diversity in technology sponsor $7,500chattanooga.makerfaire.com/wp-content/uploads/... ·...
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DIVERSITY IN TECHNOLOGY SPONSOR $7,500As one of four potential Maker Diversity Sponsors, you will receive prominent recogition throughout and prior to the Maker Faire. The Maker Diversity sponsorship highlights and drives the importance of diversity in all areas of technology. These sponsors will be non-competing.
SPONSORSHIP
PRE-EVENT BENEFITS
Title billing
Logo placement on fliers
Logo recognition on print ads
Logo on all pages of CMMF web site
Social media exposure
Email blast to Maker list
(1) Maker Grant $1,000 of your donation will be granted
to a Maker to help purchase materials
and organize hands-on activities
and workshops, thus creating better
attendee engagement. Maker grant
sponsors will be displayed at booths of
respective maker grant recipients
ONSITE BENEFITS
Sponsor booth (10’x30’)
Logo on sponsor banner
(1) Speaking opp
Ad in print program (full page)
chattanooga.makerfaire.com | [email protected]
chattanooga.makerfaire.com | [email protected]
MAKER FAIRE is the Greatest Show
(and Tell) on Earth taking place across
the globe— a family-friendly festival of invention,
creativity and resourcefulness, and a celebration
of the maker movement.
Part science fair, part county fair, and entirely
something new, Maker Faire encompasses
technology, education, science, arts, crafts,
engineering, food, sustainability, and making
of all kinds. Maker Faire has become part of
pop culture, a place for experiential marketing,
debuting new technologies and inventions,
and celebrating geekdom.
The first Maker Faire launched in the California
Bay Area in 2006. Today, over 200 Maker Faires
are produced around the world, each reflecting
the unique character of the community
of Makers.
THE MAKER MOVEMENT
“Makers tap into an American admiration for self-reliance and combine that with opensource learning, contemporary design and powerful personal technology like 3-D printers. The creations, born in cluttered local workshops and bedroom offices, stir the imaginations of consumers numbed by generic, mass-produced, made-in–China merchandise.”
- Adweek March 17, 2014
chattanooga.makerfaire.com | [email protected]