How to Sell Spirit Wear and Fundraising Apparel for Your Group

Profile picture of Ally PattersonPosted by Ally Patterson
building an online store

Spirit wear builds community and raises real money, but only if families can actually find and buy it. Here's how to run an apparel fundraiser that stays organized from first sale to final order.

Why Spirit Wear Works as a Fundraiser

Most fundraisers ask people to give something up. Spirit wear asks people to get something they actually want.

That's why apparel campaigns tend to outperform other formats in terms of family participation. Buying a hoodie in your school's colors or a t-shirt with your team name on it feels like showing support, not making a donation. The barrier to saying yes is low, and the item itself keeps doing the work long after the sale ends.

For booster clubs, PTAs, sports teams, and school groups, spirit wear also solves a practical problem: it generates consistent, repeatable revenue tied to something families are already proud to be part of. A well-run apparel campaign at the start of the season can fund equipment, travel, or program costs without the pressure of a single large fundraiser.

The challenge isn't getting people to want spirit wear. It's making it easy enough to buy that they actually follow through.


Choosing Your Apparel

The best spirit wear is what your community will actually wear, not the most elaborate design or the widest product range. Start focused and expand as you learn what your families respond to.

Start with one or two core items. A t-shirt and a hoodie in your school or team colors covers most of what families want. Adding too many options upfront creates inventory complexity and decision fatigue for buyers.

Choose items with broad size ranges. Youth and adult sizes let you serve the full family, not just students. If your supplier offers extended sizes, include them. Leaving people out of a spirit wear sale is a missed opportunity in both revenue and community.

Decide between custom designs and standard branding. A simple logo or team name on a quality blank is often more popular than an elaborate custom graphic. If you're working with a designer, keep the artwork flexible enough to use across multiple item types.

Factor in your margin. The goal is to raise money, not just cover costs. Know your per-item cost before you set your sale price and build in enough margin to make the campaign worth running. A general rule: aim for at least 30 to 50 percent margin on each item.

Consider a limited sale window. Closing your store after two or three weeks creates urgency without requiring you to hold inventory. Families who know the window is closing tend to act faster than those who assume they can buy anytime.

Genius Tip

Survey your community before you launch. A quick sign up asking families which items they'd buy — and at what price — takes five minutes to set up and can save you from ordering the wrong thing at the wrong price point.

Setting Up Your Online Store

An online store removes the single biggest obstacle in most spirit wear campaigns: the friction of collecting orders and money from dozens of families at once.

Instead of paper forms, cash in envelopes, or spreadsheets tracking who ordered what size, families shop on their own schedule and pay at checkout. You get a clean order report when the sale closes.

Here's what a well-configured store includes:

Items with variations. Each product should have its own size and color options, with individual quantities tracked per variation. That way a medium youth tee and a large adult tee are managed separately, and you'll never oversell a size that's already gone.

Inventory limits per item. Set the quantity available for each item or variation before you open the store. When a size sells out, it shows as sold out automatically. No manual tracking, no overselling, no awkward emails to families after the fact.

A sale window with start and stop times. Scheduling your store to open and close at specific times lets you promote the sale in advance and gives every family fair access. Families who arrive before the store opens see a countdown, which builds anticipation rather than confusion.

Multiple payment options at checkout. Credit and debit cards cover most buyers, but offering additional options like Apple Pay, Google Pay, and eCheck means fewer people drop off at the payment step.

A simple, shareable link. Your store should live at a clean URL you can paste into a newsletter, text message, or school communication without anyone needing an account to shop.

One link. No app required.

SignUpGenius Online Stores give your community a clean, mobile-friendly storefront to shop from any device. Families click, choose their items, and pay without creating an account or downloading anything.

See how online stores work

Managing Orders and Inventory

The administrative side of a spirit wear sale is where most organizers lose time. A few setup decisions upfront make order management much simpler once the sale is live.

Track inventory by variation, not just by item. If you're selling a hoodie in four sizes and three colors, that's twelve distinct inventory combinations to manage. A store that tracks at the variation level handles this automatically so you don't have to cross-reference a spreadsheet.

Use a waitlist for high-demand items. If certain sizes or styles sell out quickly, a waitlist captures the names and contact information of families who missed out. That data tells you exactly what to reorder and who to notify when more becomes available.

Keep your order report current. Pull your order report before you submit to your supplier so you're working from final numbers, not a snapshot from midway through the sale. Most stores surface this data in real time, so there's no waiting until the sale closes to see where you stand.

Separate fulfillment from distribution. If your supplier ships directly to buyers, your job after the sale closes is minimal. If you're doing in-person distribution at a game or meeting, a clean order report organized by name and item makes that process fast and accurate.

