Focusing on Young Professionals

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Now more than ever, recent college grads and young professionals will be looking for new ways to grow their careers. Your association can offer them something they cannot get anywhere else, connections! The problem for this age bracket has always been and will always remain money. They are coming out of college with debt and no job meaning they aren’t exactly looking to throw money into an association. Below you will find a few solutions to this obstacle and what you should be marketing to the young professional demographic.

 

Discounts. If money is an obstacle, provide discounts to students and young professionals. As they age and become more stable within their careers, they will be able to pay more and their membership price can increase. Discounts, however, will help get them in the door, which can often be the hardest part.

 

Job Boards. If the group you are targeting is fresh out of college, provide them the opportunity to find a job through your organization. Include a section for starter jobs or internships. If the job board proves successful for them, you can guarantee a long term member.

 

Networking Opportunities. You might be thinking now is not the time to network, but you are wrong! People need networking opportunities now more than ever. Set up meetings or even a speed networking opportunity online. Zoom can be your new best friend when it comes to bringing members together. This shift also makes members of national organizations more comfortable with the idea moving forward.

 

Professional Development. Professional development for young professionals should look different than professional development you are offering members of 10-15 years. Help young professionals to create an elevator speech, explain what the perfect resume looks like, provide inside tips on what companies are looking for when hiring. Older members can be the perfect mentors when it comes to those starting off their careers.

 

Leadership Roles. Get your younger members involved right off the bat. When they join, send them information about your young professionals’ committee or mention that there is a rotating spot on the board for a young professional. This is the perfect resume builder and could be a huge incentive to stay in the organization long term.

 

Young professionals might be the more difficult group to recruit, but the results will pay off. If you can make lifelong members out of them and set up their first few years for success, they will bring revenue and future members to the organization.