Welcoming New Members: Difference between revisions
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== Related == | == Related == | ||
=== Core Context === | |||
* [[Membership Officer]] | * [[Membership Officer]] | ||
=== Welcoming Process === | |||
* [[New Member Contact Methods]] | * [[New Member Contact Methods]] | ||
* [[Welcoming Timing and Reports]] | * [[Welcoming Timing and Reports]] | ||
* [[Making It Personal]] | * [[Making It Personal]] | ||
=== Supporting First Engagement === | |||
* [[Encouraging First Event Attendance]] | * [[Encouraging First Event Attendance]] | ||
* [[New Member Events]] | |||
* [[Mentor Programs]] | * [[Mentor Programs]] | ||
=== Resources === | |||
* [[Templates and Samples]] | * [[Templates and Samples]] | ||
* [[Membership Officer - Templates and Samples]] | * [[Membership Officer - Templates and Samples]] | ||
Revision as of 22:59, 25 March 2026
Welcoming new members is one of the highest-impact things a Local Group can do.
Purpose
Help new members feel welcomed and connected early.
Guiding Principle
First impressions shape long-term engagement.
Welcoming is about helping members feel seen, informed, and connected from the beginning.
Philosophy
- First impressions matter
- Personal contact is preferred over automated communication
- All members matter — including those who may never attend events
- Welcoming is a shared responsibility
Success is measured by whether members feel acknowledged and included — not by event attendance.
What This Means in Practice
A successful welcoming process means:
- New members receive timely contact
- Members understand how to engage locally (if they choose)
- Members feel included regardless of participation level
- Outreach is thoughtful and appropriately personal
Key Actions
| Step | What It Means | See |
|---|---|---|
| Make Initial Contact |
|
|
| Help Members Get Started |
|
|
| Support First Connection | Reduce barriers to first participation | |
| Build Early Connections |
|
Mentor Programs |
Best Practices
It Takes a Team
Welcoming is not the responsibility of one person.
- Involve officers and experienced members
- Use name badges and clear identifiers
- Ensure new members are acknowledged at events
Common Pitfalls
- Delayed or no initial contact
- Overwhelming new members with too much information
- Relying only on mass or automated communication
- Focusing only on event attendance
- Leaving new members to navigate alone