“Big Things Are Coming” Fundraiser Teaser: How to Build Excitement & Rally Support
November 19, 2025
byGiveable Research
You’re about to launch something big. A fresh fundraising campaign is on the horizon whether it’s for a school project, a community cause, or a passion-driven nonprofit effort and you want to build real excitement. A “what’s coming soon” teaser post is a powerful way to spark interest, invite participation, and lay the foundation for a successful fundraising journey.
Here’s a human, super-helpful guide to writing a teaser that doesn’t just hint, but motivates people to support—not just with one-off donations, but with long-term engagement.
Why Teasing Your Campaign Matters
A teaser does more than announce. It:
- Builds anticipation – By giving just enough information, you invite curiosity and make people feel like insiders.
- Mobilizes community early – When people know something important is coming, they’re more likely to mark their calendars, talk to friends, or even start planning how they can help.
- Sets a fundraising mindset – Teasing frames your campaign as a mission, not simply a request for money. It’s about shared goals and impact.
Key Elements of a Great Fundraising Teaser
Here’s what to include in your “coming soon” post to maximize excitement and engagement:
1. A Clear, Emotional Hook
Lead with a short but compelling message. For example: “A transformation is coming to our school and you’re invited to help build it.”
You might borrow from storytelling techniques, like openers used by nonprofit story‑tellers: “This almost didn’t happen.” nonprofitstorytellingconference.com That kind of line makes people lean in.
2. Your Vision — Not Just the Ask
Talk about why you're launching this campaign. Is it to build a computer lab? Fund art scholarships? Provide mentoring resources? Describe the impact in a way that makes people picture it. Use concrete, human stories. For instance: “With your help, 40 students will learn to code. With your help, our community’s next generation becomes a generation of creators.”
3. Tease the Mechanics Without Revealing Everything
Give a hint about how people will be able to contribute and participate but don’t give all the details yet. Maybe announce that you’ll be doing peer-to-peer fundraisers, or micro-campaigns, or match-gift days. This invites people to stay tuned and be ready.
4. Invite Action — Early Engagement
Your teaser should include a simple invitation: “Want to be the first to know when we launch?” or “Sign up now for early access.” That way, you’re building an email list or a “priority supporters” list even before the full campaign goes live. Email marketing is still one of the most effective ways to promote fundraisers. Winspire+1
5. Use Visuals or Short Video
A striking image or a 10‑ to 15‑second video clip adds emotional weight. Maybe show a “before” image, or a close‑up of students or community members, or a short animated teaser of what’s coming. Then pair it with a caption like: “Coming soon: hope, ambition, and change.”
6. Mention Your Platform
When your fundraiser launches, you want people to know where and how they can support. If you’re using a platform like Giveable, briefly mention: “We’ll launch on Giveable where you can donate, create your own mini-campaign, and track our progress together.”
Example Teaser Posts
Here are a few sample teaser lines:
- Instagram / Facebook:
“Big things are coming. In two weeks, we launch a campaign to build a mobile library for our school. Stay tuned. 💡” - Email teaser:
“Hello friend — we’re bouncing with excitement. Starting next Monday, we’ll officially launch our fundraising campaign to give every student access to STEM tools. Want early access to updates? Click here.” - Peer-to-peer teaser:
“Calling all supporters: Soon, you can run your own mini‑campaign to raise for our school’s art program. Are you in? Sign up to be a peer‑champion.”
Why This Matters for Fundraising Not Just Donations
When you frame your campaign with a teaser, you shift the mindset from a one-time donation ask to collective action:
- Relationships over transactions: You are cultivating supporters, not just asking for a check.
- Shared ownership: People who sign up early feel like they belong to the mission.
- Momentum: As you build your list and stir excitement, you're setting up a strong launch that can generate peer-to-peer fundraisers, matching gifts, and continued engagement.
This strategy aligns with best practices in peer-to-peer fundraising. Nonprofit platforms often recommend making early updates, celebrating milestones, and leveraging social media to keep up momentum. Neon One+1
How Giveable Helps You Deliver on Your Teaser Promise
Here is where Giveable really shines in turning your teaser into a full-blown, effective fundraising campaign:
- Custom Campaign Pages: You can create a campaign page that matches the tone of your teaser, complete with compelling impact statements, visuals, and progress bars.
- Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Built-In: Supporters can launch their own mini-campaigns under your main campaign. That means when you tease peer-led fundraisers, you are ready to deliver.
- Seamless Digital Giving: Giveable supports mobile and text-to-give, making it easy for people to contribute at launch.
- Updates and Gratitude Tools: Use Giveable to send updates, thank-you messages, and milestone reports to early-engaged supporters.
- Progress Visualization: Your campaign page can display a live “thermometer” or impact tracker. When the campaign launches, supporters from your teaser phase can immediately see how their early excitement helped generate momentum.
Call to Action
Get ready to turn your “coming soon” energy into real impact. Start your Giveable campaign now, and let your community in on the journey.