What is Young & Free
Maine?

A great new free4ME checking account and a voice for Maine's 25-and-under crowd

The Young & Free Initiative is a platform designed to help define freedom for Maine youth and provides fun and educational resources to help and challenge young people to move towards that freedom. Young & Free Maine comes to life in an online environment where meaning happens amongst thought-provoking, relevant and empowering dialogue.

The Purpose

  • Give Maine's 25-and-under crowd a voice and place of their own.
  • Empower members of this group to define and find freedom.
  • Provide free and relevant advice.
  • Find a spokesperson from within this group who will listen and be an ear to what’s going on about topics that are important to youth.
  • Help Maine's Credit Unions learn from the 25-and-under crowd to help the credit unions design better products and services that this group needs.
  • Raise the profile of Maine's Credit Unions to get on young people’s consideration list for possible financial institutions.

General Information

If you are looking for more information about the Young & Free Program, please contact:

Tim McAlpine
President
Currency Marketing
604.792.4053 ext. 62
+ Email Tim at tmcalpine@currencymarketing.ca
+ www.currencymarketing.ca

 

Physical Location:
2 Ledgeview Drive
Westbrook, ME
+ Google Maps

Mailing Address:
PO Box 1236
Portland, ME 04104

Toll-Free in Maine: 800-442-6715
Outside Maine: 800-341-0180

WEBSITE
www.mainecreditunions.org

Media Kit

If you have a Young & Free Maine media question, please contact:

Jon Paradise
Governmental & Public Affairs Manager
Maine Credit Union League
207-773-5671 ext. 273
Toll-Free in Maine: 800-442-6715
Outside Maine: 800-341-0180
Cell: 207-653-2309

Support materials for editorial use

Media Resources

  • PDF | Young & Free Maine Fact Sheet
  • PDF | Young & Free Maine FAQS

Logo artwork

  • PDF | Y&F Maine logo brand identity guide
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  • EPS | AI | JPG | Young & Free Account with url (color)
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  • EPS | AI | JPG | Young & Free Maine by Maine's Credit Unions hor (color)
  • EPS | AI | JPG | Young & Free Maine by Maine's Credit Unions hor (black)
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  • EPS | AI | JPG | Young & Free Maine by Maine's Credit Unions vert (black)
  • EPS | AI | JPG | Powered by Maine's Credit Unions (color)
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  • EPS | AI | JPG | Young & Free Maine url (color)
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Media Releases

  • PDF | Huge Perk Added to the Young & Free Maine Spokesperson Job Search!
  • PDF | 04-29-2011 | Down East CU Gives free4ME a “Jump Start” with Unique Enhancements
  • PDF | 04/18/2011 | Maine’s Credit Unions Launch Online Search for Spokesperson

Media Coverage

Monday
May072012

Young & Free Maine

FOX 23 myfoxmaine.com

As Maine's credit unions are looking for their next spokester. The winner will get a job and will post videos and blogs to educate Maine's young adults on how to manage their money. The contest is now down to 3 finalists with voting going on now through May 16th. Two of the three finalists, Kylie Keene and Danielle Waldron, are here to talk with us about their perspective on financial uses for 18 to 25 year olds.

Young & Free Maine
To Vote, go to:
MaineCUL.org
YoungFreeMaine.com

+ Original article

Tuesday
Apr102012

Helping young people navigate the ‘Real World’

BDM Maine Business | By Russ Van Arsdale

We live in a complicated, fast-changing world, and many young people don’t feel very well prepared for it once they’ve finished school. Today’s column examines a couple of resources where people in their teens and 20s can get some useful information.

The first is an organization set up by a former teacher of at-risk students in southern Maine. Navigating the Real World, or NtRW, is a nonprofit organization for young people and their parents, and its touchstones are practical information and advice.

Tom Tracy, founder and executive director of NtRW, contends that schools do a better job of preparing students for the next level of school than for the world that awaits them as graduates.

“We’re pretty ignorant about helping our kids get through these years,” Tracy told me last week. He cites some troubling results obtained through testing in schools as proof. Tracy points to a study of 13 Maine high schools in which 76 percent of the juniors who took math and writing tests failed the math portion.

