, and communications share more goals than most universities acknowledge. When those teams coordinate around a shared consistent message, their work compounds. When they don't, they often compete for the same audience's attention with conflicting messages.

12 University Marketing Strategies for Modern Advancement Teams

These strategies focus on how advancement and alumni relations teams can use marketing to drive donor participation and deeper engagement.

1. Segment your audience

Sending the same appeal to a recent graduate, parents, and a major donor is a missed opportunity for all 3. Effective segmentation divides audiences by graduation year, geographic location, interest area, giving history, and engagement level. Start with what's already in your CRM, even basic segmentation will get you good results.

2. Personalize email outreach

Personalization today goes far beyond using someone's first name. It means referencing their class year, their program, or the cause they previously supported. Personalized email campaigns consistently outperform generic ones on click-through rates and on conversion to gifts.

3. Invest in video storytelling

Short-form video on TikTok and Instagram Reels generates the highest engagement rates among prospective students, who will be your future donors. It’s also an effective way to invite current students to be influencers or advocates for your campaign. On the other hand, longer-form impact videos work well for alumni and donor audiences. For example, showing how a scholarship changed a student's trajectory or how funding to a particular department helped keep an important program alive. Both formats outperform text-only content for emotional response and sharing.

4. Build a peer-to-peer fundraising program

Alumni give more when asked by people they know. Peer-to-peer campaigns, where engaged alumni solicit gifts from classmates and community members, have consistently raised more per campaign than institution-led appeals. They also extend reach into networks the advancement office can't access.

5. Use student and alumni-generated content

The less scripted and more user-generated your content is (while keeping the core message intact), the better. All audience segments are starting to prefer more organic content over polished scripts. Alumni sharing their own stories reinforces the value of an institution's network for current donors and giving-day prospects.

6. Run giving day campaigns with urgency mechanics

A giving day is a marketing campaign with a deadline. The urgency mechanics that make it work are the countdown timers, matching gift challenges, leaderboards, and other gamification elements on the fundraising page. They are the same tools any timed marketing campaign uses to drive action.

Thomas Aquinas College used this approach to achieve a 45% alumni donor participation rate, raising $142K+ from more than 650 donors.

7. Optimize for answer engines, not just search

New donors and alumni nowadays often use ChatGPT, Claude, and Google's AI Overview to research institutions and causes before they give. They ask questions like "what has [university] done with donations?". Answer Engine Optimization for AI-powered search tools is now as important as traditional SEO. So, if your institution's impact content, donor stories, and program outcomes aren't structured to answer those questions clearly, you won't appear in AI-generated responses. This means writing content that leads with specific answers: how gifts were used, what changed, and what outcomes were achieved.

8. Build a digital alumni engagement program

Mentorship platforms, alumni directories, job boards, and affinity group networks give alumni reasons to stay connected all year round and not just during fundraising campaigns. Engaged alumni are significantly more likely to donate than those with no ongoing relationship to the institution.

Illinois Tech generated 123,000+ engagement activities in a single month after rebuilding its digital engagement strategy with Almabase.

9. Prioritize content marketing

Blog posts, impact reports, case studies, and research-backed thought leadership serve multiple purposes: they improve SEO, build institutional credibility, and give advancement teams shareable material for donor outreach. Content that addresses what prospective new donors actually care about will work wonders over generic promotional material (for example: student outcomes, program impact, institutional stewardship content over generic giving day numbers)

10. Track attribution across the full donor journey

Which email led to which gift? Which event attendance correlated with a subsequent donation? What content on which platform led to the most amount of engagement? Advancement teams that track attribution across touchpoints can plan and allocate marketing budgets toward what works, and stop spending on what doesn't.

11. Make mobile-first the default

Most alumni and prospective donors open emails, visit giving pages, and register for events on their phones. Giving pages and event registration forms that aren't mobile-optimized see higher abandonment rates. Test the entire donor journey on a phone before every campaign launch.

12. Coordinate digital and traditional channels deliberately

Digital-only or mail-only campaigns never consistently outperform integrated approaches. A direct mail followed by a personalized email, or a social ad retargeting someone who visited your giving page but didn't donate, will outperform either channel working on its own. The next section covers the data.

Digital Marketing vs. Traditional Marketing for University Fundraising

According to the M+R Benchmarks 2026 report, direct mail revenue grew 9%, online giving revenue grew 15%, and email revenue grew 16% in 2025. Digital is growing faster, but direct mail is holding its own.

According to the same report, the average direct mail gift was $120. For every dollar raised online, nonprofits in the study raised $0.66 through direct mail. That's a channel that still drives real money and not one in decline, especially with donors who already know your institution.

But digital channels do bring different strengths to the table: lower costs, wider and more accurate targeting, real-time data, and the ability to reach alumni whose mailing addresses have long since changed.

The truth is, the right mix depends on your audience, budget, and your data quality. Older alumni tend to respond better to direct mail. Younger alumni and recent graduates engage more through digital. That's not a reason to run two separate campaigns. You can let channel selection be driven by the audience segment rather than what’s been the norm.

How to Create a University Marketing Strategy

Step 1: Define the goal

Generic goals like "Increase alumni engagement" are too broad to act on. Create clear and practical goals such as "Increase donor participation rate among alumni who graduated between 2015 and 2022 by 10% before our March giving day" which is actionable.

Here are some common goals you can include:

  • Increasing applications or improving yield
  • Growing brand awareness in target recruitment markets
  • Increasing event attendance or registrations
  • Re-engaging alumni who haven't interacted with the institution in over two years
  • Promoting a new program or research initiative
  • Increasing the number of first-time donors

Step 2: Identify the audience

Different audiences need different messages, channels, and timing. Know who you're talking to before you decide what to say or where to say it. Typical higher ed audiences usually include:

  • High school and graduate students, and parents
  • Transfer students
  • International prospective students
  • Recent active alumni and alumni with no giving history
  • New donors and lapsed donors who haven't given in 2+ years
  • Major gift prospects
  • Faculty, staff, and community partners

Step 3: Define the message

Most universities lead with what they're proud of. Rankings, facilities, research output. But for some that might already be common knowledge and in any case, that's not always what your audience is there for.

