Making It Personal: Difference between revisions
m →Purpose: grammar |
m →Where Personalization Matters Most: added membership outreach |
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Glad you’re here! | Glad you’re here! | ||
== Where Personalization Matters Most == | == Where Personalization Matters Most == | ||
Not every communication requires the same level of personalization. These moments shape how members perceive the group: | |||
* Initial welcome messages | * Initial welcome messages | ||
* First event invitations | * First event invitations | ||
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* Reaching out to [[Supporting Remote Members|remote members]] | * Reaching out to [[Supporting Remote Members|remote members]] | ||
* Responding to member questions | * Responding to member questions | ||
== Practicality: Start with a Template, Then Adapt == | == Practicality: Start with a Template, Then Adapt == | ||
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* [[Encouraging First Event Attendance]] | * [[Encouraging First Event Attendance]] | ||
* [[Membership Officer - Templates and Samples]] | * [[Membership Officer - Templates and Samples]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Managing Membership Outreach]] | ||
Revision as of 06:17, 1 June 2026
Personalization is not about creating unique communications for every member.
Small, thoughtful touches applied consistently help members feel seen, welcomed, and valued.
The goal is meaningful connection that can be sustained over time.
What Success Looks Like
- New members are consistently welcomed
- Messages feel human, even when templated
- Communication is steady and reliable
Best Practices
- Start with a template, then personalize lightly
- Focus on high-impact interactions
- Use information the member has voluntarily shared
- Keep messages brief, warm, and conversational
- Make personalization sustainable and repeatable
Common Pitfalls
- Sending messages that feel automated or generic
- Including too much information at once
- Over-personalizing in a way that feels intrusive
- Treating personalization as optional rather than essential
Purpose
Help Membership Officers create meaningful member connections through small, thoughtful personalization that help members feel seen, welcomed, and valued.
What Making It Personal Means
Personalization does not mean creating a unique message every time. It means adding small details that show:
- You see the individual
- You are paying attention
- You are inviting rather than broadcasting
Examples
Less Personal
Hi,
Welcome to Mensa. Attached is information about our Local Group and upcoming activities. Let us know if you have questions.
More Personal
Hi [First Name],
Welcome to Mensa!
I’m [Your Name], and I help connect members in [Local Group]. I noticed you’re in [City/Area] — we have a few members nearby and occasional events in that area.
If you’re interested, I’d be happy to suggest a good first event or introduce you to a few people.
Glad you’re here!
Where Personalization Matters Most
Not every communication requires the same level of personalization. These moments shape how members perceive the group:
- Initial welcome messages
- First event invitations
- Follow-up communication
- Reaching out to remote members
- Responding to member questions
Practicality: Start with a Template, Then Adapt
Templates save time — personalization makes them effective.
- Add one or two custom sentences
- Reference their location or area
- Mention a specific event or opportunity
- Remove anything that doesn’t apply
- Adjust tone to feel natural