Saturday, April 13, 2019

They Seemed Like Good Ideas at the Time



April 13, 2019

My alumni club is interested in recruiting and keeping members. Their goals are sort of fuzzy, but they include vetting potential students, getting together with fellow alumni for kicks, and hosting an intellectual talk or two just to keep their hand in. I think.

The club holds a yearly event, and would like to plan a couple more. They are trying to increase interest in membership. I had some ideas that were listened to politely, and then died, so I’m listing them here, just to get them out of my system.

At one get-together I met a woman who had been written up in her local paper for developing an education program. She was understandably pretty proud of it, and sent me the link to the article. At the next committee meeting, I suggested that we let people tell us what they’ve accomplished, and we send out a quarterly e-mail to the local chapter, listing those things. It would be a great networking tool. And it would make people more interested in joining, because, really, who doesn’t like to brag?

I also suggested that we do some service projects, as some people really like them. They are family-oriented, so people could teach their kids about good citizenship; network with other alumni; and make the school look good when we sent pictures in to the local paper. So, people who like the idea of volunteering, and of staying in touch with alumni, would get a two-fer; and the school would get some recognition and local exposure as well, which is good for recruitment.

I thought that an outing to a local sculpture park would be a great way to attract alumni with families. It has art to satisfy the intellectuals in the crowd; it has woods to walk in for people with kids; you can picnic there; and it’s free, which is nice because not everybody who graduates from college lands plum jobs with hefty salaries; and people with families can’t always afford pricey admissions fees. (Alternative destination: Grant’s Farm, because I still haven’t been there.)



As far as recruiting goes, why not hold an event for kids your school is recruiting, not just the ones who have applied? Some excellent students may be afraid to apply because they’re afraid that they wouldn’t fit into the Ivy League scene. (Although they’re too young for “Law & Order”, I vividly remember how often Ivy Leaguers were portrayed as almost inhuman snobs; and what regular kid wants to deal with that sort of grief?)

A service project would be excellent for putting potential students at ease, because everybody dresses in grubbies, so that would take away one source of stress. And once the recruits found out that not all Ivy Leaguers are horrible snobs, they might be more tempted to apply.

So, get a list of recruits from your college’s admissions department, and invite them to a low-stress encounter. Catch them before they apply somewhere else. 


And that pretty much concludes my Brilliant Ideas for the Alumni Club.




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