A prospective student is curious about the costs involved, the campus life, and whether the degree will open doors for them. A donor wants to know if their last gift made a difference and if this one will too.

Build the message around what your audience is asking, not based on internal priorities or what your institution wants to say.

Step 4: Choose the right channels

Channel selection should always follow your audience and your goal, not over team familiarity. Ask yourself,

  • “Where does this audience actually spend time?” “
  • What format does this message need?”
  • “What's the budget?”
  • “Which channels give you measurable data for the outcomes you care about?”

A giving day campaign has vastly different channel needs than a graduate program recruitment campaign, and marketing is heavily dependent on choosing and making the most out of the right channels for each objective.

Step 5: Create content and campaign assets

Based on what we’ve already discussed above, you'll need a combination of:

  • A landing page or giving page
  • An email sequence (usually 3-5 emails for a fundraising campaign)
  • Social media posts and ads: organic and paid
  • A short video (for email, social, or the giving page itself)
  • Blog content to support SEO and content marketing
  • Event pages with clear registration flows
  • Donor testimonials or impact stories
  • FAQs addressing the most common points of confusion

Step 6: Launch, measure, and optimize

A smart team builds a measurement before launch. Set up A/B tests where volume permits and track which channels, subject lines, and messages are actually driving the outcomes important to you, not just opens and clicks, but registrations, gifts, and engagement activities.

Use your analytics tools during and after each campaign to review and carry the findings forward.

Your marketing strategy will continue to improve through several iterations. For longer campaigns, a team that collects data and iterates on the go tends to see better results.

Common Mistakes to Avoid in University Marketing

Here are some common pitfalls that you or your team may want to avoid while marketing your university.

1. Treating your audiences as a homogeneous group

A 23-year-old recent graduate and a 60-year-old major donor share almost nothing as an audience. Generic communications that try to speak to everyone end up reaching no one. Basic segmentation by graduation year and giving history alone will improve your campaign performance.

2. Running campaigns with no follow-ups in between

A lot of advancement teams pour everything into a giving day and then go quiet for months. Donors who give once and hear nothing back are less likely to give again. A newsletter, an alumni spotlight, an event invitation, or impact stories - low-pressure touchpoints between campaigns keep the relationship warm.

3. Optimizing for vanity metrics

High follower counts and strong open rates feel good. But they don't always translate to gifts. Track what actually matters: donor participation rates, year-over-year retention, cost per gift, and lifetime donor value. Track the entire journey, from first impression, to gift, to retention.

4. Writing about the institution instead of the donor's impact

Donors want to know their gift made an impact. Show them, specifically: "Our endowment grew by X%" tells a donor little to nothing. "Here's a student whose scholarship changed what was possible for her" tells donors their impact.

5. Neglecting the donor experience

A slow-loading giving page, a confusing registration process, or a broken confirmation email does more damage than a weak campaign. Donors who hit friction don't often come back. Walk through your own giving journey multiple times and fix on the go.

6. Letting channel preference override audience preference

Some teams default to direct mail because that's what they've always done. Others go fully digital because it's cheaper. Both channels work. The best results come from using them together and letting your audience segment guide you.

FAQs About University Marketing Strategies

How can universities improve brand awareness?

Give current students, recent alumni, and active donors moments and opportunities worth sharing, since organic awareness grows when people with a genuine connection to your institution talk about it publicly. Build on that momentum through consistent content marketing across every channel and paid social advertising in your target markets.

Is digital marketing better than traditional advertising for universities?

Neither of them win out categorically. Both channels work and the right balance changes from one institution to another. Most modern approaches use them together, as in a direct mail piece followed by a personalized email to the same person lets each touchpoint build on the last and reinforces your message.

What social media platforms should universities use for admissions?

For undergraduate programs, Instagram and TikTok see the highest engagement. RNL's 2025 research found that social media mattered most for 56% of students when they first started thinking about college, and students tend to follow college accounts for organic student life content, application information, and major-specific content. For graduate and professional programs, LinkedIn usually performs better. You’ll want to pick two or three that match your audience and invest in them.

How do you measure the ROI of university marketing campaigns?

Define what ROI means for each campaign first, because it changes with the goal. A giving day might be measured by total revenue raised, cost per gift, or donor participation rate, while admissions might look at applications per dollar spent or yield improvement. Track the full funnel rather than the single channel that drove traffic, asking which touchpoints in what sequence led to the outcome you wanted. UTM parameters reveal which email, ad, or post someone clicked, CRM attribution reporting shows which touchpoints led to a gift, and A/B testing tells you which subject lines, messages, and formats perform best.

University Marketing Strategies: 12 Proven Tactics for Higher Ed

University Marketing Strategies: 12 Proven Tactics for Higher Ed

Whether it is to attract admissions, donations, or simply to raise your institution's brand, university marketing plays a big role in your institution's engagement strategy.

Prajnya Yelamali

July 8, 2026

12 minutes

Read

For decades now, fundraising galas have been at the forefront of philanthropic events, and with good reason. It’s a format that combines formality, cause and accessible fun very effortlessly.

The best part about a fundraising gala is that it doesn’t have to follow specific guidelines; you can customise it however you want according to your needs and your donors. It can include just about anything ranging from live entertainment, food, presentations to auctions and awards.

And that’s also why the distinctness of your particular gala is all the more important. We’ll take a look into how these events are planned, and some unique ideas that you can adopt to engage your donors.

Fundraising event planning template

Are Fundraising Galas Worth it in 2026?

Galas have been a philanthropy event mainstay for a long time now, but it begs the question of whether they still provide ROI or just function as a general networking event.

The data on this leans towards the former. Overall, in 2025, about 77% of organizations met or exceeded their fundraising goals. The ones that organized purely in-person events or mixed it up with virtual/hybrid events were the standout performers.

But there’s more. Here are a couple of interesting takeaways from the same study:

  • Around 80% of organizations who incorporated in-person events met their fundraising goals.
  • In contrast, almost half (46%) the nonprofits who skipped events altogether failed to meet their goals.

This gives us two important takeaways: one being that events in general continue to be a crucial part of philanthropy. Secondly, galas meet both the criteria of being an in-person event as well as an event that can incorporate virtual or hybrid events (or purely any of the three).

