Sign up for e-updatesEveryChild can offer your company an exciting range of sponsorship opportunities, whether your company wishes to sponsor our supporter magazine ChildWorld or a high profile event.
Corporate sponsorship with EveryChild not only helps us to keep our costs down, but also aligns your business with the name and brand of the UK’s only international development charity focused on children growing up without parental care.
Some of the benefits of corporate sponsorship with EveryChild include:
• Flexibility to align your company with a specific issue, region or country where we work
• Opportunities to sponsor our campaigns, high profile events and influential publications
• Testimony of your company’s commitment to being a good corporate citizen

Burson-Marsteller, a leading public affairs and communications firm, has been a corporate partner of EveryChild since 2004. Over the years Burson-Marsteller staff have taken part in several fundraising initiatives including an annual quiz night, ‘pot luck’ lunches where staff cook for clients and friends, 5-a-side football and golf tournaments. In 2007, Burson-Marsteller sponsored a photographic trip to Moldova, exhibiting the pictures at the opening of their new officein the heart of the EU policy-making district in Brussels.
Burson-Marsteller also supports a child through EveryChild’s Bulala project in Malawi. In addition, Burson-Marsteller has kindly sponsored EveryChild publications, including our flagship supporter magazine ChildWorld, which goes out to 40,000 supporters and Family Matters, an influential study produced by EveryChild on childcare in Central and Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union.
‘Burson-Marsteller has had a long standing relationship with EveryChild and we are proud to endorse their work in supporting vulnerable children, families and their communities around the world. Through our partnership, Burson-Martsteller thrives on raising vital funds and playing a role in helping children who are not only living in poverty, but who are also growing up alone and are therefore at a greater risk of violence and exploitation.’
Venetia Spencer, Senior Associate, Burson-Marsteller
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