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HomeSummer Camp DirectorsSummer Camp ParentsSummer Camp StaffPress
 

Staffing Your Camp In The Aftermath Of September 11
By Andrew Ackerman
(Reprinted in The Two River Times, March 8, 2002; et. al.)

It is fair to say that concerns about security at camp are going to play a larger role than ever this summer but what may not be immediately obvious is the impact they are having right now. At least nine of the 19 hijackers implicated in the September 11th terrorist attacks entered the US legally on visas – many of them student visas. Though the six-month moratorium Senator Dianne Feinstein (Dem-CA) called for on student visas has not (yet?) become law, it will be clearly be more difficult - if not impossible - to hire non-American camp staff for summer 2002. Camps need to start preparing for this possibility now.

According to a study underway by camp expert Bob Ditter and Bill Harwood (president of CCUSA), about 60,000 international staff came into the US summer 2001 to work, up from 40,000 the summer before. CCUSA and Camp America alone bring in about 6,000 and 5,000 camp staff people respectively. It is a rare camp that has no foreign employees on its staff and some camps rely on them for 40% of their camp staff needs! Even with this pool of potential employees, finding enough qualified, caring staff is a challenge. Without it, you may find staff shortages significantly limiting the programs you are able to offer.

This year you are going to have to start recruiting camp staff sooner than ever before. How soon? How about right now. Your competition is already recruiting camp staff for summer 2002. You cannot afford to be left behind.

But this year’s staff search is going to have to be qualitatively different. You are going to have to search in more places than ever before. Job fairs, ads in college newspapers – the usual standbys are just not going to cut it anymore. The good news is that the internet offers you more tools than ever… if you know how to take advantage of them.

“Help Wanted”
If you have a camp website – and you really should have a website by now – you should, at the very least, have a “help wanted” page that lists the jobs you have available.

Each job description should include:

  • Job name
  • Job Description
  • Start and end dates
  • Requirements (e.g., driver’s license, Red Cross certification)
  • Salary *

* If you are uncomfortable posting an exact number, post a range (e.g., $1000-$1200) and be certain to specify if room & board are included and whether the salary is weekly, monthly, or for the entire summer.

This page should also include instructions how to apply for a camp job. Many camps put application forms on their sites for staff to download and print, others include webforms that staff can fill out online. Either way, the ‘call to action’ should clear to the potential staffer. Lastly, don’t make these forms too long. Websurfers have a notorious low pain threshold when it comes to long forms. It is far better to get the basic information from 100 interested staff people than to get full information from 10 people while the other 90 give up halfway.

How to get to this page should be clearly visible from your camp’s home page. You want to make “Help wanted” (or “Camp Jobs”, “Job Openings”, etc.) part of your website’s main navigation area (this area is typically a row of links across the top or down the left side of all the pages on your website) and/or place a big, bright button “Want to work at Camp Sunshine? Click here” prominently on your home page. Prospective staff won’t bother to dig for this information; if they don’t see this information front and center, they’ll just move on to the next camp.

Don’t wait for them to come to you
Most staff people you find don’t come to your door. You need to find them. It’s no different online. The first step is to post you jobs on websites that cater to would-be camp staff. Some of these sites let you post camp jobs for free, others charge a fee (see below for a few examples). Each site provides a slightly different set of services so read closely to be certain what you are getting for your money.

If you are having trouble staffing your camp, you may want to consider posting your camp jobs on a few of these sites.

The two most important things to consider when evaluating a job posting site are traffic and how easy it is for a job seeker to search through the camp jobs. Traffic is simple (the more potential staff people who visit the site, the more people who see your ads) but ease of use is just as important. If users can’t easily search for jobs that are relevant to them (i.e., the right type of job, the right location, day vs. residential), they won’t go out of their way to find you ad.

In many sites, prospective camp staff have the options of simply fill out a resume and waiting to be contacted rather than actively search for a camp job. All the sites listed above also give camp directors the option of searching through their staff databases for just these people. Search through those resumes often!

Know who you hire
Even in the best of times, parents are jittery about sending their children away for the summer. One way you can reassure them (and protect yourself!) is to run background checks on all employees. These can run from $10 and up depending on how much detail you want and which state the employee is from. A complete description of what these entail is beyond the scope of this article but there are a few companies with particular experience working with summer camps worth looking into.

Andrew Ackerman is the Chief Operations Officer of Bunk1.com. Bunk1.com provides password protected Community features, full websites, staffing services to summer camps and maintains a widely used camp search engine. For more information regarding this article or Bunk1.com, please contact owners@Bunk1.com or call 1-888-465-CAMP.

 



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