All that is to say that galas continue to meet the preferences of donors as well as the innovations of fundraising teams, giving us an easy answer to our question above: Yes, galas are definitely worth it in 2026 and will in all likelihood, continue to be in the foreseeable future.

Exploring the Impact of a Fundraising Gala

With events involving so much of spontaneous conversation, recreation, chance sign-ups, and curating experiences, it can be quite hard to see how extensive the benefits are and the areas they influence:

  • Relationships with major gift prospects: Community building is an obvious benefit but more specifically, wealthy donors and philanthropists require multiple touchpoints, a lot of trust, and a relationship with not just your team, but the cause itself. All of which can be generated through fundraising galas.
  • Increased awareness of your efforts and success: There’s no better way to share stories, heartwarming moments, and showcase your progress. Newsletters and blogs are fine, but not nearly as thought-provoking or emotional.
  • Brand Visibility: Successful galas can attract new supporters. If people recognize the influence you’re able to have on your donors and beneficiaries as a brand, they are more likely to trust you.
  • Multiple avenues for revenue: Donations aren’t the only support you’ll get. A fundraising gala offers so many more opportunities to contribute. You can generate revenue through ticket sales, selling merchandise, organizing fun workshops, and so much more.

How to Plan a Fundraising Gala

As you might know, a successful fundraising gala sometimes takes months and months of preparation. Coming up with plans and goals is easy enough, but with the amount of moving parts, keeping track of progress across all fronts can be confusing. The step-wise approach outlined below ensures you don’t leave any stones unturned.

1. Form Your Gala Planning Committee

Clearly define every team’s roles and responsibilities. A few key roles to include are:

  • Event Chair
  • Auction Chair
  • Marketing Head
  • Sponsorship Lead
  • Volunteer Coordinator
  • Treasurer/Finance Lead

It’s important to make sure you have enough event volunteers to pull the gala off without a hitch. You will inevitably need help with minor problems and logistics hurdles during the gala itself.

2. Set Clear and Actionable Fundraising Goals

Go through past event data to set a realistic goal. Refresh your lists and segments, check ticket sales from previous galas, and take into account all the revenue sources. The key here is to have goals centered around net revenue, not total cashflow. Setting goals using the SMART framework (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound) can help a lot.

3. Decide the Total Budget

Getting this right is crucial, as your fundraising goals are directly dependent on the gala budget. Be as extensive as you can, and categorize expenses to track them better. Separate fixed costs (like venue, catering) from variable costs (merch, printing, staff) and compare it against projected revenue from all the different sources like tickets, donations, and auctions. If your expenses are greater than the potential earnings, reduce costs wherever possible without taking away from the core experience itself.

4. Choose your Date, Venue, and Theme

You don’t really have restrictions as fundraising galas can be held at any time of the year. So decide the date and venue based on your donors’ availability and proximity. You can gauge this through surveys/forms or analyzing participation data from previous events.

Children's National Hospital's annual Children's Ball hosted at The Anthem in Washington, D.C. The event pairs a distinct waterfront venue with patient stories and a polished stage experience.

Depending on projected footfall, choose a venue that has enough space to comfortably accommodate everyone. Before you book it though, gather information on AV capabilities, official capacity, catering conditions, and Wi-Fi speed. Visit the venue in person and take note of power sources, layout, and parking as well. Evaluate the venue based on the participant’s convenience.

5. Decide Ticket Prices

A good way to land on a feasible ticket price is to work backwards from the total cost of hosting the gala. A simple yet useful formula for calculating ticket prices is as follows:

(Total event cost + fundraising goal) / paid attendees = minimum ticket price

On average, gala tickets are usually in the $100 - $250 range. Of course, you also have to account for platform fees if you’re using ticket management software.

There’s really no need for all tickets to be the same price. There are also options like the pay-what-you-want model if you want to provide more flexibility to your attendees. Introduce tiered prices offering different perks. Give discounts to families, students, etc. Early-bird offers are actually great to get some initial ticket sales and momentum going.

6. Arranging the Program and Speakers

Identify your event host early. Finding a good orator who is familiar with your organization, and does a good job of engaging the crowd, can take time. Create an inventory tracker and source equipment for entertainment (speakers, lights, stage props and the like).

At the 2025 St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Houston Gala, organizers scheduled a patient family's story immediately before the live auction. The emotional connection carried directly into bidding, helping the event raise a record $1.65 million.

If you’re running a live auction, then contact and book an auctioneer a few months before the event. Set procurement targets for auction items and include 3 or 4 premium ‘big-money’ items that bidders will contest over (like unique art, travel packages, etc.)

Prepare a full-fledged agenda for attendees to refer to and for you to plan around with.

7. Secure Sponsors and Form Partnerships

Getting the right sponsor can not only reduce expenses, but also add to your marketing efforts. Depending on the scale of your gala, choose between local businesses and corporate sponsors. Having a company whose mission aligns with yours (creating affordable health-monitoring devices, for example) can provide a big boost in trust.

Have a tiered system for sponsorships, and clearly outline the different levels of visibility and recognition that your sponsors get like social media shoutouts, speaking slots, banners, and so on.

8. Promotion and Marketing

After you have your list of prospects, promote your gala in as many channels as you can. This means multiple teams with their own responsibilities. You’ll have to create email sequences, a social media post schedule, landing pages on your website, and visual media like billboards and posters. Marketing starts months before the gala. Start off by providing sneak peeks, and gradually reveal details as the event draws closer. Building anticipation takes time.

For your more affluent donors, send out personalized invites through their preferred mode of communication.

9. Set Up Registration Workflows

Open registration around the same time you send out invites. Collect key information such as meal preferences, payment methods, and additional guests to ensure a smooth experience during the gala. Save-the-date emails can be sent a couple of months prior.

Your registration process should only ask for necessary information and should be fairly easy to complete. As the event date approaches, send targeted reminders to certain segments.

Fundraising Gala Ideas

Fundraising galas are heavily customizable, making it easy for you to incorporate themes and programs catered to your organization and its donors. Here are a few gala ideas that can create fun, memorable experiences that inspire your donors to contribute.

