Thrivent Community > Chapters > Volunteer Leader… > Visibility Toolkit > Inviting Elected Officials to Your Event
 
Visibility Toolkit
 
Find Representative
Plus Minus
Find a Financial RepresentativeFind a Thrivent Financial representative in your area.
spc
    
Locate a Chapter
Plus Minus

Inviting Elected Officials to Your Event

Funding for the Thrivent Financial chapter system and programs is generated by tax exemptions granted to Thrivent Financial and other fraternal benefit societies by the U.S. Congress and all 50 state legislatures.

Congress and state legislatures are continually looking at tax-exemptions and whether they should still be granted. To help us maintain our tax-exempt status, we need elected officials to understand our impact. But, since they can't support what they don't know, it's important for elected leaders to experience firsthand how members like you work through the chapter system to help each other and your communities.

The most important thing you can do to help elected officials get to know Thrivent Financial is to invite them to large chapter events. Invite your member of Congress to volunteer with you at a Thrivent Builds with Habitat for Humanity site, or ask your state senator to speak at your chapter's annual meeting.

Taking a few simple steps to ensure your elected officials see Thrivent Financial chapters and members at work in your community can go a long way toward protecting the resources that fund the very programs that are so important to you.

Your Hosting "How-to" List

  1. Create a list of local elected officials – Include state officials (state house or assembly members, state senators, etc.) and federal officials (U.S. House and Senate members). You may even include your mayor or other local officials. Be sure the list includes both postal and email addresses and telephone numbers. Use the elected official look up for contact information.
  2. Prioritize events – The larger the event, or the greater its impact on the community, the more attractive it will be to elected officials. So, as you plan, consider inviting officials to events that will attract a large gathering of volunteers, aid a well-known community cause or have a significant impact in other ways.
  3. Send invitations – Before you send your first round of invitations, contact the officials' offices to let the staff members know you will be extending invitations from time to time.
    • Ask who in the office manages the schedule and how they prefer to receive an invitation. Note this information for future use.
    • After the initial call, send the invitations the preferred way. (For future events, the invitation can be sent without first placing a courtesy call.)
    • Include the basics, such as date, time, location and your contact information, but also try to include facts that will get the elected officials' attention, such as how many people will attend, who or what the activity benefits, if you plan to invite the media, etc. See sample invitation (PDF, 16K).
  4. Follow up – If you haven't already heard back, at least a week before the event, call to see if the officials will attend. The staff may have questions about the event, and your conversation may help an official choose to attend the chapter activity over a competing event.
  5. Send a thank-you note – A timely and sincere note thanking an official for his or her attendance at a chapter activity can seal a relationship. Include in the note any photos you took or newspaper articles you clipped that refer to the event. Don't forget this important final step.

Helpful Hints When Elected Officials Attend Your Event

  • Most elected officials appreciate opportunities to join their constituents in efforts to help build a better community. So, an elected official's attendance at a chapter activity is important recognition for the chapter and its member volunteers.
  • Expect that staff members may accompany an official, even if it was not specifically mentioned. Staff members are also an important audience for the good news of your work.
  • Determine ahead of time what you would like the official to do at the event. Is he or she there to pound nails or serve food alongside other volunteers? Should they say a few words to kick off the event?
  • Consider appointing a person to host, greet and/or escort the official during the activity. This person would ensure that the official has opportunities to meet others at the event, and get them to their designated program or volunteer spot.
  • Ensure that any media representatives who attend know that the elected official is present. Likewise, be sure to alert the official to the media's attendance as well.
  • If there is a formal program, offer an elected official the opportunity to make brief remarks, or at the very least publicly recognize the official during that program. Most elected officials will not abuse an opportunity to speak at a volunteer event by launching into an inappropriate political stump speech.

Contact for More Information

Maria Gaulin
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans
4321 N. Ballard Road
Appleton, WI 54919-0001
Phone: 920-628-3533
maria.gaulin@thrivent.com

   
Get the Adobe Acrobat Viewer! Download Adobe Acrobat Reader
(needed to view .pdf files)
   

Appleton Office:
4321 N. Ballard Road
Appleton, WI 54919-0001 USA

Minneapolis Office:
625 Fourth Avenue S.
Minneapolis, MN 55415-1624 USA

Contact Us
800-THRIVENT
(800-847-4836)

Authentication

ABOUT SSL CERTIFICATES
VeriSign

Insurance products issued or offered by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, Appleton, WI. Not all products are available in all states. Products issued by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans are available to applicants who meet membership, insurability, U.S. citizenship and residency requirements. Securities and investment advisory services are offered through Thrivent Investment Management Inc., 625 Fourth Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55415, a FINRA and SIPC member and a wholly owned subsidiary of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. Thrivent Financial representatives are registered representatives of Thrivent Investment Management Inc. They are also licensed insurance agents of Thrivent Financial.

Bank products and trust services are offered through Thrivent Financial Bank (Member FDIC, Equal Housing Lender), a wholly owned subsidiary of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. Insurance, securities, investment advisory services, and trust and investment management accounts are not deposits, are not guaranteed by Thrivent Financial Bank, are not insured by the FDIC or any other federal government agency, and may go down in value.

Last updated: September 30, 2011