Ads and fundraising workflows

What this page helps you do

You can thank supporters, run a promotion, or share a fundraising callout without talking over the play and without switching away from the game camera. The goal: keep the action on screen while your message shows up in a clean, broadcast-style way.

These workflows are designed for first-time streamers: fast to set up, easy to repeat all season, and simple enough to run with one hand.

Pick a message style (quick guide)

  • Lower-third message (best for quick shoutouts): “Tonight’s stream is supported by…”, “Snack bar is open”.
  • Rotating sponsor/promo (best for season-long support): cycles through names/logos every X seconds.
  • Full-screen during breaks (best for halftime or between periods): QR code, donation link, raffle details.
  • Scoreboard-adjacent placement (best for “always-on” support): a small “Sponsored by…” near your scoreboard area.
If you’re unsure: start with a lower-third. It’s the least distracting and looks “pro” even with a simple message.

Workflow 1: Quick supporter shoutout (10–15 seconds)

Use this when a family donates, a local business sponsors a game, or you want to share a short announcement without interrupting play.

Keep it to one sentence so it’s readable on phones:

  • “Thanks to Riverside Dental for supporting the Tigers!”
  • “Fundraiser night: concessions support the team”
  • “Donate: team.link/donate
Write it the way you’d say it out loud. Short, friendly, and easy to read.

Display the message for about 10–15 seconds, then hide it. Viewers will catch it, and you won’t cover the action for long.

Good moments: after a score, during a stoppage, between batters, or when the ball is out of play.

Avoid showing messages during the most important moments (penalty shots, free throws, bases loaded, final seconds). Even a small graphic can frustrate viewers if it blocks the key action.

Workflow 2: Season-long rotating sponsors (set once, run all season)

This is the “set it and forget it” option: add multiple supporters and let them rotate automatically so you don’t have to remember to trigger each one.

Collect what you need for each sponsor:

  • Name (required)
  • Logo (optional, but nice)
  • One short line of text (optional): “10% off with code TIGERS”
Keep logos simple and high-contrast. Tiny detailed logos can look blurry on mobile screens.

Pick one:

  • One at a time every 20–30 seconds (cleanest)
  • Small strip that stays on-screen (least effort)

A good starting point is 20–30 seconds per sponsor with gentle transitions. If you’re streaming mostly to phones, slower is usually better.

Parent-friendly rule: if you notice the sponsors more than the game, it’s too much. Make it subtle and readable.

Workflow 3: Fundraising callout that doesn’t interrupt the broadcast

Fundraising works best when it’s easy to act on (QR code or short link) and shown when gameplay is naturally paused.

Don’t overload the screen. Choose one:

  • Scan a QR code
  • Visit a short link (example: team.link/donate)
  • Text a keyword (example: “Text TIGERS to 55555”)

Best times for a bigger fundraising card:

  • Pre-game countdown
  • Timeouts / injuries / long huddles
  • Half-time / between periods / between innings
  • Post-game “thanks for watching”
  • Use a large QR code with clear white space
  • Use 5–7 words max above it: “Support the team: scan to donate”
  • Show it for 15–25 seconds during breaks
Don’t rely on tiny URLs. If it can’t be read on a small phone screen, assume viewers won’t type it correctly.

Workflow 4: Promotions that feel helpful (not spammy)

Promotions work when they’re relevant to families watching youth sports.

  • Team nights: “Pizza night after the game — mention Tigers”
  • Concessions reminder: “Snack bar open — supports the team”
  • Local sponsor deal: “10% off this weekend for Tigers families”
Use “support the team” language. Families respond better when they know the impact, not just the deal.

Make messages look broadcast-quality (without design skills)

  • Keep it short: one idea per message.
  • Use high contrast: light text on a dark bar, or dark text on a light bar.
  • Stay out of the action: place messages along the bottom/top edges.
  • Use consistent wording: “Supported by…”, “Tonight’s sponsor…”, “Donate: …”
If you’re already using a scoreboard, treat sponsor messages like “extras.” Your scoreboard should remain the most important on-screen graphic during play.

Sample message templates (copy/paste)

  • “Thanks to [Name] for supporting [Team]!”
  • “Tonight’s stream supported by [Business]
  • “Shoutout to [Family Name] for a team donation—thank you!”
  • “Support the team: scan to donate
  • “Raffle tickets available—proceeds support [Team]
  • “Concessions open—thank you for helping the kids!”
  • [Business]: Tigers families get [deal]
  • “Post-game special at [Business] tonight”
  • “Mention [Team] to support the program”

FAQ

Not if you keep messages short, use a small placement (like a lower-third), and avoid showing them during critical plays. Most viewers appreciate sponsor support when it looks clean and doesn’t cover the game.

A simple rhythm is: one short message every few minutes, plus a longer fundraising callout during breaks. If anyone complains it’s too much, slow it down.

Set up a rotating sponsor list and let it run. Then use quick one-off shoutouts only when something special happens (a new donation, a sponsor in the stands, fundraiser reminder).

Related pages

Where sponsor messages can appear and how to keep them readable and respectful. Add sponsors quickly and show them in a professional way.