Custom Ink News & Events

T-shirts give a "Boost" for Animal Shelter Fundraising


The nation’s largest and most effective animal protection organization, The Humane Society of the United States and HSUS affiliates provide hands-on care and services to more than 100,000 animals each year, and helps professionalize the field through education and training for local animal welfare organizations.

As thousands of Booster t-shirt campaigns have been run to raise awareness and funds for animal welfare organizations across the U.S., we were excited to see the November/December 2015 issue of Animal Sheltering— HSUS’s official publication, and the premier magazine for anyone in the animal sheltering and rescue field — humane societies, rescues, fosterers, volunteers, shelter vets, animal control officers, others.

Here from that issue, with permission from author Danielle S. Tepper, Animal Sheltering Magazine, and publisher (HSUS), is an article we’re proud of!

Animal Sheltering Logo_280x280Humane Society of The US logo

 

Need a Boost?

T-Shirt Sales Strengthen Fundraising Efforts

Animal Sheltering magazine, November/December 2015

His surname may be Katz, but Ethan’s heart has gone to the dogs—in this case his family’s rescue pooches Fly (left) and Brooklyn. Fred Schilling/Fredschilling.com

His surname may be Katz, but Ethan’s heart has gone to the dogs—in this case his family’s rescue pooches Fly (left) and Brooklyn. Fred Schilling/Fredschilling.com

 

by Danielle S. Tepper

 

Eight-year old Ethan Katz didn’t start off wanting to rescue dogs for his ninth birthday—he wanted to be a dog. But when his parents declined his request for a $700 mascot costume, he decided that saving canines was the next best thing.

The Stevensville, Md., native did his homework and found Booster.com, a website that helps philanthropy-minded folks design and sell custom T-shirts to raise money for a cause or organization.

Ethan had no trouble choosing a charity. His family had recently adopted their youngest dog, Brooklyn, from City Dogs Rescue in Washington, D.C.

“He wanted to raise as much money as he could. He was obsessed; he checked it every day,” says his mother, Lisa Katz. “It was this cool little economics lesson we were having.”

Patrick Rafter, a communications specialist with Booster, says that raising money for animals has become the third most popular category on the site.

“These campaigns can range from helping dogs and cats to hippos and iguanas,” he says. “You become sort of a walking billboard for your favorite animal or shelter.”

Headquartered in Newton, Mass., Booster.com was launched in August 2013 by Virginia-based CustomInk.

In its first two years, Booster has disbursed more than $20 million to worthy causes.

Each campaign page shares a story about the cause; customers purchase shirts through the site and also have the option to make an additional monetary donation. “This turns someone who is passionate about a cause almost into a professional fundraiser, and the T-shirts become rallying tools,” says Rafter.

Meredith Raimondi, City Dogs director, worked closely with Ethan to come up with a simple and fresh image for the shirt. Rafter says Booster has a team on staff to help with slogans and design.

Word spread quickly between early April 2014 and Ethan’s birthday a month later; he wound up raising $2,640 for City Dogs. After a local newspaper publicized Ethan’s efforts, he came to the attention of “Good Morning America.” Ethan and his mom—in what she refers to as “a completely serendipitous situation”—soon got a call to be in New York City at 5 a.m. the next day to appear on the show.

“The national media just kind of took it and ran with it,” says Katz.

Now 10, Ethan has run three more campaigns for a total donation of almost $16,000 to City Dogs, an all-volunteer nonprofit that takes dogs from overcrowded shelters and places them in foster homes.

“Ethan was the first kid to do anything even approaching this scale,” says Amy McLean, executive director of City Dogs. “We get kids doing lemonade stands or Girl Scout fundraisers for merit badges, but it was so refreshing to see this young person get so involved—and to be so successful! We were just blown away.”

Rafter calls Booster “a socially conscious business” that keeps a percentage of the proceeds, but the more you raise, the more you keep.

Rebecca Mountain of Massachusetts, owner of Mountain Pet Products, has sold more than 500 T-shirts through Booster to raise nearly $6,000 for the Cat House on the Kings, a cat sanctuary and adoption center in California.

The numbers surprised her, but she attributed the success to Cat House’s impressive Facebook following (over 661,000 fans) and her shirt’s funny slogan, which reads, “If you’re uncomfortable around my CAT I’m happy to lock you in the other room when you come over.”

Blind Cat Rescue in North Carolina has launched four different Boosters since the summer of 2014, each aiming to help fund 1,500 spay/neuter surgeries. As of July 2015, more than 1,000 shirts and approximately $153,000 had gone toward achieving more than half of that goal, says founder Alana Miller.

“This is truly a tool that will work for anyone,” Rafter says. “You can’t afford a billboard, but you can sell a shirt.”

This article appears here on the website of Animal Sheltering magazine.

Article by Danielle S. Tepper. © 2015 Animal Sheltering Magazine (Humane Society of the United States). Reproduced with permission of copyright holder

 

##


    Start Designing
    View Comments
    There are currently no comments.

    Leave a Comment