Many choruses are looking to grow the organization’s membership through means of recruitment. Recruitment should have its own place in your marketing strategy and should follow marketing best practices such as identifying your target audience, determining channels for reaching your audience, and crafting communications and messaging around your intended audience.
If member recruitment is a primary goal for your chorus, there should be at least one person or a team dedicated to managing your recruiting efforts, such as “Recruitment & Auditions Chair” or “Recruitment Committee”.
Their responsibilities might include the following:
Singers don't just appear at your doorstep. It takes careful thought and a solid recruitment strategy to bring them In.
Before trying to get singers to join your chorus, it's important to first have a discussion about who you are trying to recruit - also known as your "target audience." Start by asking yourself these questions and draft up a document with the answers:
You may also wish to survey your existing singers to help you identify your demographics, the reasons why singers joined your chorus, and the reasons why they stay.
Together with your membership team or committee, write up the definition of your target audience to use as a guideline in your recruiting efforts.
It’s important to identify what it means to have a successful recruitment plan - or set a specific and measurable goal. Is success identified as bringing in 5, 10, or 15 new singers, for example? Is success identified as bringing in 20+ auditionees? Whatever your goal is, ensure that your team thinks it is attainable and write it down.
You’ll also want to have a method of tracking this goal. This could mean that you count up the new members that were added to your database or that you calculate the number of audition/new member forms submitted.
Know what the goal is and how you will measure the goal after your recruitment campaign.
Think about your target audience and brainstorm the following:
Using your target audience, carefully think through which recruiting channels you’ll want to utilize in order to target that group. Here are just a few examples of the channels you can use in your recruiting efforts:
Make a list of potential channels in your area that you can utilize in your recruitment efforts. Get as specific as possible - names of forums, magazines, digital opportunities, etc. And list of the ones that you want to utilize in your recruitment strategy.
From the list, map out a sample calendar for the year of various recruitment-based activities or advertisements.
Next, set a budget for your recruiting efforts.
Depending on your goal, you may not need a budget, but it’s good to think through first what your goal is, which channels will help you reach your goal, and how much money you will need to invest in those channels to help make it happen.
Don’t forget to get the budget approved with the powers that be in advance!
With a singer recruitment strategy in place, now it's time to get everything ready to bring in your new singers.
Hopefully, when building the recruitment strategy you’ve already given your marketing chair or staff member a “heads up” and maybe even included them in your strategy discussion.
After your high-level recruitment strategy has been developed, the next step is to sit down with the marketing team to coordinate any materials needed and schedules for content distribution. Marketing may have other things going on such as marketing concerts, or launching the season, so it’s important to work with them to make the schedule as seamless as possible.
Here are some things you’ll want to coordinate with marketing:
Depending on the complexity of your strategy, you may find it helpful to use a project management software to coordinate.
Now, it’s time to prepare all of the necessary materials for your campaign.
A few key pointers for success:
You'll want to think about the path a potential singer might take in order to join your chorus. Then, establish a process that ensures that person is getting the information they need and that their experience is great.
Here's an example of what a process might look like:
Regardless of your specific process, you’ll want to ensure that potential singers have a way to indicate their interest in joining the chorus, a point of contact within the organization, and information about how to take the next steps.
As you’re working on creating the marketing materials for your recruitment campaign, you’ll also want to finalize a process for collecting and storing potential new singer data.
For long-term recruitment purposes, you’ll really want to collect contact information and store that data in a CRM or email marketing platform.
On your auditions and/or new singer recruitment page, have a form interested potential members can fill out.
Possible form questions:
It’s important to have an opportunity for new members to get to know the chorus and its director before they join. Hosting some type of recruitment event, such as an open rehearsal or summer singer, is a great way to do this.
Whether you’re coordinating auditions or inviting potential singers to an open rehearsal, you’ll want to make sure that their first touchpoint with the chorus is a positive one.
A few tips for making these events successful:
Utilize these marketing best practices with your singer recruitment strategy and you'll succeed in long-term organizational growth.
If recruiting is a main goal for your chorus, then information about joining the chorus should be listed on your website.
Examples of good-looking auditions pages:
Once your leads are in your email marketing platform, you’ll be able to market to them from time to time. Regardless of whether they join your chorus this time around or not, you’ll want to keep them updated of any upcoming concerts, networking events, and, of course, any future auditions!
Across the board, video marketing is one of the best marketing tools at your disposal. And, yes, you can utilize video marketing in your recruitment strategy.
Try creating a recruitment video that showcases the other singers in your chorus and highlights the organization.
Examples of singer recruitment videos:
One great way to find singers that will fit in with your community is to highlight your existing members. A blog is the perfect place to share stories and photos of your members. You may even choose to highlight your members in video, email, or social channels as well.
Don’t forget to utilize your social channels for recruiting. Share your videos, blogs, or other spotlights on your members.
If you have the budget, consider boosting and targeting your social posts for greater reach. Here’s a great article on how one chorus doubled in size with their boosted social media strategy.
After your recruitment campaign, you've hopefully brought in a few new members for your chorus. Your job now is to help ensure their long-term success with the chorus and to analyze your efforts for future recruitment campaigns.
After you bring on your new members, you'll want to have a plan in place for retaining them.
Ideally, there would be some sort of new member onboarding program that would help ingrain new members into the chorus culture and keep them informed.
If you have a lot of volunteer help, you may even consider having a "Membership Retention Committee" whose purpose is to help keep your singers engaged, happy, and connected.
Read more in this article about what a successful retention program might look like.
After you've ran a recruitment campaign, it's important to sit down and reflect on what was and wasn't successful.
A few things you'll want to analyze:
To gather this data, you may wish to survey your new members. Ideally, you would have also used tracking links during your campaign to help you identify which marketing channels were the most effective at recruiting new singers. You'll also likely want to run an expense report for this campaign - think about the lifetime value that each new member will have on the organization and compare it against the money spent on this campaign.
After your analysis, write up a quick summary with recommendations for the future. Next year's recruitment volunteers will thank you!
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Thanks for reading! Don't forget to download the PDF to take home with you and share with your choral colleagues.