Comparing school fundraising companies is hard because every vendor markets itself differently, and headline commission rates rarely tell you what a school actually keeps. The fairest approach is to ignore the marketing and score every option against the same yardstick.
This guide gives you a practical 9-point framework you can apply to any vendor, plus a side-by-side look at the major fundraiser categories so you can compare on net dollars and effort rather than gross sales.
How to compare companies
Quick answer: To compare school fundraising companies, score each one on the same criteria: profit kept, student participation, ease of setup, volunteer workload, parent experience, educational value, online tools, support, and repeatability. Compare net dollars and effort, not headline commission rates. The tables below give you a ready framework.
The fairest way to compare fundraising companies is to ignore the marketing and score every option against the same yardstick. Below is a practical framework you can apply to any vendor, plus a side-by-side look at the major fundraiser categories.
Compare by category, not just by brand
| Criteria | Read-A-Thon | Product sales | Event-based | Online crowdfunding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profit kept | 75-80% | 40-50% | Varies | Varies (minus fees) |
| Volunteer workload | Low | High | High | Medium |
| Products to manage | No | Yes | Sometimes | No |
| Cash to collect | No | Yes | Sometimes | No |
| Educational value | Yes | No | Sometimes | No |
| Repeatable yearly | Yes | Sometimes | No | Sometimes |
| Setup time | ~10 min | 2-4 weeks | Weeks | Hours-days |
Read-A-Thon Insight: When you score companies on net dollars and workload rather than gross sales or headline percentage, no-sell and reading-based models tend to move up the list - they avoid the product costs and logistics that quietly erode product-sale results.
A fair scorecard
The 9-point comparison framework
Rate every company 1-5 on each line, then total. Weight profit and workload most heavily.
- Profit percentage - share of dollars the school keeps
- Participation - how many families realistically join
- Ease of setup - time and effort to launch
- Volunteer workload - inventory, money, delivery
- Parent experience - would families recommend it
- Educational value - does it support learning
- Online donation tools - pages, sharing, processing
- Support - help before and during the campaign
- Reporting - clear, real-time visibility
For the full buyer's context behind each criterion, see the school fundraising companies guide. To dig into profit specifically, see high-profit fundraising companies.
