Jump to content

Welcoming New Members: Difference between revisions

From Mensa Wiki
BethWeiss (talk | contribs)
m Related: Fixed link
BethWeiss (talk | contribs)
m Related: Organized
Line 80: Line 80:
== 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]]
* [[New Member Events]]
 
=== 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
  • Reach out to new, reinstated, and transferred members
  • Use personal, welcoming communication
Help Members Get Started
  • Help members understand how to engage
  • Share relevant information and opportunities
  • Provide guidance without overwhelming
Support First Connection Reduce barriers to first participation
Build Early Connections
  • Introduce members to others
  • Support mentor or buddy connections where appropriate
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

Core Context

Welcoming Process

Supporting First Engagement

Resources