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Guild Recruitment Guide
When you make a guild, and you go around advertising to try and
recruit people, dont say
"We are a fun guild that wants to raid and group together and
help each other out and above all have fun!"
Or something to that effect. It is usually pretty well assumed
your guild will group with each other at some point, and help
each other at some point. If not, why would someone want to
join? Here are a few suggestions I have for recruiting, if you
want to have a better shot at building a guild that has a lower
turnaround rate:
1. Explain your guild's goal -- in DETAIL!
Maybe in your recruiting message you ask them to /tell you for
details.
Explain what your goal for the guild is. Raids at higher level?
Just a casual group of gamers looking for someone to talk to
when they play at the end of a hard day? Hardcore HvA guild?
People often leave a guild when they find out the guild is not
aimed at their particular game style. Avoid this by informing
them ahead of time.
2. Tell them why you want them to join.
Do you just want a large number in your guild? Some people (
myself included ) don't want to join a guild that is inviting
them solely for the purpose of having large numbers. I want a
guild that chooses me based on my qualifications or play style.
If you are just looking for numbers, tell them that. If you are
in need of, say as in my example, a Priest, tell them that. Let
them know why you feel you could benefit from them joining, and
they are likely to feel better, knowing their place in the
guild.
3. Explain requirements.
If you require that people be on for x number of hours between
x.xx and x.xx during the day, say so first off! It is
frustrating to be in a guild and then all of a sudden find out
you _need_ to play certain hours. People will quit after finding
out they cant comply, and be upset that you wasted their time by
not informing them ahead of time.
This also goes for things like raids or guild meetings. If you
are going to REQUIRE that everyone in your guild sit in one
place for an hour, talking in /gu, then tell them that as well.
Nothing has frustrated me more so far than being expected to
spend at least an hour of my free time sitting down in front of
a guild leader while everyone talks in /g, when I could easily
do it from anywhere else in the world. Everyone benefits from
sharing this information in the beginning.
4. Level requirements
Many guilds do not have level requirements yet, but they hold
guild-wide groups and events that members must be xx+ level to
attend. If you are going to have these _often_, please do not
invite people that are 5 levels lower than this. They will feel
left out when everyone shows what they are getting for loot in a
place they cannot go to, and they will not be able to get as
many groups. Yes, some people level faster than others, so I
understand that there will always be someone that is left
behind. But there should always be at least 1 group of people
around the minimum level that can do those events/quests/etc
that everyone else was doing before.
IF you are going to invite someone below that level anyway, let
them know ahead of time that they will not be able to
participate in a lot of these things until they gain x number of
levels.
I think that is all I have for suggestions, for now. Please
remember that people will often leave a guild if they are not
provided with any information ahead of time, and it turns out to
not fit their style of gameplay. Its like blind dating, not
every date will lead to marriage.
Its easier when you can make an informed decision first.
So, advertise your guilds however you feel is best to get your
guild where you want it to go. Take my suggestions with a grain
of salt -- its mostly just the way I would like to base my
decisions for a guild on.
And if you have any other suggestions, by all means append my
list! . |