Individual Donor Letter

Help Sportsmen's Tennis & Enrichment Center appeal to individual donors with a well-written and persuasive letter template that they can easily modify for specific recipients.
Sportsmen's Tennis & Enrichment Center
Boston, MA, USA
Unfollow
Log in to follow
Sportsmen's Tennis & Enrichment Center
Boston, MA, USA

0

Live Projects

20

Matched Projects
3 Followers

Posted February 5th

Share this project:

Project details

What we need
  • A concise, well-articulated letter (not exceeding two pages) to request funds from individual donors
Additional details

Sportsmen's is seeking assistance from a fundraising professional in support of crafting a successful appeal letter. This well articulated piece will seek to raise funds for summer campership scholarships.

What we have in place
  • We currently have an overview of our camp offerings & what makes us special, which should make it easy for you to get started. We also have camper demographics, and the ability to provide any other information you need.
How this will help
This project will save us $1,240 , allowing us to apply these funds to summer camperships ensuring no family is turned away from camp due to financial limitations.

The Sportsmen's mission is to build leaders on the court, in the classroom and in the greater community by providing academic, wellness and social development programs alongside recreational and competitive tennis instruction for youth and adults. Sportsmen's is committed to improving life opportunities for inner city youth in Boston's Blue Hill Corridor.
Our primary target population is low-income, school-age youth. A successful letter will aid in offering camperships to our kids.

Project plan

P
Prep: Information Gathering
  • Volunteer Manager and Professional discuss the objectives of the project and key audiences
1
Milestone 1: Document Creation
  • Professional writes copy aligned with Volunteer Manager's style, tone, clarity, and length
2
Milestone 2: Wrap-up
  • Volunteer Manager and Professional discuss any small edits; Professional submits final version
Show more

About the org

Sportsmen's Tennis & Enrichment Center
Unfollow
Posted by
Mary L.

Dir. of Special Events and Community Engagement

Our mission

The Sportsmen’s mission is to build leaders on the court, in the classroom and in the greater community by providing academic, wellness and social development programs alongside recreational and competitive tennis instruction for youth and adults. Sportsmen's is committed to improving life opportunities for youth in Boston’s Blue Hill Corridor while welcoming a diverse community from the Greater Boston area.

What we do

Founded in 1961, Sportsmen’s is the first indoor, nonprofit tennis club in the US built by and for the African-American community. For over 50 years, Sportsmen’s has provided the communities of Dorchester, Mattapan, and Roxbury with a place for youth and adults to gather, to learn and play tennis. Today we educate, train, and develop the academic and tennis skills of over 5,000 youth and young adults annually.
MISSION AND GOALS
The Sportsmen’s mission is to build leaders on the court, in the classroom and in the greater community by providing academic, wellness and social development programs alongside recreational and competitive tennis instruction for youth and adults. Sportsmen’s is committed to improving life opportunities for youth in Boston’s Blue Hill Corridor while welcoming a diverse community from the Greater Boston area.
SPORTSMEN’S AND THE COMMUNITY WE SERVE
Sportsmen’s is a year-round, family centered organization offering tennis, academic and social enrichment programs for K-12 aged youth, adult basic education, financial literacy courses, health and wellness screening and classes. Our primary target population is low-income, school-age youth and young adults up to age 24 and their families residing in Dorchester, Mattapan, and Roxbury. Our youth are 71% elementary school age, 16% middle school, 12% high school age, and 1% young adults who are not in school; gender distribution is even. 87% of the students in our programs are underprivileged (based on a scale used to determine financial aid and free or reduced lunch at school). Our work directly addresses what studies show are the most pressing challenges faced by youth and families in economically depressed neighborhoods: poor academic performance of K-12 children; obesity, chronic illness and cardiovascular disease, stemming from limited physical activity; and lack of quality, affordable after-school options for children.

Testimonials

(No testimonial has been submitted by Mary)
(No testimonial has been submitted by Kimberly)
The pixel