| Focus
on Young Alums
This past summer and fall the Duke Alumni
Association reached out to young alumni through a series of focus
groups aimed at determining their needs and expectations. The groups
met in six cities: Boston, New York, Washington, Seattle, Raleigh,
and Durham/Chapel Hill. The focus groups comprised two members
of each graduating class from 1997 to 2006, all selected at random.
Participants were invited to voice concerns and make suggestions
about the services the DAA offers to young alumni.
The results of those focus groups are beginning to be seen in new
programming offered by the DAA, especially to young alumni moving
to new cities.
This fall, the DAA plans to host “welcome parties” for recent graduates
in cities such as Boston and New York that attract many young graduates.
Other Duke clubs are encouraged to plan their own local events.
The idea is modeled after the “send-off parties” given over the
summer for incoming Duke students.
“Students have no way of knowing who else lives in these cities
unless it’s their group of friends,” says Kim Hanauer ’02, director
of student and young alumni programs. “This is a way for them to
connect with Duke and, at the same time, with older alumni for
business and social networking and just to get acquainted with
the city.” In addition, this summer, the DAA will begin testing
a variety of welcome packages, ranging from an e-mail message from
the local club to a DAA-sponsored book designed as a kind of Zagat’s
guide to the city, including restaurant recommendations and other
information about the city, as well as local Duke resources. Surveys
will be used to determine which approaches are the most effective;
those will be offered nationwide.
Emma Boa-Durgammah ’05, who participated in the New York focus
group, says that her employer helped her get oriented in the city
but that services provided by Duke could have helped her earlier
in the process and provided more continuity in the transition from
school to work.
Other new programming in the works includes information sessions
targeted toward young alumni applying to graduate schools and toward
those buying homes, investing, saving for their children, and starting
their own businesses. Jay Barry ’03, who participated in the Washington
group, says he thinks these activities are a good move forward
in the effort to engage recent graduates. “I think it’s going to
be really helpful for the alumni.”
For more information about young alumni programs, contact Kim Hanauer
at kim.hanauer@daa.duke.edu or (919) 684-2766. |