So, for a while, I have been asking people to structurally support charity. Basically, charities give the company I work for big money to find people to support the charity, and I get paid to walk around the streets/city centre to find people that want to support charity. Each person I find gives the company around 150 euro. Every half assed student can find 2-5 people while doing this work instead of MCdonnalds as part time job. A good salesman can find up to 20 people the day. (I myself have an average of 5, and I make around 160 euro per day, while the company gets the 600 euro not used to pay my wage) The average score company wide is 3.8. There is a shit ton of money to be made in this industry. My boss once worked for a similair organisation and thought ''I can organise this better'' And I myself think I can do it just as wel. Problem: The dutch market has been saturated, with people asking to support a charity for 10 euro the month on every corner, and the average dutch household supporting charities for 60 euro the month alreay. In other euro country's I have not yet seen other professional fund raisers, so here is my question ''Where else can take this concept?''
What county's/regions are wealthy, and more importent, socialist/left enough, to want to support every charity that has a good story teller selling it?
>>1613607
> Supporting a charity
No. Never. Not when they pay people like you with the money that should go to good causes. If I want to feel better about myself, I'll spend the money on something I enjoy personally.
You've been banned from the streets for a reason, cuck.
>>1613736
Yeah, but with shell organisations the statistics can easily be circumvented.
Poor example: "Only a symbolic accountan's fee is withdrawn. The work of this charity is on a for free basis, and 99 cents on the dollar go to the Wildlife Trust Foundation."
What the wildlife trust foundation spends its money on? Well, 25% can go to actual projects that protect animals, 75% can go to another charity that uses 100% on salaries.
I knew you were dutch. Probably from groningen too. These people are cancerous as fuck and annoying as hell. I hope youre studying something which requires you to sell stuff face to face or by phone.
I knew you were dutch. Probably from groningen too. These people are cancerous as fuck and annoying as hell. I hope youre studying something which requires you to sell stuff face to face or by phone. Fucking cancer dogs always bothering me with your cliche salesmen 'tactics'.
>>1613744
Even what goes to the good cause usually just perpetuates the problem, so no. I don't do charities. I'll just spend 'only' £2 a month on something I enjoy. Jam doughnuts, for example. I enjoy those, and I get warm fuzzy feelings by sharing them with my co-workers.
>>1613823
Not Groningen, but Nijmegen is just as crowded. I study agriculture. But I do not want a loan...
>>1615110
My average amount is 13 euro something. I target people with blue collar jobs, the people that shop for expensive watches and good suits. If you budget 2 pounds for charity and leisure it's only logic you wont support anything.
>>1613736
You realize that without this industry there wont be a steady income for charitys, and thus they would fail? It's a necessary evil.