Sponsorship is a partnership (not traditional advertising) and can include rotating ad placement, social media features, short-form video content, a dedicated product-review page, a long-form pillar blog post, and ongoing visibility within our engaged community.
2. How are sponsorships disclosed to readers?
We prioritize transparency: sponsored content and placements are clearly labeled so readers always know what is editorial and what is supported.
3. How many sponsorship slots are available?
To protect the integrity and user experience of the site, we open a limited number of sponsorship positions — currently six sponsor slots are available.
4. Is this suitable for brands that want traditional ads?
We primarily focus on meaningful, value-based partnerships — but we are also open to traditional advertising opportunities where there is a good fit.
5. Who benefits from sponsoring the site?
Your support helps the Parkinson’s community directly — funding high-quality content, expanding reach, and making it possible to hire assistance that keeps the site running and responsive to community needs.
6. How can a brand get rates or apply to be a sponsor?
Brands interested in sponsorship can email us for rates and availability at info@lifewithparkinsons.ca (or use the contact form on the site). We’ll send a pitch deck with partnership levels, deliverables, and impact metrics
7. What makes this different from other sponsorships?
Sponsors become part of a small group of Founding Partners helping to sustain a free, trusted resource — not just advertisers, but contributors to a meaningful cause.
8. Where will sponsor visibility appear?
Sponsor visibility can appear across the website, blog content, dedicated pages, and social media channels, depending on the partnership level.
9. How does sponsorship support the platform?
Funding directly supports content creation, website development, and team members who help maintain and grow the platform.
Together, our impact is incredible
Your support connects and empowers everyone impacted by movement disorders.