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Playground Builder Excels
in Corporate Sponsorships
An Urban Parks Institute Success Story
Washington, D.C.
KaBOOM! is a national nonprofit that organizes individuals, community associations and corporations to build safe, accessible playgrounds in under-served neighborhoods. Although KaBOOM! is supported largely by corporate monetary contributions, it has demonstrated a unique ability to partner with
companies that also dedicate volunteer labor and in-kind services.
Project Background
KaBOOM! was founded in 1995 by Darell Hammond and Dawn Huchinson, Washington, DC-based community organizers. Their goal was to create opportunities for low-income communities to design, build, and raise funds for playgrounds. Besides creating safe places for children to play, Hammond and Huchinson believe that community-built playgrounds can jump-start local organizing efforts; involve local businesses in community improvement projects; bring parents and grandparents together with their children; and allow people from different backgrounds to come together.
Hammond estimates that a playground takes about 6 months and
$50,000 -
$75,000 to organize and build. The bulk of the organizing is done within the
community, or
by the local sponsor of the site, who must convene a playground committee, hold
design
sessions with community members and children, select a play equipment company,
deal with
the media, oversee the "build," and plan for the long-term maintenance
of the
playground. Because of the considerable efforts needed from volunteers, KaBOOM!
looks for
corporate sponsors that will bring not only dollars, but enthusiastic volunteers
who are
either connected, or willing to make connections, to low-income neighborhoods
across the
country.
Several large corporations have committed thousands of
volunteer hours
and millions of dollars to KaBOOM!'s "Let Us Play" program, which
has a
national goal of building 1000 playgrounds by the year 2000. For example, The
Home Depot
has built 20 playgrounds over three years, and will likely double or triple
their
commitment over the next three years. In addition to funding, and in-kind
donations, Home
Depot employees are active participants in building the playground, and further
organize
communities around other company-sponsored construction projects.
Typically, Hammond interviews potential funders in a meeting
"to
see if there is a match." He notes that most executives are impressed that
they are
not just looking for a fat wallet, but a commitment of time and energy as well.
"We
analyze a company to see if partnering with us is really in their best interests - in terms of their customers, their employees, or their brand."
Hammond refuses to give an exclusive contract to anyone.
"Play is
not an exclusive activity," he insists. Instead, he emphasizes the KaBOOM!
philosophy, and projects it onto the corporation, showing them how they can
involve their
officers, employees, vendors and clients in a team-building effort. Corporate
sponsors
emphasize that Hammond is responsive to their needs, mostly by creating a
direct,
efficient mechanism for them to invest in. A playground is a material thing,
with a
limited timeline. When corporate volunteers get involved, they can actually see
the
project through to completion, get the satisfaction of a job well done, and then
comfortably reach out to another neighborhood to repeat the process.
In 1997, KaBOOM! established a partnership with CNA, one of
the
nation's largest insurers. Not only has CNA committed to build 50
playgrounds, they
have also provided KaBOOM! with everything from advertising support to office
supplies.
The partnership appears to be effective because both sides have responded
directly to each
others' needs. CNA can deliver not only money, but a network of offices in
major
cities around the country that will contribute volunteer labor. KaBOOM! gives
CNA an
efficient way of giving to the many communities in which they operate. It also
allows them
to build relationships with their local vendors, clients and agents, by
involving them in
the build.
According to Sarada-Amani, executive director of the CNA
Foundation, the
company contacted KaBOOM! because they were looking for a community-based team
building
project for celebration they were holding in honor of the company's
centennial.
Although the company executives, who represented offices nationwide, were
initially not
enthusiastic about going anywhere at 6am, 700 CNA employees arrived at the
selected site:
the Bryn Mawr School in Chicago's South Shore neighborhood. With so many
volunteers,
the employees built two playgrounds, painted fences, painted a map of the United
States on
the ground, and even ripped-up moldy carpeting inside the school. At the end of
the day,
the feeling was "so positive and energizing" said Amani, "that
the officers
all wanted a project for their cities." Having tapped into the resources of
a
nationwide executive workforce, KaBOOM! had created a huge network of CNA
resources,
volunteers and organizers, who pledged to build 25 playgrounds nationwide, and
25 more in
Chicago. CNA, according to Amani, will receive substantial benefits as well.
These
include:
a solid, reliable mechanism for employees who have been
asking for ways
to volunteer;
decentralization of their philanthropic efforts;
excellent team-building opportunities;
extension of client, business partners and vendor
relationships;
enormous media opportunities.
Lessons Learned: Making a link to a company having a
conference
or anniversary is a good way to bring a large group into the process, according
to
Hammond, who has convinced a number of large companies to build a playground as
a part of
a celebration, and then watched the ripple effect through the regional
management.
"Strategy number one is to bring a potential partner to a build," said
Hammond.
"It is important that they see it, experience it, and understand the PR and
marketing
behind it." He also notes that sponsors begin to see playgrounds as a
necessity, not
as a luxury.
Hammond attributes KaBOOM!'s successful corporate partnerships to other factors as well, including:
providing direct, hands-on projects in which to
invest;
providing a replicable product;
achievable goals within a defined timeline;
strong community component;
providing a mechanism that allows corporations to link with
vendors and
clients;
since maintenance funding is built into the contract, funders
know that
the project will continue after their commitment is over.
Contact
KaBOOM!, 202-659-0215
(Spring 1998)
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