1. Silent Auction + Cocktail Party

Silent auctions can be a great alternative to conventional ones as they don’t involve crowding, too much competition, or loud announcements. You’ll have to decide on a bidding app and pay a lot of attention to how the items are presented, but it is well worth the effort.

The Power of Love Gala hosted by Keep Memory Alive combines a cocktail reception with both silent and live auctions featuring exclusive travel, sporting, and celebrity experiences.

Combined with a cocktail party, this creates a really nice environment for interesting conversations, some friendly competition, and generates good interest for items in the auction. Attendees can bid at their convenience without the stress of time running out or the pressure of matching someone else’s amount on the spot.

2. Casino Night Gala

This one changes the energy of the room entirely. Instead of a seated program with a single fundraising moment, guests rotate between blackjack tables, roulette, and poker throughout the evening, with chips that convert to charitable contributions at the end.

It's also one of the easier formats to get sponsors involved with. Each table can be presented by a different sponsor, giving them more visibility without cramping the experience. You could layer it with a James Bond or Las Vegas theme, but it’s entirely optional, the format holds up even without the extra theatrics.

Note: Check your local regulations on charity gaming events before you start planning as the rules vary quite a bit by state.

3. Live Art Auction

Commission local artists to create work live during the event. Guests watch the pieces come together over the course of the evening, and it goes up for auction towards the end of the night when emotional investment is at its peak.

It works particularly well because it gives people something to gather around and talk about, rather than just passive participation. Art is an important subject of interest for a lot of wealthy donors. But do keep in mind that the work should be compelling enough that guests actually want it, not just feel obligated to bid. Vetting the artists beforehand is not something to skip over.

4. Masquerade or Themed Gala

A strong theme does something a generic gala dinner can't – it gives guests a reason to get excited before the event even starts. A masquerade or a black and white affair creates a strong visual identity perfectly suited for social media. They’re also extremely conversation friendly, with plenty of compliments and ice-breakers being thrown around.

The Robin Hood Foundation's 2024 annual benefit committed fully to a Matrix theme that carried a narrative and ran through the entire evening, raising around $68.5 million.

The key is committing to it properly. Half-hearted theming, like placing a few props in a standard hotel ballroom can sour things. The decor, music, dress code, and even the menu should all ideally have the same aesthetic. For healthcare organizations especially, a well executed theme can shift the tone away from the clinical and toward something your donors look forward to all year.

If you’re stuck on deciding a theme or are looking for some inspiration, check out this list by the American Fundraising Association.

How Almabase Helps Teams Run Successful Fundraising Galas

Keeping track of outreach sequences, responses, and registrations while simultaneously planning for event logistics can end up being messy and stressful. Almabase gets some weight off your shoulders by bringing together engagement, giving, and event planning under one roof.

Especially with a gala involving auctions and sponsorships, you’ll need varying registration forms and workflows. With the built-in event builder module you don’t have to worry about losing track of different groups of attendees and the relevant forms. Almabase can also accommodate complex tiered ticketing structures, which you will need to tackle for a large fundraising gala with multiple sub-events.

With Emily AI, you don’t have to take painstaking effort to manually personalize outreach for every segment of attendees. The context-aware AI drafts subject lines and event emails which you can further tweak to your liking.

During the gala itself, ground operations can be hard to manage even with enough volunteers. QR check-ins, payments, and on-site registrations are all automatically synced to your CRM when using Almabase. Additionally, seating assignments and name tags are easy to arrange.

As for tracking and collecting event data, you can do away with spreadsheets (well, most of them). Almabase lets you see registrations, revenue, attendance, and engagement data all at the same place. If you’re selling merch, tracking order count ensures that you’re prepared with just the right amount of stock next time around.

Wrapping Up

Fundraising galas inject some much needed spectacle and celebration when it comes to giving. They’ve been a mainstay in philanthropy for many decades, and will continue being so long into the future. Hopefully, you’ve gained some helpful pointers in planning one of your own and drawing people to your cause.

If you’re on the lookout for tools that could help your team and wish to learn more about Almabase, we’d suggest booking a personalized demo. Happy planning!

Book an events demo with Almabase
How To Plan a Fundraising Gala + Gala Ideas

How To Plan a Fundraising Gala + Gala Ideas

The perfect blog for planning your next fundraising gala. We go over the essential steps to planning your next fundraising gala as well as creative ideas you can use.

Hari Govind

July 7, 2026

12 minutes

Read

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Yes, we know everyone does alumni reunions. You’re probably doing it too and while you already know that alumni reunions can help you increase alumni engagement, how do you ensure that you maximize this growth?

After helping over 100 schools organize 300+ successful alumni reunions in the past two years, we did a detailed analysis of all this data and came up with actionable insights on what works best in engaging alumni via alumni reunions. Here are the 8 key findings:

1. Encourage attendees to invite others in their network

Using registered alumni to influence other peers in their network to sign up has proven to be highly effective. There’s a greater chance of more alumni signing up upon receiving invites from their classmates/friends. However, a key factor here is to ensure that the registration and event-sharing process is easy.

2. Invite faculty & staff to your event

Leveraging faculty and staff to influence high alumni turnout at reunions has proven to be an effective technique. Sending out personalized invites to your entire faculty and staff is a practice you might want to follow as this resonates well with alumni who have been looking forward to reconnecting with their former teachers.

3. Create a dedicated event page and reach out for registrations early

Ensuring you have a dedicated event page is pivotal to your event’s success. Creating an event page is important because it helps your alumni get an overview of the event you’ve planned. Also, it is always a best practice to reach out to your alumni well in advance, for registrations. Typically we’ve seen schools start reaching out to alumni 6 - 9 months before the reunion.

Connect2USCSD
Upper St. Clair School District's 'Class of 1988 - Reunion' page

4. Generate buzz on social media

We already know that social media plays a pivotal role in keeping alumni engaged throughout the year. Evidence also suggests that schools have been able to drive higher alumni participation for their reunions with various approaches on social media. While providing updates concerning your reunion to your alumni is a best practice that you should follow, it is also equally important to be creative in your approach. Posting photos from previous reunions and running campaigns that urge your alumni to actively participate are some of the ways via which you can spread the word about your reunion. Here’s a list of 7 tested approaches to promote your reunions on social media.

