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Orchid society question
Hello all,
I hope you are having a good Memorial Day weekend. I am not quite sure which section to post this on, so moderators, feel free to move this thread. My orchid society based in the NYC area has lost a significant number of members since the start of the pandemic, and I wanted to know if anyone had some ideas for me to get new members for my club. I have already posted some flyers in the local area and so far, have gotten one new member that way. I am planning to also make a several posts on NextDoor to see who might be interested. Are there any other things I should be trying? Any especially good places to put up posters? Thank you. |
First, that's a problem, I'm afraid, that all societies have. Shows are a great place to recruit members. If there is one in your area, make sure to have a sign-up sheet handy. Perhaps a local nursery would be willing to have an "orchid culture day" where various society members can do talks on basic orchid culture. (and of course pass out flyers and collect names and email addresses) The human touch is really important.
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The Desert Valley Orchid Society has an active Facebook page. I would think this could work with other social media, as well. I'm not involved with any social media so I'm not the person to ask. Realize most younger people interact with hobbies via social media, not newsletter and not online forum software.
The social media groups were open to all from the start, not just members. A very few members posted photos of their flowers. More and more people joined the page, members and non-members. They were encouraged to post their own photos. We held a July ice cream social last year which was announced on social media, free to members. The public was welcome for a small fee - our membership fee - and included with new memberships was a small SVO Cattleya seedling we bought for the occasion. It was a great success. We will repeat it this year. If any of you are visiting Phoenix in July you're welcome to attend. At our Show we signed up people and gave them a free plant on the spot. Some were plants members propagated for this purpose, and others we bought from commercial vendors to resell at our Show. When the membership person ran out of plants she walked into the sales area and grabbed something. She signed up 48 new members. We announced on social media and in our newsletter that we would have a pre-meeting one hour before each regular meeting to address growing questions, and to discuss a basic topic with growing orchids. Last time it was potting media. There were at least 20 of the new members there. |
My O.S., Diablo View, has done the free plants at shows and the orchid talks at libraries with good results. I personally have given away plants on social media and included info about the society, and several new folks have joined as a result. We continued to meet during the pandemic, using Zoom, and now that we are meeting again in person, the Zoom link is still offered for most meetings. The choices of speakers is greatly enhanced by using Zoom, we have had some international speakers without the difficulty of getting them to our area.
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Depend on how involved is your neighborhood, the Nextdoor app have a very small reach and most attention you'll get from it doesnt go beyond people clicking the like button unless you're very frequent or sell orchids on it. It's catching air if you try to gain attention in the sea of social media. It's best to focus it locally first until you can grasp the flow of the social feed of the internet.
Facebook plant group of your city is a good approach if you just want to spread awareness. The community itself is already focus on plant within your area, the harder part is getting them interested in Orchid. So you'll have to do some footwork and advertise your orchids to grab some eyes. If you can partner with the local nursery to host an "Orchid day" and advertise the online group to come to the event, you can get people feet in the water, then after that you can ease them into the society. If your society have enough people, you can also start a community group on FB like estacion's, and get people to you instead. Despite being known to be terminally online, younger folks are active at in-person meetup more than you think. They are a lot more selective where they want to be at. Thanksfully, I think FB plant group tend to have a good mix of both old and young generation. What I am trying to say here is that, people need motivation to be interested in something, the light bulb doesnt turn on by itself. You've got to turn confusion to curiosity, then curiosity to clarity, eventually clarity to exploration. Most people in general are ambiguous or confused by orchid because they lack the information to grow them. They do not know the existent of an orchid society until they have a reason to look for one. I'm on the mission to get my plant group to get into orchids this way, and it's been doing well so far. The group I'm in host meet-event every two months where they exchange plants, and I would use the opportunity to show off and educate them about orchid every trade. Edit: To be frank, from where I am, I dont think I've seen the orchid community mingle with other plant community that often. Most the plant event I have been in are either rare plants + succulent + fern or carnivorous, the bonsai and orchids society are always in their own island. Most people who go to orchid show are people who already know about orchid, it's the one from co-op events (nursery, museum, botanical garden places with lot of public traffic etc) that get most attention from outsider. |
Libraries are a good place to post flyers. It seems that many people who are interested in books are also interested in various types of plants. Yes, I recognize that, with the advent of electronic books, making an actual trip to the library is not as common as it used to be. Still, there must be lots of libraries in the NYC area, and if you put up flyers in many different ones, you could attract at least a few people.
Our society hosts its own orchid show each year, and one way we advertise is to print up hundreds of bookmarks with both the show information and the society information. I always take a supply to my local library, and other members do the same. I don't personally have any social media accounts, but from what I hear, it's pretty popular these days. ;) So if you don't already have one, a FB page is probably a good idea. Also, why not reach out to your "lost" members and invite them back? Maybe give them a discounted membership for re-joining. Finally, since every grocery store, hardware store, and big box store is selling orchids these days, you could place flyers on their bulletin boards, for the stores that still have those. It may catch the attention of someone coming out of the store with their brand-new, first-ever orchid, wondering how they're going to keep it alive. :) |
Thank you all for the helpful advice.
We do have a facebook page with a couple hundred members. It doesn't seem like posting the meetings gets people to show up though. I will try and see if I can make a group to go along with it. It is currently an individual business page. What we do not have is a proper website. I may try to make one on Wix this week as I think not having a website with a calendar and information is asking for trouble. I know there is a local orchid show coming up, but I am not sure I could be so bold as to try to pass out cards at another society's show. We have not had a show ourselves in a very long time. There is a local library that was interested in us hosting a workshop. I think that sounds like a good idea. Unfortunately, most of the libraries will not allow me to post flyers as it is against their policy of advertising for private entities. The one that really irritated me is that when the NYBG orchid show was going on, I brought them a bunch of flyers and postcards to put in the store. I thought that would be a gold mine for new members. I told the people at the NYBG that we do not sell plants and are therefore, not competition. In fact, I told them I believed we would only end up encouraging people to visit the show and buy their plants. They agreed to put up these flyers and postcards but never actually did :(( |
The Greater Akron Orchid Society (Ohio) has been offering hybrid meetings...they are in person but members get a Zoom link and can participate from home, too. We have a few members who do not live in Ohio who participate. We sometimes still have speakers over Zoom, too, which means we can get people from other places. Our society did need to buy some equipment for this but I hope that we will be able to use this advantage to grow our membership.
If anyone is interested in joining a society but does not want to travel or have an orchid society near them, feel free to go to our facebook or website and ask to join! Log into Facebook | Facebook Orchid Society - Greater Akron Orchid Society |
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The DVOS page built slowly but steadily over several years. Newcomers to the page were asked to post their own photos. Eventually there were a lot of people signed on as friends. Instagram might be used the same way.
Another thought... in metro Phoenix the Home & Garden show is held at the Cardinals football stadium 2 times a year. It occupies the entire floor of the stadium, with hundreds of vendor booths. They let non-profit groups have a booth at a very low price. The local cactus society participates. See whether there is a similar show near you. |
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