The Bastrop area is growing fast as new families move into the Austin area and find our community to be affordable with a great standard of living. This growth offers the Knights an amazing opportunity to grow right along with the community. Growth means more creative ideas, more energy, and more hands and feet to carry out our charitable mission of service to one and all.
Effective recruiting is the means by which we can make growth real for our Council. The Supreme Council asked some of the Knight's most successful recruiters to share their recruiting best practices. Below are the top 10 best practices for effective recruiting, or -- as we call them -- the Ten Keys to Recruiting Success.
1. Talk about your positive experiences as a member of the Knights of Columbus and share your enthusiasm for your council.
Convey a sense of enthusiasm, excitement and pride when talking about the great things your council accomplishes and the people who are being helped. Offer some personal stories of how volunteering has helped you grow in your faith and what being a Knight means to you.
2. Positive attitude and body language count.
Your facial expressions and body language show about how you feel about being a Knight of Columbus. Maintain a positive attitude, smile often, avoid being negative and always look the prospective member in the eye when talking with him.
3. Talk to the prospective member and his wife about the ways his joining your council benefits their family.
Presenting the good works a man can help accomplish when joining the Knights, the opportunity for spiritual growth and the fraternal benefits offered to a prospective member, his wife and family, can help convince him to join. Point out that volunteering and council social activities, as well as many benefits such as scholarships, the insurance program, and others, are open to the member's entire immediate family.
4. Make sure that your members are visible when conducting a charitable service project.
When members, their families and other volunteers wear Knights of Columbus branded apparel while conducting a charitable service project, it conveys unity and identifies your council to the community. Witnessing your council's unity when conducting service projects will entice prospective members to inquire about joining your council.
5. Presume that a prospect is interested in being a part of the Knights and ask him to join.
Family, friends, co-workers and fellow parishioners all present recruitment opportunities. Ask each of these prospective members if he would like to join your council.
6. Approach recruiting in a different way.
Instead of asking, "Would you like to join my council?" ask a prospective member: "Would you be interested in learning more about the Knights of Columbus and our local council?" This offers the opportunity to explain the benefits of joining to the prospective member in a more flexible way.
7. What to say when the answer is "I don't have time."
Many prospective members, when they are approached to join the Knights of Columbus, comment, that "they are too busy," have "too much work", involved with my "children's hectic school schedule", and similar reasons. Be prepared with a simple answer, like "the amount of time you put in is completely up to you. Even one or two Saturdays a year would be a big help. Also, with the family oriented activities we offer, you'll have more opportunities to spend time with your family."
8. Promote your council's spirituality.
Place emphasis on your council's involvement in the spiritual life of your parish. Promote council corporate communions, retreats, family Mass, Eucharistic adorations and any other activities conducted by your council that promotes and strengthens our Catholic identity.
9. Involve young people.
Ask young men to join your council.
Recruiting a wide range of age groups will provide your council with greater reach within your community. Use targeted advertising, especially social media, to reach younger prospective members.
10. Follow-up with all prospects in a timely manner.
No matter how the prospective member was initially engaged, it is essential that follow-up communication, by personal contact, needs to occur within a few days at the most. This shows the prospective member that your council cares and places a high priority on meeting his expectations. If a First Degree is not scheduled in the immediate future, or a degree team is not available, use the First Degree Video Production (available on Officers Online or from the Ceremonials Department) to welcome a new member into your council.
© 2015, The Knights of Columbus, New Haven, CT
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Ten Keys to Recruiting Success
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Time to Prepare for Our Fall Membership Drive
Our Fall Membership Drive is scheduled for the weekend of 19-20 October 2019. And its not too early to start preparing. The Knights of Columbus are launching a new way of doing membership drives called "Delta Church Drive". Online training seminars are running through the month of June on Mondays and Saturdays:
- Every Monday evening from 7:30-8:30 PM CDT
and again from 9:00–10:00 PM CDT - Every Saturday morning from 9:00-10:00 AM CDT
To attend the online seminar you just need to click the following link: https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/317091949
When the meeting starts, you may be asked to enter this access code: 317-091-949
I hope all of us will take the time to participate in this training. You may be asking yourself why we want to have a membership drive? The answer is simple: we need members to carry out the charitable work of our Council. And the more members we have, the more we can do!
Or you may ask why we need a new way of doing Membership Drives? The answer to that question is also simple. Our society is changing. What attracted men to join the Knights 20 years ago is not the same as what will attract men to join us today. The Knights are adapting to these changes, and so the way we recruit new members is adapting too!
Vivat Jesus!
Wednesday, June 5, 2019
A Council is a Lot Like a Family!
I had a friend once who was having a disagreement with her sister. The two became quite irritated with each other and stopped speaking to one another. Some time later, I saw them together chatting amiably as if there had never been a problem. I asked my friend about their apparent reconciliation. She said, "She's my sister! I couldn't stay mad!"
Perhaps you have read the book or seen the movie, In This House of Brede. Certain parts of the story reminded me of my friend and her sister. A new Benedictine sister named Philippa Talbot comes into conflict with one of the older sisters in her new convent over what seem at the time to be important issues. But as the plot unfolds, their conflict fades away as they face larger issues of their convent's survival. By the end, the two have discovered how much they respect and need each other.
Like a family, any successful Knights of Columbus Council is going to have its share of challenges. We all have different personalities and priorities, and we may occasionally disagree or for one reason or another get on each others' nerves. But like Philippa and her fellow sister, we soon find that our common mission and loyalty to Christ renders insignificant whatever may be our little disagreements or annoyances. Then we joyfully work together as brothers in Christ to show God's love for the world through our actions.
Vivat Jesus!
Perhaps you have read the book or seen the movie, In This House of Brede. Certain parts of the story reminded me of my friend and her sister. A new Benedictine sister named Philippa Talbot comes into conflict with one of the older sisters in her new convent over what seem at the time to be important issues. But as the plot unfolds, their conflict fades away as they face larger issues of their convent's survival. By the end, the two have discovered how much they respect and need each other.
Like a family, any successful Knights of Columbus Council is going to have its share of challenges. We all have different personalities and priorities, and we may occasionally disagree or for one reason or another get on each others' nerves. But like Philippa and her fellow sister, we soon find that our common mission and loyalty to Christ renders insignificant whatever may be our little disagreements or annoyances. Then we joyfully work together as brothers in Christ to show God's love for the world through our actions.
Vivat Jesus!
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