Here’s how McCarthy Alumni Association grabbed the attention of its alumni by posting yearbook photos on their social media to promote their upcoming reunion:
https://www.facebook.com/mccarthyhighschoolalumni/posts/2073750082666696


5. Create an alumni reunion promo video

Alumni reunion promo videos have proven to be one of the most powerful methods to draw alumni attention. Personalization is key when it comes to reaching out to alumni. A personalized invitation video can be highly engaging as compared to your regular email blasts. Here’s all that you can try to make a more personal connection with your alumni:

Shoot your video on campus

The best location to shoot your reunion promo is none other than your own campus. Shooting the video in multiple locations within your school campus adds a nostalgic factor to it and helps your alumni relate better.

Choose your speakers wisely

Personalize it further by featuring in your video, people who are recognizable and relatable to your alumni. They could be professors, students, or maybe a more diverse set of people who your alumni might feel delighted to hear from.

Ensure maximum reach

Once you’re done creating this video, the challenge lies in maximizing its reach. Ensuring your alumni don’t miss out on this video is integral. Other than sharing it on social media and emails, and encouraging alumni to share it within their networks, try to publicize this video in alumni groups, in order to reach maximum people.

Here’s how Greater Atlanta Christian School used a personalized video to maximize participation for their Alumni Weekend 2018 event.


6. Publish an update in school newsletter/local media

Schools have found success in bringing alumni attention to their reunions by publishing in their newsletter. Even paid advertisements in the local media have resulted in good visibility. This might be highly relevant to you if you have an outdated alumni database and a large majority of your alumni are living in the same vicinity as your school. Other than getting the word out on your upcoming reunion, this can also be seen as an excellent PR activity for your school and can help boost admissions and donations.


North Allegheny Foundation published an article in the local media to announce alumni who would be awarded at their Distinguished Alumni Awards Gala. Check the story here.


8. Ensure the agenda is clearly established

For alumni who might be looking beyond networking opportunities, providing added incentives such as details of speakers attending or activities that would happen during the reunion can help increase event sign-ups.

What we learned by analyzing the attendance at 300 reunions across 100 schools

What we learned by analyzing the attendance at 300 reunions across 100 schools

Looking for ways to maximize alumni participation for your upcoming reunion? Here are 8 of our key learnings from analyzing over 300 reunions.

Events

June 17, 2019

12 minutes

Read

Having observed over a hundred schools successfully bring attention to their alumni events and reunions via social media, we have sufficient evidence that it is one of the most powerful mediums to promote your alumni reunion successfully. A little creativity and event marketing can go a long way in making sure that the maximum amount of alumni notice and engage with your upcoming reunions.

Almabase Homecoming Checklist

With that being said, here are 7 tested approaches to promote alumni reunions on social media:

1. Showcase alumni experiences at past year reunions

Sharing photos and videos of previous years reunions on your social media page is one of the best ways to attract attention to your alumni reunion event. While alumni may love hearing about wonderful stories about your previous reunions, these stories become all the more engaging when they hear it from their friends or peers. Encouraging alumni to share their own experiences from previous years reunions, has proven to be highly rewarding for reunion success.

2. Ask your faculty to share their experiences

If a large amount of your alumni base is still in touch with your faculty or staff, asking faculty members to share updates about upcoming reunions or their experiences at past year reunions is a best practice you should follow.

3. Encourage alumni to take action

Another way to encourage alumni engagement and participation is by creating opportunities for alumni to take some action on your post. Here’s an example: create a simple graphic post with the tagline - “Just three days to go!! Tag 3 people you are looking forward to meeting at the reunion.”

Here’s how William Peace University drew the attention of its alumni and got them talking about their upcoming reunion.

social-media-post-alumni

4. Create something similar to the ‘10-Year Challenge’ on Facebook

It's generally a good idea to see which alumni event ideas are gaining traction. Take for example the widely popular 10-Year Challenge on Facebook where you can request alumni to simply post two photos, side-by-side, taken at least ten years apart. Alternatively, you can use photos from yearbooks and current profiles of alumni to create ‘10-year challenge’ posts. However, in the case of this approach, consent needs to be established before using an alum’s personal photos.

5. Evoke nostalgia with yearbook, graduation photos, and countdown posts

Instead of promoting your alumni event the traditional way, capture the attention of your alumni by constantly staying in their social media feed and reminding them of the wonderful memories they’ve had over their time spent at their school. Here’s how McCarthy Alumni Association gets this right.

social-media-post-alumni

6. Share Alumni Testimonials on Social Media

Create a campaign asking alumni to respond to “What's something you loved about your Class of 10 Yr Reunion?”. Share the positive feedback you receive from the campaign and from past year reunions on your social media pages, tagging those alumni who’ve provided feedback, thus ensuring a wider reach for your campaign.

7. Keep your alumni hooked with ‘Guess who is coming?’ posters

Pick images of 3-5 alumni, combine them to create a collage with question marks on top of each image, and then post it as a challenge for alumni to guess the names of the people mentioned in the post. To make it more interesting, provide hints. For example, if one of the names to be guessed is "Sarah", you can drop the letters ‘S’, ‘R’, and ‘H’ as a clue. Such campaigns not only get you visibility but also encourage your alumni to take action by responding to the challenge you’ve thrown at them.

Best social media platforms to promote alumni reunions

To effectively promote alumni reunions, institutions today have a good variety of social media platforms, each offering distinct advantages for outreach and engagement.

  • LinkedIn: This platform is ideal for professional networking and reaching alumni in various career stages. Universities can create dedicated alumni groups, share professional development opportunities, and post event details directly within a professional context.
  • Facebook: With its broad user base, Facebook remains a strong choice for fostering community and nostalgia. Creating private alumni groups, sharing throwback photos, and utilizing event features can drive registration and engagement.
  • Instagram: For visually compelling promotion, Instagram excels. Universities can use high-quality photos and videos of past reunions, campus scenes, and alumni spotlights to evoke nostalgia and showcase the event's atmosphere.
  • TikTok: To engage younger alumni, TikTok offers a dynamic platform for short, creative videos. Universities can leverage trends, showcase campus life in a fun way, and highlight reasons to attend the reunion through engaging video content.
  • YouTube: For longer-form content, such as highlight reels from past reunions or interviews with alumni, YouTube is a valuable platform. Videos can be shared across other social media channels to provide a more in-depth look at the reunion experience.

