NEWS STORY
Celebrating Betty Hanson
CUPRAP board members come and go, but Betty Hanson, has been the face of the organization forever. Since 2011, she has served as CUPRAP’s executive director, playing a leading role in planning and executing the annual Spring Conference, among other duties. Betty sat down recently with former CUPRAP President Tom Durso to chat about her involvement with the organization, her fondest memories, and her advice for new members.
Note: This has been edited for space and clarity.
TD: How did you get involved with CUPRAP in the first place?
BH: I had not been working in higher education. My first job was at Philadelphia Magazine , and then I worked at two advertising agencies. Something came up at Widener, and I got a job there in the marketing department. My boss was just looking through professional development and said, “Well, maybe you should go to this conference and see how it is.” I got the job at Widener in ’86, so I guess this was in ’87 that I went to the first conference. I enjoyed it and have been a member ever since.
TD: And when did you get involved in your current role as an administrator?
BH: I was a member through the 90s, and then after that, I was on the board as treasurer. Then I left Widener and at the time, if you didn’t have an affiliation with a college, you had to step off the board, but I continued to be a member. Alan Janesch and I planned one of the spring conferences. It was not at all as encompassing with as many sessions and breakouts that we have now. It was a modest conference, but it was good. It was always a practical conference for people, and I think that’s what they appreciated. It was something that you could go to, and people would talk to you.
“It was always a practical conference for people, and I think that’s what they appreciated. It was something that you could go to, and people would talk to you.”
CUPRAP past president Paul Redfern and Betty Hanson
We used to have a one-day conference in October. We had a meeting in September, and nobody had remembered to plan the conference, and we had to quickly get it together. So we decided to hire Dick Jones to plan the conference, which his company did for a while. And then it reverted to Betsy Robertson, who was doing it on her own. And she did a great job. The conference started to just blossom and become larger and more welcoming, and it started including more topics that were relevant to different departments, like Enrollment Management and Development. Betsy was doing it maybe in the mid-2000s, and then when I got laid off from Drexel in 2011, Betsy got a full-time job with Susquehanna. They offered it to me, and I have been planning the conference since 2011.
TD: Besides just the conference, how would you say that the organization as a whole has evolved?
BH: Well, it always used to be that we had to have two members on the board from a community college, two members from a private university, and a public university. And it’s not that anymore. The board members can represent various entities; even vendors are now board members. We were very adamant before that we didn’t want vendors, but it turned out to work out really well. Our first was Mark Cunningham, and it added a dimension that we didn’t previously think we needed. But we do. So that was what has changed about the board members. Our constitution and bylaws were also changed to have more than a two-year term for the president, and also for board terms to be longer, so that they can get their feet wet and then continue to do good work on the board.
I think that a lot has changed, but a lot has not changed. What has not changed is the fact that people care about the members and about lifting up the members, which is our new branding. It’s about members and not about the organization — celebrating the members and their accomplishments.
CUPRAP Conference Agenda from 1997
“I think that a lot has changed, but a lot has not changed. What has not changed is the fact that people care about the members and about lifting up the members, which is our new branding. It’s about members and not about the organization — celebrating the members and their accomplishments.”
TD: What are some of your favorite memories from CUPRAP?
BH: At the Spring Conference, on Thursday after the CUPPIES, we used to have entertainment. One year, we had a hypnotist. I can remember a woman getting hypnotized. She was running around and being crazy. We used to have line dancing, and, really fun things. We had a poker night.
As far as the conference part is concerned, I think one of my best memories was when Barbara Marshall and I sat down at one of the retreats and talked about the CUPPIES. We hadn’t even named the CUPPIES — I guess the board named it. But we talked about having a competition for creative excellence. CASE had done it before us. Barbara and I sat down and thought about it, and we started to plan it.
When we had the first competition, it was really rewarding and exciting that so many people had entered. And their work was really good. At the time, people were coming from different agencies and institutions to do all the judging in person at one time. We didn’t have the online platform where the judges could judge from their office or whatever. I thought it was fun to get people together. That was one of my great memories. Sometimes, what happens now is that you can do so many things online the social aspect of things gets forgotten.
TD: How do you hope people see your legacy with CUPRAP?
BH: Well, I’m just hoping that it’s one of mentorship, because I’ve seen so many new people come in and they are excited about their growth. Our current president, Joe Master, will tell you that he had looked up to Ray Betzner and Andy Back and Mike Bruckner and thought, wow, these people are really somebody to emulate. I am hoping the new people will look at the seasoned people and think, wow, this is great. I want to do this or want to be like that.
TD: What kind of direction would you like to see the organization go in?
BH: I know that the board has been talking about getting people from other states, and we do have some members from California, a couple here and there. Most of them are from the Mid-Atlantic region, but we have some people from other states. I don’t want to get so big that we lose the essence of the organization. I know we want to grow our conference attendance, but I would like to see it retain the personal aspect as we grow. People should be able to attend, make new friends, reconnect with those they know and feel welcome.
TD: Any words of advice for new CUPRAP members?
BH: I would say don’t take yourself too seriously. The higher education climate is just so different and it’s easy to be anxious and upset about what’s going to happen to you and what’s going to happen to your job. Because a lot of people are. They are worried about that, and they should be worried about that. But enjoy the work, because I’ve enjoyed it for all the years that I’ve been in higher-ed marketing. Just have fun and try to do the best that you can for your school, and for yourself as well.
The post Celebrating Betty Hanson appeared first on CUPRAP.


