Jewish High School Ice Cream Fundraiser
Top 10 best Jewish High School Ice Cream Fundraiser for Raising Money!
The Fizz Cup is the Best Jewish High School Fundraising Idea yet for your Students!
Need a high profit Jewish high school Fundraising product for your high school, Temple or Non-profit Organization?
Do you like Ice Cream and Soda Pop? Well if so, the Fizz cup might be just what your high school needs, this ice cream soda float cup is the perfect choice for any Jewish High School Fundraiser. Anyone from ages 8 and up can make an ice cream float out of their favorite soda pop and one scoop of their favoirte ice cream, which will both make for a great snack and it will also satisfy their sweet tooth!
The Fizz Cup is the best Jewish high school Fundraising product that can be used by adults, kids and youth groups. With the Fizz Cup there are no minimum order requirements to make and you can use our Jewish high school Fundraising products to raise money whether you are part of a small group, a large group, and no matter if your budget is big or small. The Fizz Cup is very inexpensive and thus, makes for a perfect Jewish high school Fundraising product for any kind of function.
The Fizz Cup is the all new ice cream soda float cup of the future! With this brand new innovative ice cream float cup, anyone can create their very own ice cream float out of any ordinary or extrodinary soda pop that comes in a bottle and they can use any kind of ice cream they want to even sugar free ice cream, lite ice cream or gelato. The Fizz cup is made out of reusable plastic and it makes the perfect ice cream float every time without all the mess and without the need for any machines. The Fizz cup can be bought online in small or large quantities and even delivered right to your high school, Shul, Temple, Synagogue or Non-profit organization office. The Fizz cup is best for high profit Jewish High School Fundraisers for Jewish high school Fundraising and both kids and adults and senoirs too love ice cream float socials so its a win win for anyone. An Ice Cream Jewish High School Fundraiser centered around ice cream soda floats can be used for the rebuilding of a high school, Shul, Temple, Synagogue or for generating funds for any given organization.
The profit made from an ice cream soda float using the Fizz cup at a high school ice cream social Jewish Fundraiser should go towards benefiting a particular organization or to a Jewish charitable group you would like to help. The following are steps you can take to have your own ice cream soda float social Jewish High School Fundraiser.
Here is How to Organize an Ice Cream Soda Float Social Fundrasier at your high school, Shul, Temple, Synagogue or Non-profit organization:
1) Choose a well known easy to get to and from location and make sure that the location is suitable for setting up a feezer for housing the ice cream for the event or you will need to find a location that all ready has a freezer you can use, since a simple ice box probably will not work out.
2) Pick a date and time which is best for the ice cream social Fundraiser and make sure the Fundraiser takes place on a Sunday afternoon, and if you want a bigger turnout you might want to tell the the people you invite that there is an ice cream social to benefit a particular organization along with perhaps a potluck dinner.
3) Pick out some volunteers to work your event, perferably your close friends and family members are your best bet for help in the service of ice cream soda pop floats, and especially in the gathering of donations. Make sure to have someone you know well and keep all the collected donations in a donation box, that no one can see thru, so that people with little funds will not feel uncomfortable when donating.
4) The night before the Fundraiser takes place at your location, make sure to place the ice cream in the freezer and on the date of the Jewish High School Ice Cream Fundraiser make sure to arrive early for proper settup and so that you will be there to meet and greet your volunteers.
5) Make sure to advertise your ice cream soda float social Jewish High School Fundraiser weeks before the Jewish High School Fundraiser actually happens, so that the event will be known by your friends, family, and local media outlets.
6) For everyone who does not eat an ice cream soda float, make sure to have a volunteer ready to walk around the location at your high school, Shul, Temple, Synagogue or Non-profit organization and ask people to make a donation to your specific cause, because even tho they might not love ice cream, but they probably do love to help.
Watch the Fizz Cup in Action:
Are you running out of Tips for your Jewish high school students, here are a few soda float combinations to get your Jewish High School Fundraiser up and running:
- Root Beer with Vanilla Ice Cream
- Dr. Pepper with Vanillia Ice Cream
- Lemon Soda with Vanilla Ice Cream
- Jarritos Tamarind with Vanilla Ice Cream
- Ginger Ale with Vanilla Ice Cream
- Orange Soda with Vanilla Ice Cream
- Watermelon Soda with Vanilla Ice Cream
- Lime Sherbet with Sprite
- Popin' Dots with Dippin’ Dots Ice Cream and Cherry Cream Soda
Above are just a few combinations but with the Fizz cup, any soda pop and any style of kosher ice cream, gelato, or non-dairy combination is possible!
Fundraising in general is the process of soliciting and gathering voluntary contributions as money or other resources, by requesting donations from individuals, businesses, charitable foundations, governmental agencies, or parents of children whom are attending elementary school, high school, private schools, or college. Although fundraising typically refers to efforts to gather money for non-profit organizations, it is sometimes used to refer to the identification and solicitation of investors or other sources of capital for for-profit enterprises. Traditionally, fundraising consisted mostly of asking for donations on the street or at people's doors, and this is experiencing very strong growth in the form of face-to-face fundraising, but new forms of fundraising such as online fundraising have emerged in recent years, though these are often based on older methods such as grassroots fundraising.