FUNDRAISING FOR DANCE & DRILL TEAMS
Costumes, choreography, comp fees, travel — dance costs big-program money on a small-team roster. The fix is depth, not headcount: every dancer's full network, asked personally.
WHY IT WORKS
Small teams lose at product sales. They win at personal asks.
Thirty dancers can't move enough cookie dough to matter — the margins need volume you don't have. But thirty dancers each reaching 25 real contacts is 750 personal asks from people who love them. That's how the Rouse Royals — 38 dancers — out-raise product sales every single fall.
Each dancer has a personal fundraising page with their photo and story, plus one-tap sharing and automatic follow-ups to everyone on their list.
Set a real goal — solo fees, nationals travel, costumes — and track per-dancer progress against it. The teams that run this well raise more per member every year.
The Blitz Process runs about five weeks start to finish. One kickoff night, automated reminders, done before competition season eats the calendar.
PROVEN IN THE FIELD
A 38-dancer team, nine straight seasons, documented.
ROUSE ROYALS · DANCE TEAM · LEANDER, TX
$126,965 across nine seasons
The Royals have run one pledge blitz every fall since 2017 — never missing a season, with participation between 81% and 98%. Per-dancer results climbed from $129 in 2017 to $587 in 2025, growing every single year since 2021.
Read moreSAME SCHOOL, SAME PLAY
Works at 38 kids and 250
The Royals share a campus with the Rouse Band — the platform's all-time leader at $994K. Same school, same process: it works for the 250-kid band and the 38-kid dance team.
Read moreBEYOND THE CAMPAIGN
Two more streams, all year long.
Every campaign also includes a corporate sponsor page for local businesses and a monthly giving club for your most loyal supporters — steady money that keeps coming between campaigns, with students earning incentive credit for both.
That's almost exactly the Rouse Royals' roster — and they raised $22,286 in 2025 alone. Small teams win on depth: every dancer's network, asked personally, with automatic follow-up.
Both. If your team has dancers, parents, and costs, the process is the same — the platform doesn't care whether the roster belongs to a school district or a studio.
Most teams run early fall, before competition season takes over. It's about five weeks end to end, and the money lands before the big comp-fee invoices do.
Also serving: Cheer Squads · Color Guard · Middle Schools
Free to start. The Royals' playbook is published — go run it.
Start your fundraiser