A clear plan for bigger giving—without making guests feel pressured
The paddle raise (also called Fund-a-Need, special appeal, or live appeal) is often the single most profitable moment of a fundraising gala—because it invites guests to give directly to mission, not “win” an item. When it’s designed well, it feels inspiring, fast-paced, and inclusive. When it’s messy, it can drag down the room’s energy and leave dollars on the table.
Below is a practical, event-night-ready framework used by seasoned benefit auctioneers and fundraising teams to help maximize participation, protect momentum, and capture every pledge cleanly—especially for organizations hosting galas and benefit dinners across Nampa, Boise, and the greater Treasure Valley.
What a paddle raise really is (and why it outperforms “more auction items”)
A paddle raise is a structured moment where the emcee/auctioneer calls donation amounts in descending order (for example: $10,000, $5,000, $2,500…) and guests raise paddles to pledge at the level that matches their capacity. Unlike live auction lots, everyone can participate—even if they never bid.
Why it works
The “3-Part Formula” that consistently raises more
1) One compelling need (not five)
The best Fund-a-Need asks are simple: one program, one gap, one outcome. Guests should understand in a single sentence what their giving does (e.g., “Provide 3 months of counseling for a family,” or “Fund transportation for 10 medical visits”).
2) A pledge ladder with meaning at each level
Donation levels should be tied to outcomes whenever possible. This keeps the room focused and reduces “sticker shock.” Many fundraising teams also seed the top with a few pre-committed lead gifts to set the pace and normalize generosity.
3) Fast capture (so you don’t lose pledges)
The highest-risk moment is not the ask—it’s the capture. If guests don’t know how their pledge becomes a donation (or they fear being charged twice), participation drops. A clean workflow using event-night software, pledge cards, spotters, or a combination can protect your revenue.
A practical paddle raise run-of-show (that keeps the room energized)
| Moment | What to do | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mission moment (2–4 min) | A short story, client voice, or impact video; end with a clear need. | Emotion + clarity sets the stage for confident giving. |
| Instructions (30–45 sec) | Explain how pledges are recorded (software, card, QR, table captain). | Removes hesitation and prevents double-entry confusion. |
| Start high (60–90 sec) | Call $10,000 / $5,000 / $2,500 with confidence; keep it moving. | Establishes momentum and social proof early. |
| Middle levels (2–3 min) | Tie each amount to impact (“This funds…”). Acknowledge donors promptly. | Keeps the ask meaningful—not just numbers. |
| Participation levels (2–3 min) | $250 / $100 / $50; invite “any amount” at the end. | Often the highest number of donors happens here. |
| Last call (20–30 sec) | Explain how to give after the moment (QR, pledge card, checkout add-on). | Captures late givers and reduces “I missed it” regret. |
Quick “Did you know?” event-night facts
Breakdown: making the ask feel inspiring (not awkward)
Use language that invites, not pressures
Guests respond best when the invitation is clear and respectful: “If you’re able,” “at a level that’s meaningful for you,” and “every gift matters.” A professional benefit auctioneer keeps urgency high while keeping tone warm and mission-centered.
Seed the top (quietly) to build confidence
A common best practice is to secure one or more leadership commitments before event night. When the first ask lands and paddles go up, the rest of the room relaxes—giving becomes “what we do here,” not “should I be the first?”
Make giving easy for “I came as a guest” attendees
In Treasure Valley events, many guests attend because a friend hosted their table. They may not feel like “insiders” yet. Calling inclusive levels ($250, $100, $50, and “any amount”) with genuine gratitude helps convert guests into donors—without singling anyone out.
Local angle: what works especially well in Nampa & the Treasure Valley
In Nampa and across the Treasure Valley, many gala audiences include a mix of long-time community supporters, business owners, and first-time attendees. That blend is a strength—if your program is paced well. Keep the appeal tight, the impact concrete, and the checkout process smooth.
Treasure Valley-friendly tips
Planning a gala or benefit auction? Get event-night strategy support.
Kevin Troutt is a second-generation benefit auctioneer based in Idaho, helping nonprofits run high-energy, mission-first fundraising auctions nationwide—supported by practical consulting and event-night software solutions that protect momentum and capture every pledge.
FAQ: Paddle Raise & Fund-a-Need at fundraising galas
How many donation levels should we include?
Most events do best with 6–9 levels total, ending with an “any amount” option. Too many levels slows the pace; too few can leave out key giving capacities.
Should the paddle raise happen before or after the live auction?
It depends on your room and run-of-show, but many galas place the paddle raise after a strong mission moment and when attention is high—often before late-night fatigue sets in. Your benefit auctioneer can help choose the best placement based on audience and program timing.
Will Fund-a-Need reduce what people spend in the live auction?
In many rooms, guests arrive with a rough “giving budget.” A well-structured event aligns the live auction and the appeal so they feel complementary: one is a fun buying moment, the other is a direct mission investment.
What’s the cleanest way to record pledges?
The cleanest approach is the one your team can execute confidently: event-night software with paddle-number mapping, trained spotters, pledge cards collected table-by-table, or a hybrid. The key is giving guests one simple instruction and a clear backup option.
Do we need a professional benefit auctioneer for a paddle raise?
A skilled benefit auctioneer brings pacing, language, and room-read ability that can materially affect revenue—plus pre-event strategy around pledge ladders, matching gifts, and capture. If your gala is a key annual fundraiser, professional leadership often pays for itself in results and reduced stress.
Glossary (quick definitions)
Interested in a benefit auctioneer specialist for a gala fundraising auction in Nampa, Boise, or beyond? Visit Kevin Troutt or reach out via the contact page.