While it may be easy to blame the schools, Tracy says the solution is to help young people by providing them with sound advice and information, which often is best received when it comes from their peers.

The NtRW website (www.NtRW.org) contains help on a number of topics, from study habits to job interviews to social pressures. Advice is presented in the form of interviews or narratives recorded on video; most are made by young people who direct their comments at others in their age group.

The organizers of NtRW also distribute print versions of their advice to high schools across the state. A tabloid for middle-schoolers is in the works, and there’s a publication called The Maine Parents’ Guide to Middle School, High School and Beyond. It includes interviews with parents on their experiences and tips that might be useful to others.

Tracy says NtRW leaders have held two workshops on improving students’ writing, and more are being planned. He also would like to tackle cross-curriculum learning and math issues in later conferences.

Another source of help for young people comes from Maine’s credit unions, which have banded together in an effort called Young & Free Maine (www.youngfreemaine.com) to offer free checking accounts, debit and check cards and other financial products. They’re aimed at 18-to-25 year-olds, who seem to like the no-charge aspect of the services. There’s even a $10 iTunes gift card for new account holders.

The Young & Free Maine website also includes video clips with financial and other advice, this time from a designated “spokester.” Entries for the spokester job are being accepted until April 20, with a new winner selected to represent Maine’s credit unions for a year.

Our young people need solid information to make their way safely and securely. We recommend these paths as starting places.

+ Original article

Monday
Apr022012

Marketing and big-bank backlash swell credit union ranks

Mainebiz | By Matt Dodge

Nationwide, credit union assets saw a 5% bump in 2011 with total assets across the country's 7,094 federally insured credit unions rising to $47.4 billion according to National Credit Union Administration

Around the country, credit unions hit a record number of members last year, adding 1.3 million in 2011. Much of the growth on the national level came in the fourth quarter with 398,000 customers leaving larger financial institutions for smaller community banks and nonprofit credit unions.

The trend was a bit more subdued in Maine, where credit union membership has long been above average; at 46.6%, Maine ranks sixth in credit union membership as a percentage of state population, while nationwide the average is 29.8%.

"Maine has always been a very strong credit union state in general. I've always said they are one of the best kept secrets in the world of financial services," says John Murphy, president and CEO of the Maine Credit Union League. The MCUL's youth-oriented Young & Free program, surcharge-free ATMs, increased marketing budgets and recent news stories presenting credit unions as a financial services alternative have all contributed to the recent growth in membership and assets, according to Murphy.

Four-year growth figures for Maine credit unions also show growth in loans and savings across the state's 191 credit union branches with loans rising 9.4% and savings up 21.5%.

Originally founded as a cooperative movement aimed at pooling money to offer credit to individuals, the first official credit unions were founded in Germany in 1849 to protect poor urban workers from opportunistic loan sharks. The concept grew rapidly in the United States during the Great Depression, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Federal Credit Union Act, establishing a nationwide credit union system overseen by the federal government.

"The Great Depression is really when credit unions started to spread around the country to serve people of all incomes and backgrounds," says Murphy. Given the hardscrabble roots of the credit union model, the recent rise in membership could well be tied to the recent economic downturn, according to Murphy. "In tough economic times, people look to save money on a bunch of things — that holds true for financial services as well."

Credit unions typically offer lower late-payment, overdraft and ATM fees as well as interest rates than their banking brethren; five-year car loans at banks carried an average interest rate of 5.1% last September while credit unions were 3.7%, according to CNNMoney. The Credit Union National Association estimates credit union members saved $6.78 billion in interest and fees from 2010 to 2011 as compared with banking institutions.

"You can't be in financial services today and not have some sort of fee structure, but the issue is to what degree do you implement and impose fees," says Murphy.

Murphy says the nonprofit, member-run credit union model promotes accountability and fosters a sense of community within the organization. "There is certainly a difference in terms of structure versus [big banks]. Credit unions are responsible to membership as the people that own and operate the [credit union] are also the people that use it," says Murphy.

The cooperative credit union model held up particularly well during the recession, according to CUNA. With volunteer boards and no enterprising stockholders to answer to, credit unions were able to avoid the danger-laden derivatives market that put many larger financial institutions on shaky financial footing and focus more on serving their local communities.

