How to Get Sponsors for Your Sports Club in 2026 (Step-by-Step Guide)
If you’re trying to figure out how to get sponsors for a sports club and it keeps turning into a massive project… you’re not alone.
Here’s the Grassroots approach we teach clubs to get momentum fast:
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Build a list of 20 local businesses
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Reach out to 3 this week
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Follow up properly
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When they say “Yep, send me something” → send a 1-page sponsor info sheet
No fancy decks. No awkward begging. Just a simple system that works for busy volunteers.
What is sports club sponsorship? (And what it isn’t)
Sponsorship is a partnership where a business supports your club (cash or in-kind) and your club helps them get value back—visibility, community goodwill, and real local connection.
Key terms (plain English)
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Cash sponsorship: money
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In-kind sponsorship: goods or services instead of money (printing, signage, equipment, food, services)
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Hybrid: a mix of both
What sponsorship is NOT
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It’s not begging
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It’s not “we’ll chuck your logo on a banner and hope for the best”
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It’s not only for big clubs
Quick action (5 minutes)
Write your one-liner:
“We’re a community [sport] club in [area] and we’re raising support for [goal].”
Then decide what you’re open to:
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Cash
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In-kind
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Either
Why local businesses sponsor sports clubs
Most local businesses sponsor because:
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They want to be seen as a good local business
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They want more customers
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They want to support families and community
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They like being connected to something positive
The mindset shift
Your club isn’t “taking”. You’re offering:
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Access to a local community
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Trust (people listen to clubs)
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Stories + visibility that feel real (not ads)
Quick action
List 5 local business types that match your club:
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Cafés
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Physios
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Tradies
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Real estate
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Gyms
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Clinics
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Accountants
Then pick one easy win business you already know.
Get sponsor-ready in 30 minutes
You don’t need a full proposal to start sponsor conversations. You just need to look organised.
Here’s the minimum:
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Club name confirmed (as you want it written publicly)
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Club logo saved (PNG is fine)
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Best sponsor contact person (name + role)
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Best contact email + phone
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Website and/or social link ready to share
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Rough numbers (estimates are fine): members, teams/programs, home games/events, social followers
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10–20 good club photos in one folder (juniors, volunteers, game day, community)
Build a list of 20 local businesses to approach
This is where most clubs win or lose. A good list makes outreach easy.
Where to find sponsor targets
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Businesses already connected to members/parents
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Local main street businesses
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Businesses near your ground/venue
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Businesses your members already use
How to prioritise your list
Mark each business as:
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Hot: warm intro / existing relationship
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Warm: some connection / known locally
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Cold: no connection yet
Your goal is simple: build the list of 20. You don’t need to contact them all at once.
"Want the business tracker template?"
Grab the free resource pack HERE
How to ask businesses for sponsorship (scripts that work)
Your job at this stage is to start a conversation, not “sell a package”.
Best approach order:
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Warm intro (best)
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In-person (great)
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Phone (fast)
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Email (fine)
Phone / in-person script (30 seconds)
“Hey [Name], I’m [Your Name] from [Club]. We’re a community [sport] club in [catchment] with around [#] [players/members/families]. This season we’re working on [goal], and we’re looking for a couple of local partners.
I thought of you because [why fit]. Would you be open to a quick 10-minute chat to see if there’s a simple way we can help bring you more local customers, and you can help us with support this season?”
Email script
Subject: Local partnership idea — [Club] x [Business]
Hey [Name],
I’m [Your Name] from [Club] in [catchment]. We’re a community sports club with around [#] [players/members/families]. This season we’re focused on [goal].
I’m reaching out because [why fit]. Would you be open to a quick 10-minute chat to see if a simple partnership could make sense? We’re open to cash support, in-kind support, or a mix—whatever’s easiest.
Cheers, [Name][Role] | [Club][Phone] | [Email]
Warm intro text (to a connector)
“Hey [Connector], quick one—do you know [Owner/Manager] at [Business]? We’re looking for 1–2 local partners for [Club] this season. If you’re comfortable, could you intro us? Totally fine if not.
If they’re open, I’ll keep it simple—just a 10-minute chat to see if there’s a fit.”
How to follow up on sponsorship (the 24-hour + 7-day rule)
Most sponsors aren’t a “no”. They’re busy.
Follow-up rules:
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If they ask for info → send within 24 hours
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If no reply → follow up in 7 days
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If “not now” → book a date to check back
A simple habit that wins sponsors:
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Do 15 minutes of follow-ups twice a week
Common mistakes to avoid (so you don’t waste 4 weeks)
If you only avoid a few mistakes, avoid these ones:
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No clear goal: asking for money before you’re clear on what you’re funding (no goal = no urgency).
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Starting cold: spraying heaps of cold emails with no local connection (start warm: parents, members, mates, suppliers).
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No clear next step: “let me know” kills deals—ask for a 10-minute chat.
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Sending a 10-page proposal too early: send the 1-pager first, earn the meeting.
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Not following up: most “no’s” are just busy—use your 24-hour + 7-day rule.
When they say “Yep, send me something”
Don’t send a 10-page proposal. Send one page.
Your 1-page sponsor info sheet should include:
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Who you are (2–3 sentences)
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Quick community snapshot (members/teams/home games/social)
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What you’re funding this season
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Cash / in-kind / hybrid options
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What you can offer (only what you can actually deliver)
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Clear next step: 10-minute chat
Free Sponsorship Resource Pack (templates + tracker)
Want the copy/paste templates so you can move faster?
Download the free Grassroots Sponsorship Resource Pack, including:
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Sponsor-ready checklist
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20-business sponsorship tracker (with follow-up dates)
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30-second pitch builder (phone + email + warm intro)
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1-page sponsor info sheet template
Button text: Get the Free Sponsorship Resource Pack HERE
After you download it, we’ll also send you the link to our Skool community if you want the next step-by-step system for packages, pricing, a simple 1-page proposal, meeting flow, and closing the deal (without feeling salesy).
FAQ: How to get sponsors for a sports club
How do you ask a business to sponsor a sports club?
Keep it simple: share who you are, what you’re funding, why they’re a fit, and ask for a quick 10-minute chat. Your goal is a conversation—not a perfect pitch.
What do you offer sponsors at a grassroots club?
Start with what you can actually deliver: a thank-you post, a sponsor feature, mentions at game day, signage (if allowed), and a genuine connection to local families.
What is in-kind sponsorship?
In-kind sponsorship is when a business supports your club with goods or services instead of cash—like printing, signage, food, equipment, or trade services.
How much should a sports club sponsorship cost?
There’s no single number. It depends on your club size, what you can deliver, and what the business values. Start with a conversation, then match the support level to what you’re funding.
How many businesses should we approach for sponsorship?
Start with 20 on your list, contact 3 this week, and keep going weekly. Consistency beats a one-off sponsorship “push”.
How do you follow up without being annoying?
Use clear timeframes: send info within 24 hours if requested, follow up in 7 days if quiet, and if it’s “not now”, book a date to check back.
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