1 / 40

MARKETING 101: MEMBER RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

MARKETING 101: MEMBER RECRUITMENT & RETENTION. Alumni Leadership Connection June 11, 2011. GOALS FOR TODAY. Session Overview. Membership Philosophy and Approach Membership Today The Decision to Join The Basics 10 Steps to Growing Your Program Idea Exchange/Q&A. Philosophy and approach.

rhoda
Download Presentation

MARKETING 101: MEMBER RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MARKETING 101: MEMBER RECRUITMENT & RETENTION Alumni Leadership Connection June 11, 2011

  2. GOALS FORTODAY

  3. Session Overview • Membership Philosophy and Approach • Membership Today • The Decision to Join • The Basics • 10 Steps to Growing Your Program • Idea Exchange/Q&A

  4. Philosophy and approach

  5. Membership Defined mem·ber·ship, n. • A group of individuals who come together to support a common cause • Membership should support the enduring values of your organization and the promise of your experience • Access is easy … but membership is complex, diverse, and ever-changing Membership = Engaged Communities

  6. MEMBERSHIP TODAY

  7. Key Trends Impacting Groups • Members are in-charge • More splintering and blurring of loyalty • Convenienceand ease are all-important • Members are more self-directed • Members are more critical, seeking guarantees • Changingworkforce dynamics, demographic , andconsumption habits • Time is currency

  8. Today’s Media Landscape

  9. Approach to Membership Development • Membership development is a continuous process of testing new ideas and adjusting the variables that affect response and improve ROI • Monitor performance of segments, lists, media, offers, creative, message • Analyze membership data to unlock opportunities • Research to uncover trends • Apply learning and gained knowledge • Results through innovation • Drive high-quality membership through strategic, integratedmarketing campaigns

  10. WHY JOIN Why Join

  11. The Decision to Join “Membership” should answer four key questions • Why should I join? • What do I get? • What do you do with the money? • Why should I stay?

  12. The basics

  13. Key Considerations

  14. Before You Begin • Membership is a process—not an event • Single appeals are no longer enough • Tactics/channels cannot operate in a vacuum • Cultivation and involvement are key • Not every communication is about asking for money • Great programs provides a continuous outlet for individuals to support your organization or cause • Builds rewarding relationships • Allows you to communicate with lots of people over time

  15. Features of Great Membership Marketing • Strategic • Orientation has shifted from siloed to integrated • Integrated • Across multiple channels • Within an organization • Throughout the member experience • Specific and focused • Measurable • Scalable • Results-driven • Data driven • Should generate a response • Both data-generating and data-collecting • Frequent and Consistent

  16. Engagement Channels Events Email Publications Welcome Kits Direct Mail Website Member Calls Social Media

  17. Factors Influencing Response • Who are your best members today? • How did they find you? • What are they doing for you? • Who do they know? • What do you give them? • Why do you need more? Impact: A data driven approach can increase results by 10-30% and allow your organization to minimize risk and optimize investment

  18. 10 Steps to GROWING YOUR MEMBERSHIP PROGRAM

  19. Organizational Checklist • Take stock in your organization • Know your audience • Set goals • Start small • Create a plan • Make membership relevant • Be a broken record • Provide access and choice • Engage the right people • Rinse and repeat

  20. 1. Take Stock in Your Organization • Understand business priorities • Internal review of marketing activities, results, and data assets • External review of best practices across multiple verticals • Illustrate concepts and financial impact of decisions • Make short-term and long-term recommendations

  21. 2. Know Your Audience • Who are your best members today? • How did they find you? • What are they doing for you? • Who do they know? • What do you give them? • Why do you need more? Impact: A data driven approach can increase results by 10-30% and allow your organization to minimize risk and optimize investment

  22. 3. Set Goals Net Growth

  23. 4. Start Small

  24. 5. Create a Plan

  25. Sample Plan • Project Name • Date of the effort • Audience or segment • Effort name • Channel(s) or media used • Quantity • Project costs • Response • Members • Revenue • Net

  26. 6. Make Membership Relevant Impact: Personalized communications can increase results by as much as 25% versus non-personalized communications

  27. 7. Be a Broken Record Announcement/Launch Reminder Reminder Last Chance Impact: Frequency and consistent communications have a multiplier effect on overall results

  28. 8. Provide Access and Choice Impact: Multi-channel contact yields better results – adding a response channel can improve overall response by 20%- 30%

  29. “Other” Choices • Channels • Mail • Email • Phone • Social Response Mechanisms • Online • BRE • Events • In Person • Length of • Membership • Partial • Annual • Multi-Year • Life • Messages • Benefit-driven • Mission-driven • Peer-driven • Industry-driven • Billing & • Payment • Auto renew • Bill Me • Installments • ACH/EFT • Member • Types • Free • Basic • Enhanced • Discounted

  30. 9. Engage the Right People • Motivate them with “why” membership is important • Help them understand the organization’s story • Help them get in touch with their own story of how membership has influenced their life and success • Tell them “how” they can be involved • Focus on the strengths of your volunteers • Help them establish a plan of “what” to do • Create a written plan of action • Set specific goals

  31. 10. Rinse and repeat

  32. The Real #10 …. Ask for help

  33. Remember…. Retention Acquisition Best Practices Programmatic programs(e.g. annual membership drive) Member-get-a-member Event-based recruitment Incentives/premiums • Offer renewals early and often • Try more efforts • Renew in unexpected places/media • Segment renewals to match acquisition strategies  • Tell a story and use specifics • Ask early, ask often • Test, test, test • Frequency = success • Use multiple channels Best Practices • Personalize (e.g. handwritten note) • Call lapsed members • Put it in an envelope • Renewal incentive • Multi‐yearrenewals

  34. Final Thoughts • Great membership programs are strategic, integrated, focused, data driven, and measurable • Communicate with people when they want, how often they want, and in the manner that they are most comfortable • Datacontributes to the ongoing dialog with members and provides a foundation for greater interaction

  35. Final Thoughts • Identify characteristics of your best members and use that to find new members and markets not reached • Engagement is not joining, so get members involved on Day 1 • Start slow, but don’t be afraid to challenge convention

  36. Questions

  37. Ideas to grow membership

  38. Idea Exchange • Research • Conduct annual brief survey • Programming • Develop programming and events based on members’ input • Segment or create new programming to attract specific segments and retain current members (family, young, career networking) • Communications • Welcome e-mail to new members • Welcome phone call with follow up information by email • Announcement of new members at next chapter meeting • New member webcast or online chat • Send link to recorded welcome video from Chapter President

  39. Joe Fiochetta Penn State Alumni Association 814-863-2307 jtf11@psu.edu THANK YOU

  40. Membership is…. … a way to stay connected to Penn State and show your Penn State Pride … an investmentin Penn State, the community … a votefor the enduring value of a Penn Stateeducation … a way to preservethe past and ensureavibrant future … another way to give back to and supportthe University

More Related