"With credit union loans, all those dollars have gone directly back into the community, whether it's a home mortgage or car loan, it goes right back into the local economy," says Murphy.

Remember, remember the fifth of November

Last November's Bank Transfer Day capitalized on consumer discontent surrounding increased service fees on checking accounts at large national banks such as Wells Fargo, Citi and Chase, but it was a proposed monthly fee for debit card use at Bank of America that catalyzed the effort, leading one California woman to create a Facebook event urging friends to withdraw their money from "big banks" on Nov. 5.

Within three days, Kristen Christian's event had garnered 8,000 attendees. Two days before Bank Transfer day, that number swelled to nearly 80,000. CUNA estimates that 40,000 new credit union accounts were opened on Bank Transfer Day.

In the three months following, an estimated 5.6 million Americans moved some or all of their money from banks to credit unions, according to Javelin Strategy & Research. Eleven percent of those who transferred funds cited Bank Transfer Day as the reason for the switch, while 26% attributed the decision to increasing banking fees.

While Bank of America eventually scrapped the new fee for debit card use, the country's second largest bank still saw a 20% increase in account closures in the fourth quarter of 2011, while credit unions added 1.3 million new members to bring total membership to a record 91.8 million, according to the National Credit Union Administration.

"Bank Transfer Day was not started by the credit union industry but rather a consumer who was fed up," says Murphy, who doesn't discount the role of social media in effecting change. "When these sorts of things happen today, they are more apt to be promoted virally."

Overall, defection rates for large, national and midsize banks rose an average of 2.1% while defection rates for credit unions dropped 7.9%.

While Murphy could not provide any data on the effect of Bank Transfer Day on credit union membership in Maine, he said the media hype surrounding the event frequently mentioned credit unions as a "good, viable alternative" to larger financial institutions. "I'm sure there has been some rise," Murphy says.

Chris Pinkham, president of the Maine Bankers Association, takes issue with the recent surge in anti-bank media that lumps all such institutions together regardless of size, service or community involvement. "The average person just looks at the headlines. The analogy I use is Congress — when polled, everyone says they dislike Congress, but when you ask them about their individual senator, they love them," says Pinkham, whose organization represents 30 Maine-based banks, the overwhelming majority small, community banks.

But credit unions aren't just counting on organic growth, having launched a marketing effort to lure young Mainers to the state's credit unions. "Certainly credit unions are advertising more and individual marketing efforts have increased," says Murphy.

A youthful face of credit unions

A credit union member since the age of 6, Seth Poplaski never needed to be sold on the merits of small, community-based banking.

But as discontent with big banks started to rise following the TARP bailout in 2008, Poplaski started to notice a growing ire among his college-age peers. TARP saw the federal government shell out upwards of $430 billion to purchase assets and equity from financial institutions as a means of strengthening the faltering economy. The taxpayer share of the TARP program is estimated by the Congressional Budget Office to be $19 billion.

"People really started to get fed up with a lot of what banks stood for and after the bailout, I think they kind of started looking at credit unions more and more," says Poplaski, who will soon end his one-year tenure as spokesperson for the Maine Credit Union's Young & Free program. Through the initiative, Poplaski reaches out to Mainers ages 18 to 25, educating them on the benefits of credit union membership while helping to build a sense of community that he says is central to the credit union ethos.

The program's Free for Me checking account is tailor-made for younger members with fewer fees, built-in safeguards and modern amenities like no minimum balance, no monthly fees, online banking, shared branching and the "Oops Refund" to protect members who overdraw on their account. Over 2,000 such accounts were opened by 18- to 25-year-old Mainers in the last year, according to Poplaski, who partially credits awareness from movements like Occupy Wall Street and Bank Transfer Day to the surge. "[Those] definitely helped us out," he says.

A University of Maine grad with a focus in public management and broadcast journalism, Poplaski was intrigued by a job posting he saw at his local Bangor Federal Credit Union branch seeking a spokesperson for a new youth-targeted program being organized by the state's credit unions.

Working as a bartender at the time, Poplaski was eager to hone his media and public relations chops while promoting a system he had long believed in and dispelling misconceptions among his peers. "People really lump credit unions and banks together. Credit unions might offer some of the same services, but they're not the same thing," Poplaski says.

