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Originally Posted by dnall
I'm not talking at all about my school or my undergrad experience.
While I certainly believe very deeply in what my fraternity is about, operationally it is still a business. As a business, it must provide adequate services to meet the expectations of members or they will either not stay members or pay or both.
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So all of our "businesses" must be F500 in order to be successful? There's no market for mom-and-pop shops?
I'm not sure which ass cheek you pulled your formula from, but how do you know that the events provided by a 20-30 member chapter AREN'T meeting the expectations of members? They are, after all, the ones PLANNING said events.
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For an NIC fraternity at any school that is 14-20 events a year, and those have a definable cost. It will be variable from place to place, depending on the rule structure between your school and nationals as locally enforced, and what things cost in that area based on what's available. I can show you locations where to do that many events according to the rules/costs they are required to deal with the min cost regardless if you have 20 or 70 members would be close to 100k/yr. And I can show you other places where you can accomplish the same thing for a tiny fraction of that cost.
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The bold is where you keep fucking up. If you want to say "For ATO at large colleges..." fine. You obviously don't have enough knowledge of every NIC organization (one of which is my organization), so you cannot speak on the "norms" at EVERY school.
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I don't know what the economics of the greek system in Hawaii are. I'm not commenting on that. All I know is fewer members means less money, which drastically limits what you can do. That doesn't mean you can't survive or have a good greek experience, but that lack of resources will define that greek experience.
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Here's a formula.
100 members x $500 dues = $50,000
30 members x $2000 dues = $60,000
So -- fewer members does NOT always mean less money.
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While a 100man chapter has huge financial resources, there are just as many cons to that end of the spectrum as well, they just tend to be less about money. Some happy medium supportable by the school is the most balanced situation. 20-anything is always going to be a struggle for resources. That chapter would be best served to get their numbers up closer to 40. There's a lot more synergy in that range to capitalize on.
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So Regional State University is always going to struggle, regardless of the fact that the campus can't support hundred-man chapters? Ok.