New Member Orientation
Purpose
[edit | hide all | hide | edit source]Help new members feel welcomed, informed, and comfortable engaging in a way that works for them.
Guiding principle: There is no “right” way to participate. Orientation should reduce pressure, not create it.
Effective new member orientation:
- Is welcoming and low-pressure
- Provides clear, simple guidance
- Supports multiple ways to engage
- Builds a sense of belonging from the start
1. Goals of Orientation
[edit | hide | edit source]A successful orientation should:
- Help members understand what the group is and how it works
- Show multiple ways to engage (not just events)
- Make it easy to ask questions and connect
- Reinforce that all levels of participation are valid
2. What to Cover in Orientation
[edit | hide | edit source]Keep it simple, welcoming, and practical.
About the Group
[edit | hide | edit source]- Mission and purpose
- What makes the local group unique
- Connection to the broader organization (if applicable)
Ways to Participate
[edit | hide | edit source]Emphasize flexibility and choice:
- Attend events (optional)
- Join online discussions or email threads
- Volunteer or help organize
- Simply stay informed via newsletter
👉 Be explicit: “You can engage as much or as little as you like.”
What to Expect
[edit | hide | edit source]- Types of activities offered
- Typical event format (casual, structured, etc.)
- Communication channels (newsletter, social, website)
Key Contacts
[edit | hide | edit source]- Local leaders or organizers
- General contact email
- Who to reach out to with questions
Getting Started (Simple Next Steps)
[edit | hide | edit source]Offer 2–3 easy options:
- Attend an upcoming event
- Reply to introduce themselves
- Join an online space
👉 Avoid overwhelming with too many actions
3. Format Options
[edit | hide | edit source]Orientation can take different forms depending on capacity:
Live Orientation
[edit | hide | edit source]- Short (20–30 minutes)
- Includes Q&A
- Can be recurring (monthly/quarterly)
Written / Self-Guided
[edit | hide | edit source]- Email welcome series
- PDF or webpage
- Recorded video walkthrough
👉 Best practice: offer a self-guided option even if live sessions exist
4. Local New Member Handbook
[edit | hide | edit source]A local handbook provides a consistent, reusable resource.
Communications guide, MC, SIG, profile, email choices, definitions: national new member handbook, encouragement to attend events, guest policy, how to meet people, Jargon Decoder
What to Include
[edit | hide | edit source]- Welcome message
- Overview of the group
- How to participate
- Event expectations
- Communication channels
- FAQs
- Contact information
Format Recommendation
[edit | hide | edit source]Use a local website whenever possible
Benefits:
- Easy to update
- Shareable link
- Accessible anytime
- Can link to events, forms, and resources
Alternative formats:
- PDF (good for quick distribution)
- Shared document (easy to edit internally)
Keep It:
[edit | hide | edit source]- Clear and concise
- Friendly in tone
- Easy to scan (headings, bullets)
👉 Think “quick start guide,” not a long manual
Greeting New Members
[edit | hide | edit source]Personal connection early on makes a big difference.
Best Practices
[edit | hide | edit source]- Send a welcome message soon after joining
- Use a friendly, human tone (not overly formal)
- Reinforce that there’s no pressure to participate
- Include:
- Link to the handbook or website
- Upcoming events (optional, not overwhelming)
- Contact info for questions
Optional: Personal Outreach
[edit | hide | edit source]- Assign a point person for new members
- Offer a low-pressure 1:1 conversation
- Invite—but don’t require—introductions
👉 The goal is to open the door, not push them through it
Ongoing Onboarding (Beyond Day One)
[edit | hide | edit source]Orientation is not a one-time moment.
- Check in after the first few weeks
- Highlight different ways to engage over time
- Continue reinforcing that all participation styles are valid
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
[edit | hide | edit source]- Overloading with too much information
- Implying that event attendance = “real” participation
- Using guilt-based language (“we hope to see you soon”)
- Making orientation feel mandatory or high-pressure
Simple Orientation Checklist
[edit | hide | edit source]- Welcome message sent
- Handbook or website shared
- Ways to participate clearly explained
- Key contacts provided
- Low-pressure next steps offered
- Tone is inclusive and flexible