Photos and quotes describing why you've joined Challenge Walk MS 2015 in Door County were due Friday.
If you missed the deadline and want to be included in the weekend displays and special event keepsake, please submit a photo of yourself along with one or two short sentences describing why
you’ve joined Challenge Walk MS to Nichole Shaffer at nichole.shaffer@nmss.org this week. (Photo must be 1 MB or larger, headshot
preferred.)
If you already sent in your photo and quote but didn’t hear back from the Wisconsin Chapter, please resubmit your photo and quote to Nichole at nichole.shaffer@nmss.org.
Monday, August 31, 2015
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Is it a Yard Sale or a Really Inexpensive Department Store? Come See For Yourself.
by Jackie Piper
There are so many ways to raise money for the fight against
MS. If you need ideas to help you toward your fundraising goal, checkout this link.
My team, the MS WARRIORS, has used a yard sale to help us
raise money for Challenge Walk every year. I'd like to share some
"Hot Tips" for a successful and easy yard sale that we've
learned over the years. Here are some things that work for us:
#1 Have an awesome sign. The title of this
post is one idea for a sign I saw on Pinterest. However, we like customers to
know the WHY of our yard sale, so make sure people know you are raising
money for a great cause.
#2 Have an awesome organizer in charge. This is
my daughter, Annie. Trust me, "Organized" is her middle name.
#3 Try to collect some larger items from family and
friends. Furniture sells! BIG ITEMS = BIG BUCKS.
#4 Organize (there's that word again!) and price stuff
by table, not by item. Whew!! This saves you a ton of work and customers
really like it. Also, don't haggle. We gently remind the cheapskates...er
bargainers...that the money is for charity!
#5 Highlight your really awesome junk items. I mean who can resist a "Gone With The Wind" ornament??? (It
sold, by the way!)
#6 Have a "Fill the Bag" deal at the end of your sale. Our community has a Garage Sale Facebook page that lets us communicate in the moment with customers. We used the fill-the-bag-for-a-dollar approach for the last hour of our yard sale. You really don't want that stuff back, right?! And guess what? Because it's for a great cause, people will sometimes give you more than a buck!
#7 Pray for no rain. Okay, it's out of your hands, but have a
contingency plan. Like an adorable child with a bright orange umbrella to show people that rain won't close you down!
Have a great sale!!
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Color My World
by Jackie Piper
Only 45 days until
we step off for the 2015 Challenge Walk MS in Door County.
I’m thinking that
there are not enough training days left. I’m thinking it’s time to immerse
myself in the fundraising. I’m thinking I need to go get a new pair of walking
shoes. I’m thinking lots of Challenge Walk-related thoughts.
But, mostly I’m
thinking about orange.
As I train for the
Challenge Walk and trek all over my smallish city, I try to always wear an
orange shirt. I am participating in my 6th Challenge Walk, so I have many
options when it comes to orange shirts. But, does color really matter? Ask the
people involved in the breast cancer movement, who took the color pink and
raised awareness around the world and rallied people to their cause. That sort
of awareness translated into funding for research that has been instrumental in
changing the outcomes for people with breast cancer.
I’d love to make
“orange” the new “pink”.
I’d love to have
the world identify the color orange with the movement to end MS forever. It can
happen. It starts with a t-shirt, a hat,
a backpack, or ....an umbrella.
Last fall, while
vacationing in Europe for my 40th anniversary, I pulled out my orange Challenge
Walk MS umbrella to walk the rainy streets of a small Austrian town. The next
day, I offered my arm to another woman from America as we walked down the steps of our tour boat. She asked, “Are you the lady with the orange umbrella?” I said, “Yes, I am.” She replied very simply, “You walk for me.”
So let’s color our
world.
Get your “orange”
on.
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