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Copy them from previous years (listed in the wiki as child pages) and change the date and location, or get creative and design your own! Be sure to save them into the wiki (pdf and source format) for reuse in later years.

Hire someone to poster

Recently there's been one person who's been postering for most of campus. She needs a fair bit of time beforehand (one or two weeks), which has been a reason I (Dennis) didn't always coordinate with her. She does work with student groups and so has an MIT vendor number you can pay. She also knows the poster cleanup schedule better than anyone and is responsible for maybe 80% of the posters on campus. I would recommend hiring her if the treasurer is okay with it (the price as of 2013 was $0.35 per poster, which she says has not changed in years). Her contact info is:

Rachel Maillet
781-696-2824, cell
781-890-7850, work?
rachelmaureen@hotmail.com

If you don't hire her, the following sections are good advice for how to poster:Double check that you have the dates for the start of class and the locations correct. In recent years (as of 2015), we've put QR codes on our posters and made these unique each semester to try to track effectiveness. It's unclear whether this is worth it. 

Making copies

If possible, use colored paper, as it stands out more. Try to pick unusual colors, and if necessary go up another price bracket to get colors that fewer groups use. Or use Using color printing !can be effective too, but limit its use as it is expensive.

You can have the copies charged straight to our account, and that way you don't have to get reimbursed for the cost. Use the main account number listed on the Treasurer wiki page. Apparently this can only be done at the CopyTech main campus location, but you can also send files there electronically and the printouts will be ready when you go to pick them up.

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Posters in obscure locations may persist for months, so poster all over first, and they'll be there during the entire recruitment period with no more work from us.

When to poster

Ideally as soon as the blackout lifts (or maybe At least two weeks before the class starts), and maybe earlier. Keep postering up until and including the first day of class itself. We can only have two chances a year to recruit new members two times per year, so we need to make it count. 

Finding space to poster

Bulletin boards at the Institute are cleared on Sunday and Thursday nights (depending on how busy facilities is). People are inconsiderate. My heuristics for "making space" on bulletin boards are:

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This isn't a passive business; our presence needs to be maintained. Other groups are much more cut-throat and you
have you have to keep things up. If I'm walking and find someone has covered one of our flyers, I don't think twice moving theirs. GET HELP. Other MIT-frequenting members should be recruited to police the postering.

Table-top cards in the dining halls now require a reservation to be made at the ARA office, W20-5th floor. By my last count, Lobdell has about 90 tables and Walker has 55 tables. I haven't done Baker and I think there is another dorm-based dining hall in a west campus dorm.

Postering Blackout

At the beginning of the school year, during rush/orientation up until the activities midway, the ASA limits how student groups may recruit new students. This may interact with early postering you want to do. Check the official ASA rules or ask them for clarification to be sure.The ASA seems to have stopping having a blackout period, but check http://web.mit.edu/asa/rules/recruitment-rules.html and make sure we're following recruitment rules.