Social media tips for driving alumni engagement

  • Create Dedicated Alumni Groups: Establish private groups on platforms like LinkedIn and Facebook. These provide a focused space for alumni to connect, share updates, and network with peers.
  • Share Compelling, Nostalgic Content: Post throwback photos, videos, and stories that evoke fond memories of campus life. Encourage alumni to share their own experiences using relevant hashtags.
  • Highlight Alumni Success Stories: Regularly feature accomplishments of your alumni in various fields. This inspires pride and demonstrates the value of their alma mater.
  • Host Virtual Events and Live Sessions: Offer webinars, online networking mixers, or Q&A sessions with notable alumni. Live streams can bring the campus experience to alumni globally
  • Utilize User-Generated Content (UGC): Encourage alumni to share their current endeavors, campus visits, or reunion experiences. UGC fosters authenticity and broadens reach.
  • Offer Value and Resources: Share content relevant to alumni's professional and personal lives, such as career development tips, job opportunities, or industry insights.
  • Promote Events with Clear CTAs: Use engaging visuals and direct calls-to-action for reunion promotions, mentorship programs, or fundraising campaigns.
  • Personalize Communication: Segment your alumni audience and tailor content to their interests, class years, or geographical locations for more relevant engagement.
  • Engage with Comments and Messages: Respond to alumni interactions promptly and thoughtfully to foster a sense of community and show appreciation.
  • Leverage Interactive Features: Use polls, quizzes, and Q&A stickers on platforms like Instagram and Facebook Stories to encourage direct participation.
  • Consistent Posting Schedule: Maintain a regular posting cadence to keep your alumni community informed and engaged.
  • Analyze Performance: Use social media analytics to understand what content resonates most with your alumni and adjust your strategy accordingly.

Conclusion

When it comes to promoting your alumni reunions, there’s no limit to all that you can do. Here’s a list of techniques for increasing alumni participation to your reunions that have brought success to over a hundred institutions.

7 Tested Ideas To Promote Alumni Reunions On Social Media

7 Tested Ideas To Promote Alumni Reunions On Social Media

Discover 7 proven strategies to boost engagement and attendance at your alumni reunions using social media. Learn how to create buzz, use countdown timers, etc.

Events

June 17, 2019

12 minutes

Read

Estimated Reading time: 5 minutes

When you dig down to the fundamentals - the most significant challenge with alumni relations is the same for most of us.


“How do I continuously engage all my alumni, yet remain personal, at scale, with a small team and limited resources?”

Not easy. Certainly.

Over the last five years, we’ve been doing much research to try and address this.

What we’ve come to believe is that there isn’t a silver bullet that will solve this problem. What we’ve also come to realize is that alumni will not regularly engage amongst themselves without something external that drives them to do so.

This is precisely why social network groups (Facebook/LinkedIn) fall flat. Over time, the group and the content within it become stale. The content that does get added becomes irrelevant and fails to provide enough value to its members.  Since there isn’t anything of value to bring people back to the group, the group eventually dies out.

This is an age of specialized solutions for specific problems. It’s no different with alumni. They are most likely to listen when they’re receiving communication relevant to and targeted at them. If not, they tune it out.

So, what is the solution?
Like I’d said - there is no silver bullet to this problem. However, we are attempting to solve it - step by step.


The first step: Groups v1.0

Our first step to address this was taken last year -- with v1.0 of the Groups module on Almabase. With this, we wanted to understand how effectively a group would engage when someone drove the engagement.

Of course, we understand how stretched alumni offices are. We needed to do this without adding additional load to you and your team.

So, we built groups 1.0 focused around ‘Group Admins’.This would help you break down your alumni into smaller chunks, and help you delegate this responsibility of engaging smaller communities to those who are possibly more attached to the community.

Like a class leader for a class, a football coach to former football players, or a chapter president for a regional group.


We learned a few valuable lessons from this first step:

1. For the most part, Group admins, on their own are not always incentivized to drive engagement

2. Fresh, valuable content drives engagement - and the group admin(s) alone cannot generate enough content to keep a group from going stale.

3. Unlike social networks - the purpose of an alumni network is more specific. Members arrive with particular objectives in mind (attend an event, reconnect with classmates, career networking, seek advice, find a job, etc.) The frequency of interaction is much lesser - so it’s all the more critical that the content they interact with be very relevant to them.

4. Different kinds of groups have different requirements from their administrators - some might want to be deeply involved, and some just superficially.

5. The frequency of engagement is vital - too frequent, and your community tunes out. Too infrequent, and your loses relevance and becomes stale.

The Challenge

We summarized this into three key challenges that we need to address, to be able to engage alumni:

Creation: Creating valuable content, frequently, without the burden for this falling on one or a few people.‍

Curation: Collating content such that each member of the community receives relevant content that is of value to them‍

Distribution: Distributing this curated content to appropriate people at a frequency with which they are comfortable.

Earlier, each of these three challenges fell on the shoulders of you and your office.

We want to build a solution that shifts most of this responsibility to the technology that powers almabase. It will automatically take care of Curation and Distribution while driving people to Create more content.


What Next?

Creation

We are building a ‘Feed.’ All users can now post, like, comment and react. Content creation is no longer a job for just admins. Everyone can contribute to communities that they care.

Curation

The system will look across the groups that are relevant to each alum, and curate content that they are most likely to find value. For instance, if someone is part of the groups for ‘Class of 86’, ‘Law Alumni,’ ‘Alumni in San Francisco’ and ‘Baseball,’ the system will take care of curating the most relevant content from those groups and then send it to this person.

Distribution

The feedback loop. We’ll be building an automated digest that is curated and personalized for each member based on what they choose to stay connected with. It will then be delivered at a frequency of their choice. All without you having to get involved. This will drive alumni back to the platform and hopefully urge them to create more content and close the loop.

