Peer-to-Peer Fundraising: How to Turn Supporters Into Fundraisers
Peer-to-peer campaigns let your supporters fundraise on your behalf. Here's how to launch a P2P program with ambassador pages, social tools, and gamification.

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Your most passionate supporters have networks you can't reach. Peer-to-peer fundraising turns those supporters into active fundraisers, expanding your reach far beyond your own email list and social following.
When done well, P2P campaigns generate 3-5x the reach of organization-driven campaigns. When done poorly, they generate nothing but confusion. Here's how to do it well.
What Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Actually Is
In a P2P campaign, your supporters create their own fundraising pages linked to your organization's campaign. They set personal goals, share their pages with their networks, and collect donations on your behalf. All funds flow to your organization.
The key shift: instead of your nonprofit asking 1,000 people for donations, 50 supporters each ask 20 people. The ask comes from a friend, not an organization — and personal asks convert at dramatically higher rates.
Three P2P Campaign Models
1. Event-Based P2P
Tied to an event — a walk, run, bike ride, or challenge. Participants create fundraising pages and collect pledges from their networks.
Best for: Organizations with an active community and a natural "challenge" tie-in. Example: "Walk for Water — Set your distance goal and raise funds for clean water projects."
2. Ambassador Programs
Long-term supporters create ongoing fundraising pages and recruit donors throughout the year, not just around events.
Best for: Organizations with deeply committed volunteers who want to do more than give. Example: "Become a Reading Champion — Create your fundraiser page and help raise funds for our literacy program."
3. Time-Bound Campaigns
Short, intense campaigns (24-72 hours) where supporters compete to raise the most. Often tied to Giving Tuesday or another giving day.
Best for: Organizations with an engaged social media following and competitive supporters. Example: "24-Hour Challenge — Which team can raise the most for animal rescue?"
Setting Up Your P2P Campaign
Step 1: Define the Campaign Structure
Before recruiting fundraisers, nail down the fundamentals:
- Campaign goal: Total organization-wide target
- Individual goals: Suggested personal goals (e.g., $500 per fundraiser)
- Timeline: Start and end dates (shorter campaigns create more urgency)
- Teams or individuals: Will fundraisers compete as teams or solo?
Step 2: Create the Fundraiser Toolkit
Your supporters want to help but don't know how. Give them everything they need:
Personal fundraising page template Pre-written story that fundraisers can customize. Include placeholder text they can personalize: "I'm fundraising for [Organization] because [personal reason]."
Social media assets Pre-sized images for Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn with your campaign branding. Include sample captions they can copy and paste.
Email templates Three emails fundraisers can send to their networks:
- Launch: "I'm raising money for a cause I care about"
- Midpoint: "I'm halfway to my goal — can you help?"
- Final push: "Last chance to help me reach my goal"
Talking points A one-page FAQ so fundraisers can answer basic questions about your organization and where the money goes.
Step 3: Recruit Your Fundraisers
Not all supporters make good peer fundraisers. Target:
- Monthly donors — They're already committed. Ask them to expand their impact.
- Event attendees — They've engaged beyond giving. They're likely to share.
- Social media engagers — People who comment, share, and tag your organization.
- Board members — They should be the first to create their pages.
The ideal first cohort is 20-50 fundraisers. Enough to generate momentum, small enough to support individually.
Step 4: Support During the Campaign
The biggest mistake in P2P fundraising is launching and disappearing. Your fundraisers need active support:
- Daily check-ins during short campaigns (email or group chat)
- Progress updates — "Our top fundraiser just hit $1,200! The team is at $18,000 of our $25,000 goal"
- Coaching for stalled fundraisers — "Try sending a personal text to five friends — texts convert better than social posts"
- Celebration of milestones — Publicly recognize fundraisers who hit their goals
Gamification That Works
Competition drives P2P campaigns. Use it wisely:
Leaderboards Display real-time rankings by amount raised. Update frequently. People check leaderboards obsessively during campaigns.
Milestone badges Award badges at $100, $250, $500, and $1,000 raised. These are shareable social proof that fuel more donations.
Team competitions Organize fundraisers into teams and let them compete. Teams create accountability and peer pressure (the good kind).
Matching unlocks "When 25 fundraisers each raise $200, a matching donor will unlock a $10,000 match." This creates collective urgency.
What to avoid: Prizes that cost more than they inspire. A $500 gift card for the top fundraiser is $500 that didn't go to your mission. Recognition and experiences (dinner with your ED, behind-the-scenes tour) are cheaper and more meaningful.
Social Sharing Best Practices
P2P campaigns live or die on social sharing. Optimize for it:
- One-click sharing — Fundraiser pages should have share buttons pre-loaded with customizable text
- Visual progress — Shareable graphics that update with progress (e.g., "I've raised $340 of my $500 goal!")
- Story prompts — Give fundraisers prompts to share personal stories: "Why does this cause matter to me?"
- Donor thank-yous — When someone donates through a fundraiser page, prompt the fundraiser to thank them publicly
Measuring P2P Campaign Success
Track these metrics:
| Metric | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Fundraisers recruited | Your recruitment reach |
| Active fundraisers (made at least 1 share) | Real participation vs. signups |
| Average raised per fundraiser | Individual effectiveness |
| Donors per fundraiser | Network reach |
| Average gift through P2P pages | Donor quality |
| Fundraiser retention (year-over-year) | Program sustainability |
The most important metric is active fundraisers. A campaign with 100 registered fundraisers but only 20 who actually share is a 20-person campaign.
After the Campaign
P2P fundraisers are your most engaged supporters. Steward them accordingly:
- Thank fundraisers individually — Personalized, not automated
- Share results — Total raised, number of new donors acquired, impact funded
- Invite to deeper involvement — Board advisory roles, major donor cultivation, year-round ambassador programs
- Ask for feedback — What worked? What would make them do it again?
The donors they brought in need stewardship too. They gave because of a personal relationship — make sure your organization builds its own relationship with them so they return next year, even without a friend's ask.
Getting Started
Start with one time-bound P2P campaign tied to an existing event or giving day. Recruit 20-30 fundraisers from your most engaged supporters. Give them great tools and active support. Measure what works.
Your second P2P campaign will outperform your first by 2-3x. The model improves as you learn your community's dynamics and as returning fundraisers bring experience and expanded networks.
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