Smarter Sponsor Outreach

How to Find Sponsors

Finding sponsors starts with who you already know, where there is alignment, and how clearly you organize your outreach.

Who to ask first, where to look, and how to prioritize outreach

Finding sponsors isn’t about cold selling or chasing random businesses. The strongest sponsorship programs are built on existing relationships, shared values, and clear internal alignment.

When done thoughtfully, this system starts to support itself.

Getting Started and Branching Out

Start Here: Who to Ask First

Always begin with the warmest, most obvious connections.

1️⃣ Current & Past Supporters

Highest priority

Ask:

  • Previous sponsors
  • Past donors
  • Businesses that have supported events, programs, or fundraisers

Why:

  • They already believe in the market
  • The relationship exists
  • Renewals are easier than new asks

Retention should always come before expansion.

2️⃣ Businesses Near the Market

Ask:

  • Nearby restaurants, cafes, breweries
  • Retailers and service providers within walking distance
  • Businesses that benefit from market-day foot traffic

Why:

  • Visibility at the market has direct value
  • On-site recognition matters most to these sponsors

    3️⃣ Values-Aligned Local Businesses

    (Don’t forget financial advisors)

    Ask:

    • Local banks and credit unions
    • Local financial advisors and wealth management firms
    • Healthcare providers
    • Real estate companies
    • Insurance agencies
    • Sustainability-focused businesses

    Why:

    • Farmers markets align naturally with community investment and local economies
    • Many have marketing or community sponsorship budgets
    • Financial advisors often value local trust and visibility

    These sponsors are often ideal for program-based sponsorships.

    4️⃣Personal, Board & Steering Committee Networks

    Often overlooked, extremely powerful

    Ask:

    • Board members
    • Steering committee members
    • Staff and key volunteers

    A simple question works:

    “Do you or your employer sponsor local organizations?”

    Why:

    • Warm introductions dramatically increase response rates
    • People enjoy supporting causes they personally care about

    Internal Check: Review Your Sponsor List Before Outreach

    Before sending any emails, pause and check in internally.

    Share your draft sponsor list with:

    • Your employer or supervisor
    • Board of directors
    • Steering committee
    • Market leadership or partners

    Why this matters:

    • Avoids conflicts of interest
    • Prevents overlapping or duplicate outreach
    • Ensures alignment with values and policies
    • Builds internal trust and transparency

    This step protects relationships and strengthens your credibility.

    Corporate Grants & Large Company Sponsorships

    (A different but valuable path)

    Some sponsorships come through corporate grant or community giving programs, especially with larger companies.

    Consider:

    • Regional banks and national financial institutions
    • Grocery chains
    • Healthcare systems
    • Utility companies
    • Large employers with local presence

    How this is different:

    • Often requires an application
    • Timelines may be fixed
    • Decisions may take longer
    • Awards may be larger or multi-year

    Where to look:

    • Company websites (“Community Giving” or “Corporate Responsibility”)
    • Corporate foundations
    • Local branch managers or employees

    Tip:

    Even if funding is labeled as a “grant,” it often functions like sponsorship with recognition expectations.

    Where to Look Beyond Your Immediate Network

    If you need to expand:

    • Chamber of Commerce directories
    • Downtown or Main Street organizations
    • Business sponsors listed on other community events
    • Companies advertising locally (print, radio, social)

    If a business already spends money on visibility, they’re a sponsorship candidate.

    How to Prioritize Outreach (So You Don’t Burn Out)

    Ask these three questions:

    1. Do they already know the market?
    2. Do they benefit from the market’s success?
    3. Do they align with our values or programs?

    Two “yes” answers = higher priority.

    Simple Outreach Priority System

    Tier 1 – High Priority

    • Past sponsors
    • Known supporters
    • Warm introductions

    Tier 2 – Medium Priority

    • Nearby businesses
    • Values-aligned companies

    Tier 3 – Lower Priority

    • Cold outreach
    • Large corporate applications

    Start with Tier 1. Build momentum before moving down the list.

    Match Sponsors to Initiatives

    Use your Choose Your Impact menu to guide outreach.

    Examples:

    • Financial advisors → community programs or food access
    • Banks → kids’ programs or loyalty initiatives
    • Healthcare providers → nutrition and wellness programs
    • Real estate companies → community events or live music

    Clear alignment makes the ask easier and more compelling.

    How This System Fills Itself Over Time

    When done consistently:

    • Sponsors renew
    • Sponsors refer other businesses
    • Board members make introductions
    • Your CRM becomes a pipeline instead of a list

    Fundraising shifts from scrambling to stewardship.

    Final Reframe

    You are not “asking for money.”

    You are:

    • Inviting businesses to invest locally
    • Offering visibility rooted in trust
    • Supporting farmers, food access, and the local economy

    That’s a strong, ethical ask.

    Find Your Next Step With These Links

    Fundraising Introduction

    Intro to fundraising basics for markets: why it matters & how to get started.

    Deciding What You’re Fundraising For

    Clarify your fundraising goals so every ask has purpose and impact.

    Funding Readiness Checklist

    Checklist to assess if your market is ready to raise funds with confidence.

    Sponsorship Pitch Guide

    Pro tips on pitching sponsors so they see value in supporting your market.

    Why Sponsor Us Messaging

    Core messaging to explain sponsor benefits and market community value.

    Sponsorship Tiers

    Tiered sponsor levels that offer clear benefits and value for support.

    Creating a Sponsorship Package

    Build a sponsorship package that feels fair and motivates support.

    Sponsorship Package — Example

    Example package to model your own sponsor offerings and perks.

    How to Find Sponsors

    Strategies to identify and reach potential sponsors for your market.

    Sponsorship Emails

    Email templates to pitch sponsors without the guesswork.

    Corporate Grant & Sponsorships

    Guide to writing strong applications for grants and corporate support.

    In-Kind & Service-Based Sponsorships

    Leverage non-cash sponsors who give goods, services, or staff time

    Year-End Sponsor Thank-You

    Thank-you templates to recognize sponsors and keep relationships strong

    AI-Ready Prompt Templates

    AI prompt templates to speed writing grant and sponsorship responses.

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    Maine Federation of Farmers Markets
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    Contact

    mffmmarketingguide@gmail.com