All together for their community centre
“An Antigonish rowing club has teamed up with the community of Lochaber, Antigonish County, in a grassroots movement to make a community centre sustainable.” -via thechronicleherald.ca
Reasons to Run a Club
For the pleasure
For the impact you have on others
For the reputation you build within the community
To be a part of something that is growing and ever organic
For the challenge
To be appreciated
To be part of a society, a society you want to be a part of.
It’s probably not for the money.
In fact this will also be reflective of your attitude in your day job.
Say Thank You.
Thanking people for their efforts is a great way to start a conversation, it leads with the right foot, it gets them on side, it gets them on your side.
They will be more understanding of the small critiscm you may follow up with, and they will be more likely to help you again into the future. You can’t do it by yourself.
Building on the Olympics for Clubs
This article comes from the Department of Sport and Recreation NSW, Australia. It highlights some great points about taking advantage of that warm fuzzy feeling people have whilst the Olympics are on.
1. Build on the Games to create spirit and involvement at your club
- Organise club nights to watch Olympic/Paralympic sport together (and maybe use as a fundraiser at the same time)
- Publish Games results in your newsletter/website
- Get the whole club to sign a hero fax
- Run Games tipping comps or opinion polls on your website/newsletter
- Put live Olympic news feeds on your website
- Run Olympic/Paralympic themed training sessions (e.g. tabloids for the kids)
- Set up a “Gold, Silver and Bronze medal” award scheme for players, officials, coaches and/or volunteers.
2. Use Games time for fundraising
- Have a gold coin donation day
- Run guessing competitions based on Olympic/Paralympic trivia, medal counts, race times and/or results
- Theme one of your training/game days - get people to dress in green/gold and bring Aussie flags
- Hold an Olympic/Paralympic trivia night (go to www.olympics.com.au for lots of trivia).
3. Capture the Olympic/Paralympic spirit – give it meaning at your club
During the Olympics/Paralympics, we often see the very best in sporting values. Draw on performances and highlight outstanding sporting behaviour, as a way of promoting the same behaviour at your club. For example, highlight the exceptional moments (and why they are exceptional) in your newsletter and/or website (e.g. “Top Olympic/Paralympic Moment: Who saw Sally Sparks’ gesture in the 100m event? It was the ultimate in sportsmanship and respect. What a true sporting hero.”)
4. Capitalise on the interest and attract new members
The Olympics/Paralympics essentially creates free advertising for sport. People will be more interested in becoming involved in sport. It’s a great opportunity for you to attract new members – build on the momentum that has been generated. How?
Have the basics in place
- Update your membership forms, website and member databases
- Be available and prepared – make sure people can find and deal with your club easily via the web, directories etc.
Show the community you support the Olympics/Paralympics
- Put a banner up at your ground wishing the Australian team good luck, or messages on your website/newsletter
- Get the whole club to “wear Australian” one game day/training day – green/gold or bring along Aussie flags
- If Olympic/Paralympic events involving the Aussie team are taking place on your game day, announce the results over the PA.
Generate publicity
- Publicise any of the special events you organise to local media
- If an athlete, official, volunteer or coach associated with your club gone to the Games, publicise this to local media before, during and after the Games
- Create media stories at the right moments e.g. if your sport receives profile at the Games, either via Australia doing well or for another reason, seize the moment. Send out a media release to your local papers about how your sport operates in the local area.
Promote your club
- Advertising following the Games might prove a worthy investment. You’re bound to double the impact, as sport will be at the forefront of people’s mind. It doesn’t have to be costly - contact your local school about their newsletter advertising
- Run open days/come-n-try events following the Games. This could work particularly well if you are an Olympic or Paralympic sport who is profiled well during the Games.
Note: there are very strict guidelines about the use of Olympic symbols and words. Make sure you don’t infringe these.
Source: dsr.nsw.gov.au
Design
We’re currently looking for a Graphic Designer Intern, and it’s caused us to think about what we want in an interface.
The rule of thumb for interface design is simple: We want to minimise input, maximise output. The less our Users need to do to get results, the more efficient the interface. This is how we approach all aspects of our application, from our code to our PDF reports and we are looking for an Intern that has a similar level of enthusiasm.
Enthusiasm for better screen typography. More white space, for touches of colour and an understanding that UI and UX is as much about the code as it is about the logic and hierarchy of the interface.
Our office is in East Perth, along with a coffee machine and fresh looking hoodie, if you’re keen to join us!
The TidyClub Plan
Our strategy is simple, because it’s driven from places we’ve already been and experiences we’ve already had.
The TidyClub app, we feel, should allow for the analysis and communication of data that has been inputted in a simple form, that is easily recognisable, understood and remembered. Making for quality, useable information.
The core features which we have built is our attempt to close the gap between internal and external perceptions of your club, particularly from your members point of view. Our first release executes on our plan, a solid basic structure, a foundation for a comprehensible but simple plan.
We look forward to your feedback and thoughts.
Tweaking the delivery
The world around your club is constantly changing, it’s easy to over-think what your club is and is not. It’s useful to regularly remind yourself of why your club actually exists, what the one passion is that everyone wants to get together for.
Yes, you may want to tweak how you deliver the experience, but don’t forget why you’re there in the first place.
Your member and supporters are also having the same disruptive experience in their world. Are you making it easier for them to connect with and take advantage of your offering?
