Member Engagement: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 01:24, 4 June 2026
Words of Wisdom
Engagement is not limited to in-person events.
Members connect in different ways, and all forms of participation are valid.
What Success Looks Like
- Members have multiple ways to engage with the Local Group.
- New members find opportunities to connect.
- Members participate at a variety of engagement levels.
- Members feel welcomed and included.
- Engagement is not dependent on a single activity or event.
Best Practices
- Keep engagement options simple and accessible
- Personal outreach is more effective than mass messaging
- Small, consistent efforts are more sustainable than large, infrequent ones
- Focus on helping members feel comfortable and included
Common Pitfalls
- Focusing only on event attendance
- Overloading members with too many options
- Using pressure or guilt to drive participation
- Ignoring less-visible or remote members
- Assuming one approach works for everyone
Purpose
[edit | hide all | hide | edit source]Support ongoing connection by helping members engage in ways that work for them.
What This Means in Practice
[edit | hide | edit source]Member engagement is the ongoing process of helping members connect with the organization, with activities, and with one another.
| Principle | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Multiple ways to participate | Not all members engage through events. |
| Different levels of engagement | Participation can be active or passive. |
| Connection without pressure | Members should feel invited, not obligated. |
| Variety of interests | Different members seek different experiences. |
| Belonging | Engagement is about connection, not attendance. |
Supporting Member Engagement
[edit | hide | edit source]| Focus Area | Examples |
|---|---|
| Offer multiple ways to engage |
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| Encourage participation |
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| Connect members to each other |
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| Support different interests |
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| Include remote and less-active members |
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Measuring Engagement
[edit | hide | edit source]Look beyond attendance. Consider:
- Email engagement
- Content interaction
- Renewal rates
- Member feedback
- Variety of participation styles
Feedback Loops
[edit | hide | edit source]Make it easy for members to share input.
- Short surveys
- Informal check-ins
- Anonymous feedback options
Focus on understanding, not just increasing activity.