Poplaski found that among his peers, familiarity and brand names could outweigh logic and cost when it came to choosing a financial institution. "If you see a Bank of America, you know what you're going to get. People think banks are more convenient and they don't really look into it — it's like eating at a McDonalds or Subway because you know what you're going to get," says Poplaski.

Two blog posts, videos and an interview later, Poplaski made the final cut and stepped into his role as spokesperson last spring. At 24, Poplaski represents the older end of the 18-to-25 spectrum courted by the Young & Free program when he applied, but says his age affords him a good perspective on the issues facing post-college youth. "I had the experience of being in college, paying off loans and living on my own so I can say 'I've gone through this, I understand it'," Poplaski says.

Dollars and cents aside, Poplaski says that credit unions offer a sense of community that one doesn't typically see in the financial sector, an ethos he likens to that of his favorite sports team. "I'm a huge Green Bay Packers fan, and they are also owned by the fans, so I kind of liken it to that — you put money in credit union and you're a member, not a customer. You have a have a say at the annual meeting, you have a voice," Poplaski says.

But Pinkham sees the unique tax status afforded to credit unions as undermining their purported ethos of community involvement. Under federal law, credit unions are not required to pay federal or state income taxes because, as not-for-profit entities, credit unions return all profits to members in the form of lower rates and fees. Credit unions are still responsible for payroll, property and sales tax as well as various licensing fees.

"Credit unions have expanded their membership from a small, narrow common bond of members in the days of parish or company-based credit unions, but they still have the huge advantage of paying no state or federal taxes," says Pinkham. "Of course it's easier to offer less expensive, more attractive rates when you don't pay taxes."

Murphy says the Young & Free program is an important service as credit unions attempt to reach out to the next generation. "This [program] is a great opportunity to do that," he says. Having secured funds to keep the program running for another year, the search for the next Young & Free spokesperson began in March.

+ Original article

Wednesday
Feb082012

Maine Young & Free program introduces winter musical promotion  

CUNA News Now

PORTLAND, Maine (2/7/12)--Young & Free Maine has introduced a special winter promotion through a Sound Off Music Com­petition for Maine musicians ages 18-25.

The competition will be held Feb. 1 to March 5. The contest will be open to individuals, groups or artists, said the Maine Credit Union League (Weekly Update Feb. 3).

"This competition provides a new way for Maine's credit unions to connect with the state's young adults, while giving young musi­cians a unique platform to share their talent," said John Murphy, league president/CEO. "Through Young & Free Maine, and our spokesman Seth Poplaski, we've been able to hear the voice of this generation, so we can bet­ter serve them. This competition is another way we can recognize all that Gen Y in Maine has to offer, while bringing attention to our Young & Free program and driving website traffic."

Sound Off entrants must be between 18-25 years of age--in the case of bands, at least one member must be ages 18-25--and must not be under a recording contract. Entrants will submit an audio or video recording of themselves singing or performing original music to a special page on the Young & Free Maine website.

From March 7-16, the public will vote to choose a winner. The winning band or individual will receive a $1,000 gift certificate to a studio to be used for a recording session of their choice, and the opportunity to perform live at a festival, Aug. 4-9. The winner will be announced on YoungFreeMaine.com March 19.

"Maine has an ex­citing music scene that continues to grow and evolve," said Seth Poplaski, Maine's Young & Free spokesman. "I know that 'Sound Off' will really let these musicians shine, and offers an opportunity that is very unique--with a prize of both stage and studio time."

+ Original article

Tuesday
Dec132011

Young & Free Maine reports double-digit growth  

PORTLAND, Maine (12/12/11)--The Young & Free Maine program reported double-digit growth from August through November, said the Maine Credit Union League. 

In that time frame, credit unions reported a 40% growth in free4ME accounts, with nearly 600 new accounts added (Weekly Update Dec. 9). Young & Free Maine includes a financial headstart with an account called the free4ME Account, designed for 18- to-25 year-olds. The Maine program has proven successful in connecting with Gen Y in other regions throughout North America, the league said (News Now June 14).

