In Feburary 2016 23,
Establish the criteria for entering your beauty pageant. For example, criteria can include age limits and previous pageant experience. While your beauty pageant is for kids, try to stick with an older age demographic. Older kids, such as preteens and teens, can handle the pressures of pageantry better than very young girls.
Register your pageant with the Secretary of State. You can register as either a non-profit or for-profit business. Either way, you can donate some of the money you make to a cause, if you prefer.
Get sponsors. If possible, approach businesses that are related to pageantry. These businesses can contribute funding or things like refreshments, prizes or a venue. Some possible businesses to approach include beauty salons, hotels, dance studios, modeling agencies, dry cleaners and advertising firms.
Advertise the pageant for kids. You can advertise through your sponsors or other local businesses that cater to your age demographic, through your local newspaper or using low-priced television ads. Be sure the entry fee is mentioned in the ad. The entry fee is paid by all contestants and helps you pay for the pageant.
Use other resources that are available to help get your pageant off the ground. For example, various books and online programs are available to help you start your pageant for kids. This means you don't have to do it on your own.
In Feburary 2016 23,
Showing posts with label profit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label profit. Show all posts
Tuesday, 23 February 2016
Friday, 19 February 2016
How to Organize a Cake WalkIn Feburary 2016 19,
In Feburary 2016 19,
Find the perfect location to hold the cake walk. You will need a lot of space for participants and cake tables. Select a school gymnasium, parking lot, park or community center.
Ask for cake donations from community members and local bakeries or grocery stores. You need at least ten cakes to make a decent profit.
Mark off a large square on the ground with tape or chalk. Divide the perimeter of the square into 20 smaller squares (five on each side). Number each smaller square 1 through 20.
Place scraps of paper, numbered 1 through 20 in a basket.
Sell tickets for one round of your cake walk. Ticket prices should be between 25 cents and one dollar. The more cakes you have, the more rounds you can have, so the less you need to charge.
Conducting The Cake Walk
Organize participants into a group of twenty. Every person should stand on one of the numbered squares.
Play some lively music and instruct participants to walk around the square until the music stops. Then each participant should stop on a numbered square.
Pull a numbered piece of paper from the basket. The person standing on the corresponding numbered square gets to select a cake to take home.
Give all the other participants a small consolation prize, such as cupcake, and then organize a new round, with people buying a numbered square once more. Continue until all the cakes have been sold.
In Feburary 2016 19,
Find the perfect location to hold the cake walk. You will need a lot of space for participants and cake tables. Select a school gymnasium, parking lot, park or community center.
Ask for cake donations from community members and local bakeries or grocery stores. You need at least ten cakes to make a decent profit.
Mark off a large square on the ground with tape or chalk. Divide the perimeter of the square into 20 smaller squares (five on each side). Number each smaller square 1 through 20.
Place scraps of paper, numbered 1 through 20 in a basket.
Sell tickets for one round of your cake walk. Ticket prices should be between 25 cents and one dollar. The more cakes you have, the more rounds you can have, so the less you need to charge.
Conducting The Cake Walk
Organize participants into a group of twenty. Every person should stand on one of the numbered squares.
Play some lively music and instruct participants to walk around the square until the music stops. Then each participant should stop on a numbered square.
Pull a numbered piece of paper from the basket. The person standing on the corresponding numbered square gets to select a cake to take home.
Give all the other participants a small consolation prize, such as cupcake, and then organize a new round, with people buying a numbered square once more. Continue until all the cakes have been sold.
In Feburary 2016 19,
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