What does this mean for you?

1. Groups are going to become very central to all engagement on your alumni platform.

2. As it ties together all these different components for engagement, the product going forward would focus a lot on ‘groups.’

3. Increased peer to peer alumni engagement

4. A ‘feed’ within each group or module will allow users to post, like, comment, and interact with others in the community.

5. Distributed Fine grain control for group administrators

6. You’ll have much more control over the permissions of each group administrator. You can set different levels/combinations of permissions for each. E.g., if you want a group admin to be able to approve users, or update profile data of members - but just within that group.

7. Personalization gets more powerful

8. Customized email digests, notifications, segmentation based on engagement on the ‘Feed.’

9. ‘Chapters,’‘MyClass,’’ Sub-Colleges’ will get deprecated by November 2019

10. These discrete modules all going to be absorbed into groups. For those of you that use it, we’ll help you migrate to Groups.

Timeline

We wanted to be upfront about this.

All of these are hard problems to solve and will take time to get them right?
However, we’ll get there.

Such an integrated system is something that has not been attempted before in the industry, but we’re finally at a time where we have the technology to pull it off.

We’re going to build this step by step, and we’d love to hear feedback along the way. Bear with us till we reach the final state, and I’m sure you’ll come to love the product. :)

1. The first noticeable change on the product is going to be with events

2. You’ll now see a Feed within each of your events where alumni can post, like, comment, and interact with each other.

3. Events are always a gathering point for people to interact with. It’s currently the single most significant driver for online alumni engagement across our partners. Adding a feed within events first will give us a lot of great insights that we can take back to the drawing board before rolling it out to groups.

4. Within the next one-two months, you’ll see Feeds within Groups as well, as well as the first version of the notification system!

Big changes ahead!
We’re excited. Hope you are too :)

Building the Next Generation of Online Communities

Building the Next Generation of Online Communities

Here's our attempt at trying to solve the challenge of continuously keeping alumni engaged yet remain personal, at scale, with a small team and limited resources.

Product updates

June 14, 2019

12 minutes

Read

As we continue our focus on user engagement, we are today laying the foundation for what we envision to be one of the primary drivers of engagement on your platform... Feeds!

Feeds have been around on Social Media for almost as long as they have existed — so it is by no means a new concept. Over the next few quarters, you will start to see your Almabase platform utilize feeds as the primary driver for engagement and user-generated content.

This is just the beginning and there is a long way to go. But we are excited to announce that Starting today, our first version of feeds will be available on all events on the new events module. Over time, users will be able to interact with the feed on other features such as Groups as well.

Here are some of the key highlights to look out for :

1. User-generated content that other users can comment or like.

2. Admins can delete any post or comment at any time.

3. Users can report violations or abuse on any content created by other users.

4. Users can now share photos to the feed.

5. Only logged-in users can post content.

6. Administrators can hide the entire feed if required.

Feeds are finally here.

Feeds are finally here.

Feeds have been around on social media for almost as long as they have existed — so it is by no means a new concept. Over the next few quarters, you will start to see your Almabase platform utilize feeds as the primary driver for engagement and user-generated content.

Product updates

June 13, 2019

12 minutes

Read

Having observed 100+ Giving Days, we have enough data to conclude that Giving Days can provide a major boost to your fundraising efforts.

How Archbishop RIordan High School grew its giving day donations by 5 times in a year

What is a Giving Day?

A Giving Day is a powerful online fundraising campaign conducted for 24 hours with the purpose of raising money and finding new donors. On every calendar, there are special days, or holidays, dedicated for different purposes or activities. For example, most calendars automatically include holidays like Independence Day, Mother’s Day, and Halloween. A giving day could be one such special day marked on your school’s event calendar, dedicated to fundraising and known to your constituents as a special day for your school.

Key elements of a Giving Day

How are Giving Days different from any other day of the year?

If you’re asking yourself why a designated day should be any different from any other day of the year, read on. While your constituents can donate throughout the year, asking them to participate in a 24-hour event exclusive to a cause helps create a sense of urgency. Giving Days also help create healthy competition and a sense of community as your constituents get an opportunity to contribute towards a common goal.

Why are Giving Days so important to schools or universities?

A well planned Giving Day can entirely transform your fundraising approach by helping you acquire new donors, enrich the giving experience, and instill a culture of giving in your constituents.

5 benefits of Giving Days

Need more information on how to plan for a Giving Day? Click on the image below to get a free copy of our Planning a Giving Day Handbook today!

Giving Day Book
Why are Giving Days so important?

Why are Giving Days so important?

Giving Days have proven to be highly successful in boosting fundraising efforts. Learn how they can help you acquire new donors, enrich the giving experience, and instill a culture of giving in your constituents.

Fundraising

April 24, 2019

12 minutes

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Events have been around on Almabase for a while now and has grown to be one of among most utilized channels to engage constituents offline. As usage grew, the kind of events that needed to be created grew diverse and the more we realized that most event solutions out there, are not meant to handle the kind of complexities that come up during reunions - while considering engagement data to manage.

So, we went back to the drawing board to redesign events and we're excited to roll it out today to all platforms.

While a whole lot has changed (we will be covering more in our support documentation), here's everything you need to know :

1: A fresh new interface, for everyone

We've completely redesigned the interface and experience for the user. Each event also now lives on its own page – free from unnecessary navigational options.

Additionally, the admin side for events is now entirely mobile responsive. Which means you can create an event, add photos, add guests, check-in guests, record payments, export, and everything else you needed to do from your computer, now on your mobile device.

2: Editable Registrations and additional RSVP options

Need to accommodate for change of plans? different tickets? additional guests? Not a problem. Each registration can now be edited both by the guest and event admins.

Guests can now also respond with a 'Maybe' or 'Not attending' during their registration.

3: Sub Events

You can now assign tickets to your event schedule (previously called 'Agenda') which will then appear to your guests in chronological order as they select the tickets they require. Great for grouping sub-event tickets and displaying tickets in the same order as that of the event schedule.

4: Additional Ticket Types

You can now select one of three types of tickets based on your use case.

1. Mandatory Tickets behave like base fares that need to be applied to every guest on the registration (including accompanying guests).