Strong statewide advertising support through new TV and radio commercials, which specifically highlight the program, helped bolster its growth, the league said.

Other high­lights of the impact of the Young & Free Maine program are:

  • 13.4% member­ship growth in 18 to 25 year-old members since the Young & Free Maine program began in April;
  • The average age of credit union members at participating credit unions decreased a full year during that period, to 45 from age 46;
  • 13% of free4ME accounts have loans with an average loan balance of $6,649; and
  • The average age of free4ME account holders is 19.

October and November showed more positive results, with 60% of free4ME account openings being new relationships, a 20% increase over August and September.

With six months remaining on the first year of the Young & Free Maine Program, the Maine league said it continues to get closer to its goal of funding a second year of Young & Free.

+ Original article

Monday
Dec052011

Young & Free, other programs tap into what's big with youth  

CUNA News Now

MADISON, Wis. (12/5/11)--Credit unions are using creativity and the power of the electronic media to capture the imagination of Gen Y.

After about six months of operation, Young & Free Maine has begun to achieve results in the marketing of the free4ME checking, according to the Maine Credit Union League (Weekly Update Nov. 25). 

Young & Free is a spokester recruitment program, launched in 2007 by Currency Marketing, a credit union marketing company in Chilliwack, Canada. Young & Free provides the tools to engage the youth market, using a combination of social media and contests to find a young, media-savvy credit union spokesperson. To connect with younger consumers, credit unions that participate in the campaign are also urged to create price-sensitive products, such as free checking accounts with low or no fees. Several state leagues are promoting the program as well.

Seth Poplaski, Maine's spokester, has made 45 spokesperson appearances and attended 30 media events, using a Young & Free-branded Chevy Cruz to travel the state.
 
Maine credit unions have seen an 8.2% increase in membership of 18-25 year olds from September 2010 to September 2011, with the majority joining between April and September of this year, the first six months of Young & Free in the state.

With 22 credit unions reporting--56% of which offer free4Me checking--the Maine league has tracked 1,707 new checking accounts as of Sept. 30.

The Maine Young & Free Website has attracted 30,000 visitors.

In Missouri, Vantage CU cashed in on the popularity of the Twilight series by treating two young members and their guests to a midnight showing of the movie, "Breaking Dawn," the fourth in the series, Nov. 18. For a chance to win the premiere tickets, Vantage CU's Young & Free St. Louis spokester, Jenn Cloud, encouraged fans to go to the Young & Free St. Louis website and answer Twilight trivia questions.

Cloud met the two winners and their guests at a local theater to take their places in line for the midnight showing. She treated other waiting moviegoers to Young & Free bracelets, lip balm and cell-phone screen cleaners.

The Association of Vermont Credit Unions employed its Economy of Me program to help students better understand and manage their money. Project Manager Colin Ryan presented back to back assemblies for students of Winookski High School in November.

Local CBS affiliate WCAX was on hand to film Ryan's presentation in preparation for an upcoming appearance on the station's late afternoon news show, "The: 30."  Ryan used the opportunity to raise awareness about Economy Of Me and highlight what Vermont credit unions are doing to educate young people.

+ Original article

Thursday
Nov172011

Young and Free Spokesperson Visits Calais

Calais Advertiser | By Joyce Scott

Seth Poplaski is Maine Credit Union's spokesperson for Young and Free Maine.

Last Week he made stops at Down East Credit Unions in Baileyville and and Calais.

The Young and Free Maine program was launched to get information to young adults 18-25 years of age.

As part of the program a search was initiated for a spokesperson. In July it was announced that Poplaski was the chosen spokester.

He will have this title for a year. In that time his job is to travel around the State talking with young adults gathering information on their thoughts and concerns about their finances.

To make his job easier he has been given tools to help him-a bright green car with the Young and Free Logo on it, a laptop, video camera and iPhone.

At 25 years of age Poplaski is enjoying his unique job and learning as well. "I go all over the state talking to the Gen Y generation about credit unions and why they are a viable option for that generation," he told a Calais Advertiser reporter last week.

The spokester also has a blog. "I write in it everyday," he said. Through this blog, videos, tweets, Facebook page and Youtube he shares what he has learned.

