Postering Secrets:
How & Where to Hang Flyers On Your Campus
By Butch Oxendine, Editor-in-Chief
Excerpted
with permission from The
Student Leader. Copyright © 1998 Oxendine Publishing,
Inc. All rights reserved.
Next to word-of-mouth, flyers and posters can be the next two
best ways to promote your group. This publicity can help you
recruit new members, improve attendance at meetings, and even
raise money. Posters are cheap to produce (you can copy a couple
of hundred for just a few dollars), easy to change or update,
can be put up for free, and can be distributed by your own staff
or members.
But if your campus is like many others across the country,
when you put up a flyer tonight, tomorrow morning it will be
plastered over with ads for fraternity parties and upcoming
meetings. "The only way to find a clean place to post at
the University of Florida is to light a match," jokes Mike
Eisenberg, president of Collegiate Promotions International,
a postering company in Tampa, Florida.
That's because most student groups are unsophisticated and
haphazard in how they poster they give members a stapler,
copies, and say "Go to it." "You don't have to
be professional to be effective, but you need to be efficient,"
says Stephen Crockett, president of Mid-South Marketing in Tennessee.
If you're courteous to other groups, keep track of where you
put your posters, and monitor boards regularly, you can get
a lot of attention through your flyers. Putting up posters
the right way around campus can be well worth your time and
effort.
Tip #1: Get permission first
Some schools first require that all posters and flyers be
approved by the dean's office or by student activities, then
stamped with an official seal. "At our school, students
have to get their posters stamped at each building, which
has control of how its posters are distributed," says
Cynthia Kane, assistant director of Student Activities at
Seton Hall University in New York.
Tip #2: Don't hog the boards
Never put more than one or two posters on each bulletin board.
You'll get a bad image and create hard feelings among other
student groups if you blanket the boards with your posters.You
can put up more than one if it's a short-term event, like
an election, a concert, or a fund-raiser. But then immediately
afterward, take them down.
Tip #3: Remove your old posters
Don't wait months to take down your flyers. "At one
school, I found posters that were 18 months old, 30 layers
thick," Mid-South's Crockett says. "If it looks
messy, people will poster over top of you. A lot of students
aren't going to check before they post you over." The
University of Texas at Austin has developed an innovative
postering technique that has helped prevent a lot of unsightly
trash around campus. "Students used to put posters anyplace,
on trees, trash cans, basically anything that didn't move,"
says Jerry Harrison, UT's manager of landscape services. "But
a few years ago, we built some kiosks which are barrel-shaped,
made out of redwood. Every six inches, we have these large
elastic bands that are permanently attached. Students can
slip the posters under it. They work great."
Tip #4: Walls are no-no's
Nearly all colleges and universities across the nation prohibit
clubs from sticking posters to interior or exterior classroom
walls. Taping or stapling posters to walls eventually will
peel off the paint, can damage drywall, and could end up costing
your school and ultimately raise your tuition.
Tip #5: Never use glue or staple guns
Heavy-duty staple guns are a no-no because they tear up the
boards. Instead, use an office stapler, such as an Arrow stapler,
or a "light-duty" staple gun. Don't use glue on
plexiglass or on glass it's almost impossible to remove
without damage, which angers the "owner" of the
board or newspaper box.
Tip #6: Keep track of the best locations
Spend an hour or two going around your campus to do a bulletin
board inspection where they are, how heavily covered
they are, and how well they're maintained. Keep detailed notes
about your observations of each location. While sitting for
an hour or two visiting with friends, studying, or reading,
monitor "traffic" in front of certain board locations.
Write down how many students walk by the boards and note how
many actually stop for a minute or two to read posters. If
you don't keep these records, when your leader graduates,
transfers, or leaves school, then you'll have to start over
from scratch.
One time-tested option is to place posters on the backs of
stall doors in restrooms, if it's permitted. These locations
are the ultimate captive audience. "Since Simmons College
is all women, this works really well," says Karen Boss,
a former student activities employee at Simmons. "People
will always read what is in front of them."
Tip #7: Target your audience
Target your market, just like in a political campaign. Don't
put posters in areas and buildings that don't relate to your
organization. It doesn't make much sense to put engineering
club posters in the business building or flyers for the chemistry
club in the political science department.
Tip #8: Classrooms vs. breezeways
In classrooms, students are stuck in one place for an hour
or more. If you place your posters inside classrooms on the
small bulletin boards near the doors, you'll get the whole
class's attention. "If you're looking for maximum exposure,
breezeways may be best. But classrooms are better for reaching
specific majors," Crockett says. "You may get 200
kids through a classroom in a day, but you may have 2,000
students walk down a hallway, which is way more competition,
but also a lot more traffic."
Tip #9: When to poster
Ideally, start putting up posters one week before your event.
Don't wait until the day before or it'll be too late to attract
much attention. On the other hand, if you start too far ahead
of time, you'll get posted over. Put up your posters two days
in a row classes usually run Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday, then other classes are on Tuesday and Thursday.
Tip #10: Best time of day to poster
Go late at night or early in the morning. "We try to
get out at 4 or 5 a.m. and leave enough of the board exposed
so that anyone posting later will likely leave some of our
posters," says Charles Grapski of the Independent Student
Coalition at the University of Florida. "Sometimes it's
a chore, but it can be fun."
Tip #11: Where to post on a board
Try to put your posters at eye level and remember than everyone
isn't the same height. Some people are taller than others,
while others use wheelchairs. "One of the most
unique means of attracting attention that I've observed on
our campus is when groups place a `Burma Shave' type display
on stairs," says Ken Peress of Susquehanna University
in Pennsylvania. "You can't miss them when you start
up the steps. Mounting this type of poster is more difficult
than posting traditional flyers, but it gets a lot of attention."
Tip #12: Who should poster?
Unless they understand what you're trying to accomplish,
not every member of your organization should be allowed or
asked to put up posters. If they break the rules, it may be
your group's reputation that could be tarnished.
Tip #13: What if somebody posters over you?
If someone slaps their posters over yours, remove theirs.
You have that right. But knowing how much you hate it when
this happens to you, don't perpetuate the problem. That's
precisely why you shouldn't post over someone else's flyers.
Tip #14: Postering gets your members involved
It's actually a good way to get your members and volunteers
involved, to motivate them, and to help them develop a sense
of being valued by your organization. There may be people
who don't want to do fund raisers or a discussion seminar,
but who may be real happy to poster.
Conclusion
You can get better attendance at club or organization meetings
and more attention for events if you develop a strategy about
when, where, and how to display posters and flyers on campus
to get the most exposure possible.
Like this article and need more details and specific ideas
for your campus? Then order a copy of our new 64-page workbook,
Postering Secrets: How & Where to Hang Flyers on Your Campus.
For books on this topic in our bookstore,
click the
link(s) below:
Recruitment
Volunteers by Type (includes youth)
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Permission is granted for organizations to download and reprint this article. Reprints must provide full acknowledgment of source, as provided:
Excerpted with
permission from The Student
Leader. Copyright © 1998 Oxendine Publishing, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Found in the Energize website library at: http://www.energizeinc.com/art.html