2. Seated Tickets behave like reservations made for a particular guest. Use seated tickets when the person needs to be physically present at the event, or when you need to know exactly which guest is attending and not just a number, like at an award ceremony or dinner. Seated tickets also work great with guest forms - more on that later.

3. Open Tickets behave like anonymous tickets that can be bought in any quantity by the buyer. Works great for t-shirts, tours etc.

Oh, and tickets now also support images for that homecoming merchandise :)

5: Guest Forms

Previously, you could add a 'Registration Form' that was asked once per registration. With the new events, you can add 'Guest Forms' – a form that asked once for each guest mentioned on the registration. Works great if you need to know the dietary preference of every guest that will be attending.

6: Stripe Support with Apple & Google Pay

Events now support in-page payments without ever having to leave your platform using Stripe. Additionally, guests can pay on their mobile devices using Apple & Google Pay for one-touch payments.

Support for Blackbaud Merchant Services (BBMS) coming soon.

7: Better Discounts

The new events have a few tricks up it sleeves when it comes to discounts:

1. No more remembering or pasting discount codes with public discounts that anyone can use as they register.

2. Discounts applicable only to paid members of your organization with Member discounts.

3. Discounts applicable only to certain affiliations like student.

8: Automated Event Reminder

While paid events have a reasonably predictable turnout, free events have a large problem with no-shows. Which is why we built an automated event reminder that is sent a day before the event to your guests that remind them of the event and nudge them to modify their registration if they won't be able to make it.

Events : Here's what's changing.

Events : Here's what's changing.

The Events module has been around on Almabase for a while now and has grown to be amongst the most utilized channels to engage constituents offline. While a whole lot has changed (we will be covering more in our support documentation), here's everything you need to know.

Product updates

March 7, 2019

12 minutes

Read

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”
- Nelson Mandela

At Almabase, we understand the power of education. We believe one of the best ways to create an impact is by enabling small advancement shops to advance organically, efficiently and sustainably.

Over the last few years, we’ve worked really hard to build powerful software that is also easy-to-use. Hundreds of advancement teams have enjoyed higher participation from alumni as a result. One of the key reasons for this success, has been understanding our customers and their needs deeply.

But we know that there’s a lot left to be truly game-changing. To build great technology, we need to dig deeper into the science and psychology of alumni relationships. I started discussing goals and challenges of advancement teams with some of the thought leaders of our industry. Fortunately, I met Jay on this journey. As you probably know, his research on alumni identity is changing the course of higher education engagement and fundraising. We truly enjoy the insights he brings and approached him to play a role with Almabase. Yes, we’ve got big news!

Today, Jay is coming on board to help us realize our vision. We’re excited to welcome Dr. Jay Le Roux Dillon to the Almabase advisory board.

About Jay

Jay is a social scientist and higher education consultant with 14 years of progressive leadership experience in advancement. Jay’s research and consulting practice focuses on broadening and measuring institutional value and impact among college and university alumni through the lens of social psychology and alumni identity.

He has served as Director of Alumni Engagement at the University of San Francisco and as Executive Director of Alumni Strategic Initiatives at UCLA. Jay is dedicated to improving philanthropy through data science in order to bring social justice and equity to education. He holds a doctorate in organization & leadership from USF and a master's and bachelor's degree in music from UCLA.

Above all, Jay is a caring father to this adorable 9 month old.


Jay with his son

There’s so much more to jay than we can put together in words. Learn more about his research on AlumniIdentity and follow him on Twitter to see what we mean!

To know more about what we’re building at Almabase with Jay, click here.

Dr. Jay Le Roux Dillon joins the Almabase advisory board

Dr. Jay Le Roux Dillon joins the Almabase advisory board

We’re excited to welcome Dr. Jay Le Roux Dillon, a social scientist and higher education consultant with 14 years of experience to the Almabase advisory board.

August 27, 2018

12 minutes

Read

Events are getting a major upgrade! And it tackles some key issues that schools face when it comes to event management, the data-trail after the event, and measuring engagement.

In this August release, Events will now be able to:

1. Count the exact number of people expected to attend with each registration

2. Check in people at the event using a web app so you have data on no-shows and on-spot registrations

Schools have tackled these issues using spreadsheets, clipboards, highlighters and name tags. While the process got the job done, the event organizer needed to spend hours trying to clean up data, and some data just got lost in the noise. And with larger events, the problem compounded.

Who's really attending?

Registering for an event is a big step towards engagement. But every event is not the same. Free events could garner more registrations, but the no-shows were equally large. You could use a pen and paper to keep track of things and walk away with clean up work to do after the event.With the new Check-in app on Almabase, volunteers/managers can check in pre-registered guests in just a few taps. You can also add spot registrations to make sure you get as much data as possible.

Match guests to your database instantly

Here’s where the magic kicks in. For users that already have a record on Almabase, the event attendance is automatically attributed to their engagement.

That means accurate data on data studio, a better engagement rating and accurate participation reports and more - all just with a few taps.

Low maintenance. Low Clean up. You will, however, need to decide what you will be doing with all that free time.

Precise Planning

When you don’t know the exact count of people, schools tend to overcompensate for the uncertainty. With the accompanying guests' feature, you can take out the guesswork.Each time a user registers, the user can enter in the number of guests he/she expects to be accompanying them. So you know how many chairs to put in, and how many plates you need.

New Volunteer Permissions!

You can now also add volunteers to your event. Volunteers have access to the check-in app so that you can easily scale up your check-in counters if you have a large event. You could also perhaps ask split up check-in responsibility by class so that the class volunteer from the class of 1998 can check in and manage the registration for all his/her classmates.

Enabling Check-In for your platform

There are a few more changes under the hood which you will be able to review in the support documentation. Speak to your account manager today to learn about other changes that are coming to events and how you can enable the check-in feature for your school today!

Events - Introducing Accompanying Guests & The Check-in App

Events - Introducing Accompanying Guests & The Check-in App

Events are getting a major upgrade! And it tackles some key issues that schools face when it comes to event management, the data-trail after the event, and measuring engagement.

Product updates

August 1, 2018

12 minutes

Read

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