After four months on the job he has logged 11,000 miles on the car, met a lot of people. "A lot of people are very interested about the program," he said. "I have also met with a lot of marketers and CEO and learned hot to better market to the 18-25 your old group."

A credit union member since the age of five Poplaski said he knows the benefits of being a member and what credit unions have to offer.

He is enjoying his job and the people he has come into contact with. He said he hopes he has been able to get the message across about credit unions and what they have to offer.

For the next eight months the spokester will continue on his way traveling across the state and enjoying the job that many would love to have.

For more information on the Young and Free Maine Program call 1-800-442-6715 or by email to youngfreemaine@gmail.com

Friday
Sep162011

Put your money where your home is

The Portland Phoenix | By Deirdre Fulton

Earlier this summer, I wrote a piece about local banks versus big banks (see "Keep Your Money in Maine," by Deirdre Fulton, June 24). FDIC statistics show that in Cumberland County, more than 80 percent of the market share of deposits is in TD Bank, Key Bank, or Bank of America.

As a result of researching and writing that article, I decided to make a (tiny) dent in that percentage by MOVING MY MONEY from Bank of America to a local institution.

It took me a long time to choose among several venerable banks and credit unions. Once I finally selected (my decision was based largely on convenience), waltzing into the branch and opening a new account was easy enough.

The harder part is severing ties with my old bank.

I cribbed from a letter drafted by Catherine Austin Fitts, a bank-local enthusiast who currently serves as president of Solari, Inc., a progressive investment company based in Tennessee. It expresses my appreciation for 10 years of BoA customer service, then explains why I am leaving.

"In recent years, I have become increasingly alarmed at the growing corruption in the financial system in this country," the letter reads. In a bullet-point list, it goes on to say that "American households are experiencing record deficits while America's largest banks are enjoying record profits," and "As private banks and their investors increasingly control our government bank accounts and financial policies, it falls to the private citizen and private markets to assume greater responsibility for ensuring that our financial system operates on an ethical and lawful basis." (Read the letter here.)

I can't give this to them, though, until I deal with the seemingly infinite loose ends it takes to close an account. And this, of course, is what trips people (me) up: the transferring of direct deposits, the switching of automatic bill-pays, the paperwork. I'm muddling through, and I'll keep you posted.

• While behemoth banks dominate Maine's financial market, SMALLER INSTITUTIONS ARE GRAPPLING FOR A BIGGER PIECE OF THE PIE. And in some arenas, they're succeeding. With 47 percent of Maine residents using a credit union for at least some portion of their banking needs, Maine is the fifth-strongest "credit union state" in the country, according to Jon Paradise, government and public affairs manager at the Maine Credit Union League.

The only way to grow that number, however, is to get 'em while they're young. Right now, between 12 and 15 percent of 18-to-25-year-olds in Maine belong to a credit union. Young & Free Maine — with its 24-year-old representative, Seth Poplaski — hopes to increase that percentage. At YoungFreeMaine.com, young adults can find money-management tips and tools, blogs about finance, and information about credit unions.

The Young & Free campaign is a marketing gimmick, yes, but one with earnest roots. It was launched in 2007 by Currency Marketing, a Canadian firm that claims as part of its mission: "We can't wait for the day when credit unions have more members than banks have customers. We want credit unions to gain ground on the banks one member at a time."

Today, there are Y&F "spokesters" in eight US states and two Canadian provinces. Like Poplaski, they travel to college campuses, talking to the 18-to-25 crowd about financial responsibility and how credit unions can serve students and recent graduates (with services such as free checking accounts, shared-branch networks, and surcharge-free ATMs).

"You're more apt to just walk into a big bank," Poplaski admits. Which is why part of his task is to demonstrate that "credit unions are a viable option for young people."

+ Original article

Tuesday
Jul122011

Kiss 94.5 FM interview with Seth and Jon

Kiss 94.5 FM

Seth Poplaski and Jon Paradise where on the The George Hale/Ric Tyler Show.

+ Visit station website

Wednesday
Jun292011

Helping Young People Deal with Money

myFOXMaine.com

Jon Paradise of the Maine Credit Union and Seth Poplaski of Young and Free talk about a new initiative to give young adults a voice, advice, and useful information when it comes to money.

