At a recent yacht club bridge meeting, we were discussing the need to recruit younger members. Someone rightly pointed out that younger people increasingly can't afford to get into boating.
As we all know, it isn't particularly hard/expensive to get a serviceable boat. The expensive and labor-intensive part is everything that follows. And, new boaters don't always appreciate what all of these costs and efforts will look like.
I think a strong path forward for us it to specifically try to find and appeal to new boaters in general, and sailors specifically. My idea is to figure out ways to support people who are new to the sport - like maybe just before or just after buying their first cruising boat. (We are a cruising club.) Our club is rich with experience but, as are many clubs, short on younger members. We are not in a position to run youth sailing programs and the like, for a number of reasons. But, I am thinking more of targeting the 35-50 crowd.
Does anyone have ideas for ways a (fairly small) yacht club could support new boaters that makes it easier for them to enter and stay into cruising? There are some obvious ways, such as simply having experience "on-tap" to answer questions about insurance, maintenance, moorage, anchoring, etc. But, I think there might be an opportunity to do something more formal - something that helps all new boaters, not just members. It would be a community service, but also a good recruitment tool.
I should also mention that there is an excellent ABC club in town that already offers much in the way of education. And, we have a thriving community boating center that teaches small paddle and sailboat skills, up to intermediate keelboat. I tend to think our niche in supporting new boaters is more about the non-sailing parts - buying a boat, insurance, moorage, etc.
Thoughts/ideas?
As we all know, it isn't particularly hard/expensive to get a serviceable boat. The expensive and labor-intensive part is everything that follows. And, new boaters don't always appreciate what all of these costs and efforts will look like.
I think a strong path forward for us it to specifically try to find and appeal to new boaters in general, and sailors specifically. My idea is to figure out ways to support people who are new to the sport - like maybe just before or just after buying their first cruising boat. (We are a cruising club.) Our club is rich with experience but, as are many clubs, short on younger members. We are not in a position to run youth sailing programs and the like, for a number of reasons. But, I am thinking more of targeting the 35-50 crowd.
Does anyone have ideas for ways a (fairly small) yacht club could support new boaters that makes it easier for them to enter and stay into cruising? There are some obvious ways, such as simply having experience "on-tap" to answer questions about insurance, maintenance, moorage, anchoring, etc. But, I think there might be an opportunity to do something more formal - something that helps all new boaters, not just members. It would be a community service, but also a good recruitment tool.
I should also mention that there is an excellent ABC club in town that already offers much in the way of education. And, we have a thriving community boating center that teaches small paddle and sailboat skills, up to intermediate keelboat. I tend to think our niche in supporting new boaters is more about the non-sailing parts - buying a boat, insurance, moorage, etc.
Thoughts/ideas?
