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5 Things Every Chapter Should Be Preparing Right Now – CBFO Edition

1. Build and Finalize the Full Fall Recruitment & Intake Calendar

The most successful organizations are already mapping out August through November before summer begins.

This includes:

Recruitment events

Informational meetings

Community service events

Educational programming

Collaboration opportunities

Intake timelines

University-required deadlines

National/regional organizational deadlines

Homecoming planning

New member presentation timing

Why this matters – Without a structured calendar:

Chapters compete against each other unnecessarily

Members become overwhelmed

Potential new members disengage

Marketing becomes rushed

Intake processes feel disorganized

What organizations should do NOW:

– Undergraduate Chapters

Meet with incoming executive boards

Review what worked and failed this year

Build a draft Fall semester calendar

Coordinate with campus Fraternity & Sorority Life offices

Identify high-conflict dates early

– Graduate and Alumni Chapters

Align mentoring/support expectations for undergraduate chapters

Confirm advisor and support availability

Prepare support for membership education and risk management

– Councils (CBFOs)

Create shared calendars

Plan council-wide involvement fairs and showcases

Schedule collaborative programming early

Establish intake blackout/conflict dates if needed

Best practice – By the end of June, chapters should ideally know:

Their first 4–6 weeks of programming

Tentative intake windows

Marketing launch dates

Member staffing expectations

 

2. Complete MIP / Risk Management / Advisor Training Before Summer

Many organizations lose momentum because officers and advisors are not trained before students leave campus.

For many culturally based organizations, this is the ideal time to:

Complete Membership Intake Process (MIP) certifications

Finish anti-hazing education

Conduct advisor onboarding

Review campus compliance requirements

Train new officers

Critical areas to review:

Intake eligibility requirements

Documentation procedures

Event management expectations

Social media guidelines

Risk prevention

Crisis response procedures

University policy updates

Why this matters – Fall recruitment problems usually come from:

Miscommunication

Policy confusion

Untrained officers

Advisor disengagement

Last-minute preparation

Strong chapters do this now – They do not wait until:

August retreats

The first chapter meeting

The week before interest meetings

Advisor preparation should include:

Intake oversight expectations

Communication plans

Escalation procedures

Event approval timelines

Student leadership coaching

This is especially important for undergraduate transitions where institutional knowledge may be limited.

 

3. Audit and Clean Up Recruitment Infrastructure & Technology

Now is the perfect time to organize systems before Fall traffic begins.

This includes:

Interest forms

ChapterBuilder leads list

Email lists

Texting systems

Social media pages

Chapter websites

Shared drives

Event registration workflows

Organizations should ask:

Where are leads currently being stored?

Who has access to systems?

Are there duplicate or outdated contacts?

Is follow-up automated?

Are officers trained on the platform?

Are branding materials updated?

Important recruitment reality – Most chapters lose potential members because:

Nobody follows up

Leads are disorganized

Contact information gets lost

There is no communication strategy

Recommended actions NOW:

– Data cleanup

Remove duplicate records

Archive inactive contacts

Verify member access permissions

– Communication preparation

Create email templates

Build text campaigns

Prepare FAQ responses

Schedule summer engagement touchpoints

– Marketing prep

Design Fall graphics now

Plan content calendars

Prepare interest campaign assets

Collect photos/videos from the year

– Pro tip
Organizations that recruit well in Fall often begin “soft recruitment” over the summer through:

Instagram engagement

Accepted student outreach

Orientation participation

Summer text/email nurturing

 

4. Develop a Strategic Summer Engagement Plan

Recruitment starts long before the first event. Summer engagement is one of the biggest differences between high-performing chapters and struggling chapters.

Why this matters – Potential members are making decisions during the summer about:

Campus involvement

Social belonging

Organizations they want to explore

Who feels welcoming and visible

Organizations should prepare:

– Incoming student outreach

Welcome messages

Orientation involvement

Summer informational sessions

Virtual meet-and-greets

– Relationship-building content

Member spotlights

Alumni features

Community impact stories

Educational content about organizational values

– Consistent communication – Potential members should see

Activity

Professionalism

Organization

Authentic culture

Strong organizations focus on:

Relationship-building over hard selling

Visibility over pressure

Education over exclusivity messaging

CBFO organizations especially benefit from:

Cultural storytelling

Identity-based programming previews

Collaboration visibility

Cross-community partnerships

 

5. Prepare Leadership Transitions and Internal Chapter Readiness

Many Fall recruitment issues actually begin with weak Spring transitions.

May is often when:

Seniors graduate

Officers transition

Institutional knowledge disappears

Momentum resets

Chapters should focus on:

– Transition documentation

Recruitment timelines

Vendor contacts

Event templates

Intake procedures

Budget information

Campus relationships

Marketing assets

– Membership expectations – Before Fall begins, members should understand:

Recruitment participation requirements

Attendance expectations

Conduct expectations

Social media professionalism

Financial obligations

Event staffing responsibilities

– Internal culture matters – Potential members can quickly identify:

Disorganization

Internal conflict

Poor communication

Burnout

Lack of member engagement

Successful chapters use May and June to:

Rebuild morale

Clarify goals

Set expectations

Re-engage inactive members

Recruit committee volunteers

Recommended planning conversations:

What kind of chapter culture do we want to be visible this Fall?

What experience do we want prospective members to have?

What are our recruitment goals?

What capacity do we realistically have?

How do we sustain relationships after recruitment?

 

Additional Areas Organizations Often Forget

Campus Partnership Planning – Connect now with:

Fraternity & Sorority Life staff

Student affairs offices

Admissions/orientation teams

Cultural centers-[=p

Alumni advisors

Budget Preparation – Finalize:

Recruitment budgets

Marketing budgets

Apparel timelines

Event funding

Intake-related expenses

Marketing & Branding Consistency – Ensure:

Correct logos

Approved language

Consistent messaging

Updated chapter bios/websites

Professional visuals

 

The Biggest Mistake Organizations Make

Waiting until students return to campus to start planning.

The strongest Fall recruitment seasons are usually built:

In May and June

Refined over the summer

Executed confidently, starting in August

Organizations that prepare now create:

Better member experiences

Stronger intake processes

Higher retention

Better campus visibility

Less officer burnout

More sustainable chapter operations

 

 

Written by Ashley Swift, Customer Success Manager