For more information on the program you can visit their website at www.youngandfreemaine.com.

+ Watch the segment

Friday
Jun032011

Young and Free finalists need your vote!

NBC WLBZ

BREWER, Maine (NEWS CENTER) — One of three finalists will soon be Maine Credit Union League's first social media representative as the Young and Free spokesperson.

The spokesperson will represent people in the 18-25 age group and attend events, produce audio, video podcasts, and blog for Maine's credit unions.  The winner will also receive an Apple Mac Book Pro notebook computer, and HD camera, a smart phone, plus a brand new Honda Fit with gas for the full year they're employed.

"They're the age that's coming up and are going to be getting the new jobs and influential positions, and that's how they like to communicate," Dave DeFroscia, Vice President, Brewer Federal Credit Union, said. "We've all done a little with social media, but we'd like to do more.  Finding out how the folks who are using it the most are getting results from this is, I think, what we want to do."

Here's where you can cast your vote for Becca HodgdonMonique Pelletier, or Seth Poplaski. The ballot will close Monday, June 6.

+ Original story

Wednesday
Jun012011

Finalist Seth Poplaski interviewed by Ric Tyler

WVOM FM

Seth Poplaski was interviewed by Ric Tyler from WVOM 101.3 and 103.9.

+ Visit website

Wednesday
Jun012011

Three finalists on Q97.9 FM

Q97.9 FM

Becca, Monique and Seth were all on the air together on Q97.9 FM.

+ Visit site

Monday
May302011

Monique Pelletier on 89.3 FM

Monique was interviewed on Bangor's 89.3 FM. Take a listen!

+ Visit 89.3 FM website


Friday
May272011

Monique Pelletier on 107.3 FM

Monique was interviewed on 107.3 FM. Take a listen!

+ Visit 107.3 FM website

Wednesday
May252011

Becca Hodgdon on 107.3 FM

Becca was interviewed on 107.3 FM. Take a listen!

+ Visit 107.3 FM website

Wednesday
May252011

Seth Poplaski on 107.3 FM

Seth was interviewed on 107.3 FM. Take a listen!

+ Visit 107.3 FM website

 

Friday
May202011

"Young & Free" contest names 3 finalists 

The Portland Press Herald | By Emma Bouthillette

Maine's credit unions have announced the finalist in their search for a "Young & Free Maine Spokesperson."

Becca Hodgdon, 21, Monique Pelletier, 23, and Seth Poplaski, 24, all of Bangor were selected from a pool of 26 applicants for the one-year position, which would require them to promote Maine's credit unions through social media and videos, attend promotional events and be accessible to Maine's youth.

They now have three weeks to campaign and solicit votes online atwww.youngfreemaine.com. The candidate with the most votes will be named "Young & Free Maine Spokesperson" on June 17. The full-time job starts July 1 and pays $25,000.

+ Original article

Thursday
May192011

Wanted: Principled youth with interest 

The Portland Press Herald | By Emma Bouthillette

College tuition, car loans, rent, grocery bills, savings, checking accounts and credit cards.

Maine's young people face an onslaught of financial responsibility from the time they graduate from high school. With jargon about overdraft fees, annual percentage rates and paying back interest versus principal thrown their way, many are confused by the world of money.

Maine's credit unions hope that a creative approach with a youthful spokesman will provide a bit of financial education, and attract new customers.

"Youth has been a priority for credit unions for years," said John Murphy, president and CEO of the Maine Credit Union League. "But we've never had a program that we could reach out to the 25-and-under population and focus on the benefits that credit unions provide."

The league began a search for a "Young & Free Maine Spokesperson" earlier this spring. It received 26 applicants for the one-year position, and will announce the final three candidates on Friday.

The top three will have three weeks to campaign and solicit votes online atwww.youngfreemaine.com. The winner, who will be named June 17, will spend a year promoting Maine's credit unions through social media and videos, attending promotional events and being accessible to Maine's youth. The full-time job starts July 1 and pays $25,000.

The representative will be equipped with a MacBook Pro, a high-definition video camera with microphone and accessories, a smartphone with a paid contract, and a Honda Fit covered with credit union advertising for promotional events.

