A Tool to Calculate Your Potential Membership

Posted by Tony Rossell under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Tony Rossell's blog.

Language Matters

Posted by Jamie under Uncategorized

On an association listerver discussion recently, several members debated the pros and cons of what to call their volunteer leadership group: board of directors or board of trustees. The consensus conclusion was that it really doesn’t matter. What matters is the way the Board does its work, not what we call it. We have heard […]

Read & discuss at Jamie's blog.

6 Reasons to be President yourself ..

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

A great way to improve as an association executive is to volunteer to be president of another organization. What you may find:

1. Important to be more flexible with your own leadership and directors. Watch how unreasonable it is to be asked to do something with little notice while trying to balance your real job and real life. I make it a point to tell my officers how many things really are optional.

2. Need to respect communications preferences. When someone prefers email communications, they typically mean it. While out of town for work, but president of local community service group, had ten or twelve phone calls in one day related to my volunteer position. Huge inconvenience. Have a process for determining officer preferences for information and communications - I use one-page checklist of questions.

3. Did you need leadership skills training or already a leader? If someone has already been president of 10 or more organizations, chances are good they don’t need more training. Sometimes we try to fit very qualified leaders into the same box as those with lower skills. Was I going to attend days of training to learn how to chair a meeting? No. Have already chaired hundreds of meetings - even back in elementary school Brownie troop. Will I encourage a leader to attend a seminar to learn how to chair a meeting if I know they already know how? No.

4. You’ll make better personal decisions. If need to leave a national or state meeting for an important personal event, the answer is yes. Seriously, if there isn’t something that will change the industry on the agenda at the end, leaders shouldn’t be asked to give up key moments in their family or business lives because they said yes to serving years earlier. I’ve left conferences for kids awards ceremonies, and officers have left for graduations. As the saying goes, they won’t forget how you made them feel. The words “of course you should leave” help.

5. Find out how great your skills are. Association executives sometimes forget that we know how to do literally hundreds of things that are extremely valuable to other groups. Using those skills elsewhere is a reminder of your own talent.

6. It feels great to volunteer, you’ll learn something new, you’ll develop relationships that may last a lifetime or help you in business. All the reasons we give our members on why they should volunteer are exactly the same reasons association executives need to do it too.

If you’re already thinking you’re too busy, do it anyway — Don’t you want the best in your own membership to agree to serve? Live up to your own expectations of others.

Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.

Not blogging (here) this week

Posted by bkmcae@gmail.com (Ben Martin) under Uncategorized

If it seems quiet on the Certified Association Executive blog, it’s because I’m blogging for VAR’s Convention & Expo 2007 blog this week. Stop by and take a look around.

Tagged: ; ; ;

Read & discuss at bkmcae@gmail.com (Ben Martin)'s blog.

Effective Ecommerce with a Login

Posted by david@highcontext.com (C. David Gammel) under Uncategorized

The screencast I created of the effortless ecommerce process for Coda prompted several questions about how to best incorporate a login to the online sales process. I’m going to address that issue via a normal blog post rather than a video.
Every additional step in an online process usually costs you people who don’t want to […]

Read & discuss at david@highcontext.com (C. David Gammel)'s blog.

User/Customer Generated Content

Posted by Matt Baehr under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Matt Baehr's blog.

Best Practices in Software Training

Posted by Wes Trochlil under Uncategorized

I've done a lot of training on using software, and I've sat through even more in conjunction with implementation projects for my clients. The typical software training program consists of day-long sessions (and often multiple days) covering all aspects of the software. This is especially true during the implementation of a new association management system (AMS).
But what […]

Read & discuss at Wes Trochlil's blog.

Connecting through LinkedIn

Posted by Matt Baehr under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Matt Baehr's blog.

Go Big…

Posted by Cynthia D'Amour under Uncategorized

Or go home!
Today I’m at The Drake Hotel in Chicago. It’s a beautiful historical hotel with a floral bouquet in the lobby that truly makes a statement.
The flowers are exquisite - and bouquet is bigger and taller than me!
Every time I’m here, the display is fresh - and different!
(Today, the flowers match my hair.)
Many upscale […]

Read & discuss at Cynthia D'Amour's blog.

The Walled Garden Strategy Loses Another One - FT.com

Posted by Peter Turner under Uncategorized

The Long Tail seems to be adding more converts. Now it’s the Financial Times.
Yesterday they announced:
“Newspapers have until now chosen between offering their content free, or charging on a subscription or “pay-per-view” basis. But Ien Cheng, publisher of FT.com, said the site would pioneer a new approach from mid-October. Articles and data will be […]

Read & discuss at Peter Turner's blog.