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Member Contact Methods

From Mensa Wiki
Revision as of 05:45, 1 June 2026 by BethWeiss (talk | contribs) (Added WoW)
Words of Wisdom

Use a mix of contact methods and adapt based on what works—personalization matters more than the method.

Members have different communication preferences, and flexibility improves effectiveness.

What Success Looks Like

  • Members are reached through at least one method
  • Outreach feels personal and welcoming
  • Members respond in a way that works for them
  • The approach is manageable and repeatable

Best Practices

  • Use more than one method when appropriate
  • Keep outreach simple and personal
  • Adjust based on what gets responses
  • Respect member preferences and boundaries
  • Focus on connection, not just completion

Common Pitfalls

  • Relying on a single contact method
  • Sending long generic or mass-style messages
  • Over-contacting without response
  • Avoiding follow-up after initial outreach
  • Assuming preferences based on age or assumptions


Purpose

Outline practical options for contacting members, recognizing that preferences vary.

No single method works for everyone—using a mix of approaches increases the likelihood of connection.

What This Means in Practice

  • Start with one method, and follow up with another if needed
  • Personalization matters more than the specific method
  • Respect boundaries and responsiveness
  • Use the methods you can sustain consistently

Key Actions

Use a Mix of Contact Methods

No single approach will reach everyone:

  • Some members appreciate postal mail
  • Some prefer quick, informal contact (text or email)
  • Some respond best after multiple touchpoints

Using more than one method—when appropriate—can improve response rates.

Prioritize Personalization

Regardless of method:

  • Use the member’s name
  • Reference their membership or interests when possible
  • Keep messages short and genuine

A simple, personal message is more effective than a longer, generic one.

Contact Methods

Postal Mail

Often appreciated and can stand out.

  • Handwritten notes are encouraged
    • 3–5 sentence personalized welcome
    • Include contact information or a business card
    • Optional: include a printed welcome message with a personal note

If needed, assistance may be used for handwriting.

Phone

Can be effective, but response rates vary.

Often used to:

  • Acknowledge membership
  • Confirm contact details
  • Follow up after written or electronic contact

Best practices:

  • Consider sending a text first to introduce yourself
  • Keep calls brief and optional

Email

Widely used and easy to scale.

  • Personalize each message
  • Include:
    • A brief introduction
    • Links to local group resources
    • Upcoming opportunities to engage

Email is most effective when it does not feel like a mass mailing. Several short emails a week apart can be more effective than one long email which may not be read in full.

Text Messaging

Often effective for quick, informal contact.

  • Useful for:
    • Initial outreach (with identification)
    • Follow-up after another contact method
    • Quick check-ins or reminders
  • Keep messages:
    • Brief
    • Clearly identified (Hi, this is <me> from <Local Mensa Group>."
    • Low-pressure

Other Methods

  • Social media platforms
  • App-based messaging

These may be useful for follow-up or ongoing engagement, depending on group norms.