Fulfillment Method Best For Key Consideration
Direct ship to buyers Larger groups, geographically spread families Collect shipping info at checkout; consider free local pickup option to reduce shipping costs
Bulk ship to organizer Teams or groups with regular in-person gatherings Requires a distribution plan; clean order report by name is essential
Local pickup only Small groups, single-location organizations Simplest for the organizer; may limit participation from families who can't pick up in person

Promoting Your Spirit Wear Sale

Opening a store is the easy part. Getting families to actually visit and buy requires consistent, well-timed communication.

Announce before you open. Give families a heads-up two to three days before the store goes live. Tell them what's available, what it costs, and when the sale closes. An early announcement lets people plan and reduces the "I didn't know about it" response after the window closes.

Share one link everywhere. Put the same store link in your email newsletter, your group text thread, your school's communication platform, and any social media your group uses. The more places the link appears, the fewer excuses people have for missing it.

Send a midpoint reminder. A quick message halfway through your sale window catches families who saw the first announcement but didn't act. Keep it short: the link, what's left, and when it closes.

Create urgency near the close. A reminder 24 to 48 hours before the store closes consistently drives a spike in purchases. Mention any sizes that are running low to push buyers who are on the fence.

Show off what you're selling. If you have a sample item or a mockup image, include it in your communications. Families are more likely to buy when they can see what the finished product looks like.

Genius Tip

Use discount codes strategically. Offering a small discount to families who buy in the first 48 hours rewards early action and gives you a clearer picture of demand before you commit to final quantities with your supplier.

Fulfillment and Follow-Up

Once your sale closes, the work shifts from selling to delivering. A clean process here protects your reputation for future campaigns.

Close the store before you submit your order. It sounds obvious, but late orders create real problems with suppliers. Set your stop time and hold to it. Families who miss the window can go on a waitlist for the next round.

Reconcile your order report before you submit. Check item counts and variation totals against what your supplier needs. One error at submission can mean wrong items, wrong sizes, or delays that frustrate your whole community.

Communicate a delivery timeline. As soon as you know when items will arrive, tell your families. People are more patient when they have a specific date to expect rather than a vague "soon."

Follow up with visitors who didn't buy. If your store collects visitor data, you have a list of people who were interested but didn't complete a purchase. A simple follow-up message before your next sale can convert some of them and expand your buyer list over time.

Run a quick debrief before your next campaign. Note what sold out, what didn't move, what families asked about, and what you'd change about the timing or promotion. Spirit wear campaigns tend to improve significantly from the first year to the second when organizers document what they learned.

Ready to run your spirit wear sale?

Set up your online store, share one link, and let families shop on their own schedule. No cash, no spreadsheets, no chasing orders.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best way to sell spirit wear for a school or team? An online store is the most practical approach for most groups. It eliminates paper order forms, cash collection, and manual inventory tracking by letting families shop and pay on their own. You get a clean order report when the sale closes and never have to chase anyone down for payment.

How do I create group apparel for a fundraising event? Start by selecting one or two core items in your group's colors, set a sale price that covers your cost and leaves margin for your fundraiser, and open an online store with a defined sale window. Share the link through email, text, and any other channels your community uses. When the window closes, submit your final order to the supplier.

Where can I find apparel for fundraising? Custom apparel suppliers like Bonfire, Custom Ink, and similar services let you design and order branded items in bulk. For the storefront and payment collection side, an online store platform handles orders and inventory so you're not managing a spreadsheet.

Do I need to hold inventory to sell spirit wear? Not necessarily. Many groups run print-on-demand campaigns where items are produced and shipped only after the sale closes. This eliminates inventory risk entirely but typically reduces your per-item margin. If your supplier allows it, a limited pre-order window with no minimum stock is often the easiest path for first-time campaigns.

How do I price spirit wear for a fundraiser? Start with your per-item cost from the supplier, then add your target margin. Most groups aim for 30 to 50 percent above cost. Factor in any platform fees or shipping costs you plan to absorb so your net revenue matches your fundraising goal. Pricing too low leaves money on the table; pricing too high reduces participation.

Can I offer different sizes and colors in the same store? Yes. A well-configured online store lets you set up item variations with individual sizes, colors, prices, and inventory quantities tracked separately. When a specific size or color sells out, it shows as sold out automatically without affecting other variations.

How long should a spirit wear sale stay open? Two to three weeks is a practical window for most groups. It's long enough for families to see multiple reminders and act at their own pace, but short enough to create urgency and keep your order timeline manageable. A clearly communicated close date consistently drives more purchases than an open-ended sale.

What happens if I run out of a popular size? If you set up inventory limits per variation in your store, sizes that sell out will display as sold out automatically. A waitlist feature lets interested buyers add their names so you can contact them if you reorder. That data also tells you exactly what to order more of next time.

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