"We look at the Young & Free program as a great opportunity to mesh the credit union's desire to provide services to the younger consumer and have them understand what the financial products are today," Murphy said.

Seth Poplaski, a 24-year-old graduate of the University of Maine, saw it as an ideal job opportunity.

On the Young & Free Maine website, he wrote: "I'm looking to find a real job, like most everyone else my age."

Poplaski, who graduated with a journalism degree in 2009, is bartending and serving at Texas Roadhouse in Bangor while looking for a journalism-related job.

He said he would like to stay in Maine, but journalism jobs here are limited and highly competitive.

"I'm in the same situation as most 18- to 25-year-olds," he said. "I just got out of college and I'm working at a job not even close to my major."

Molly Massa, 20, of South Portland is faced with working three jobs this summer just to pay rent.

Massa just finished her junior year at the University of Southern Maine. She said she applied for the one-year position as a resume builder and for financial security.

"I think it's a great idea. A lot of young people use things like Facebook and the Internet. It's pretty hard for young people to access the info that they need to know," she said, adding that the financial world can be "very confusing."

Maine joins more than half a dozen states and Canadian provinces in naming a Young & Free Spokesperson for credit unions and businesses using alternative media to connect with customers.

"We're trying to look to the future and see who are the members using credit unions down the road, and we are reaching out to them in a proactive way," Murphy said. 

+ Original article

Wednesday
May182011

Maine's credit unions court young people 

Morning Sentinel | By Emma Bouthillette

College tuition, car loans, rent, grocery bills, savings, checking accounts and credit cards.

Maine's young people face an onslaught of financial responsibility from the time they graduate from high school.

With jargon about overdraft fees, annual percentage rates and paying back interest versus principal thrown their way, many are confused by the world of money.

Maine's credit unions hope that a creative approach with a youthful spokesperson will provide a bit of financial education, and attract new customers.

"Youth has been a priority for credit unions for years," said John Murphy, president and CEO of the Maine Credit Union League. "But we've never had a program that we could reach out to the 25-and-under population and focus on the benefits that credit unions provide."

The league began a search for a "Young & Free Maine Spokesperson" earlier this spring. It got 26 applicants for the one-year position, and will announce the final three candidates on Friday.

The top three will have three weeks to campaign and solicit votes online at www.youngfreemaine.com.

The winner, who will be named June 17, will spend a year promoting Maine's credit unions through social media and videos, attending promotional events and being accessible to Maine's youths. The full-time job starts July 1 and pays $25,000.

The spokesperson will be equipped with a MacBook Pro, an HD video camera with microphone and accessories, a smartphone with paid contract and the use of a Honda Fit covered with credit union advertising for promotional events.

"We look at the Young & Free program as a great opportunity to mesh the credit union's desire to provide services to the younger consumer and have them understand what the financial products are today," Murphy said.

Seth Poplaski, a 24-year-old graduate of the University of Maine, saw it as an ideal job opportunity.

On the Young & Free Maine website, he wrote: "I'm looking to find a real job, like most everyone else my age."

Poplaski, who graduated with a journalism degree in 2009, is a bartender and server at Texas Roadhouse in Bangor, while looking for a journalism-related job.

He said he would like to stay in Maine, but journalism jobs here are limited and highly competitive.

"I'm in the same situation as most 18- to 25-year-olds," Poplaski said.

"I just got out of college and I'm working at a job not even close to my major," he said.

Molly Massa, 20, of South Portland is faced with working three jobs this summer just to pay rent.

Massa just finished her junior year at the University of Southern Maine. She said she applied for the one-year position as a resume builder and for financial security.

"I think it's a great idea. A lot of young people use things like Facebook and the Internet. It's pretty hard for young people to access the info that they need to know," she said, and the financial world can be "very confusing."

Maine joins more than half a dozen states and Canadian provinces in naming a Young & Free Spokesperson for credit unions and businesses using alternative media to connect with customers.

Murphy said, "We're trying to look to the future and see who are the members using credit unions down the road, and we are reaching out to them in a proactive way."

For more information about the position, to view the 26 applications or to follow and vote for one of the three finalist starting Friday, visit www.youngfreemaine.com.

+ Original article