How to Break 6 Association Habits

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

A local AE told me something I found shocking: she and her husband don’t have their own side of the bed. Any given night either might sleep on either side. Are they the only couple in history with this approach? Is the only reason some of us can sleep at night because of habits, including the ones in our own associations? Or is a reason some can’t sleep at night because of habits?

Many association activities, programs and schedules are not driven by bylaws or policies, but rather driven by habit and culture. Officers, members and particularly staff can get very accustomed to the same routines, without thought to value or alternatives.

6 Association Habits to break and how to do it:

1. Don’t allow any speaker to speak beyond a scheduled time. I tell all speakers in advance we’re strict with time schedules. Then literally move to the front of room 3 minutes before deadline and will end it on time, period. The audience is grateful. No one attending a program should have to suffer with an extended program because speaker doesn’t manage time correctly.

2. Eliminate the personnel committee if you have volunteers “helping” you manage or evaluate staff. I believe this is one of the top two issues that determines if you really are a CEO or not. Do you go to their office and evaluate their support staff? That’s the reason to give. I would not have accepted my position if I didn’t have full authority for staff decisions. That committee is not one of those things that has to continue forever because it’s always been there. And the truth is the only reason they may be doing it is because it started years ago, and no one ever suggested stopping it — not because the officers necessarily think it’s the best system either.

3. Look at how much time you give to governance and see if you’re meeting anyone’s needs with it. Try filed reports instead of verbal reports, and if you file a report for god’s sake don’t give it verbally too. Time commitment a key reason some of the most talented will not participate. Try emailing the entire membership updates, rather than require those attending live meetings to hear reports. Historically, my association had an annual membership meeting during our annual convention that took more than an hour - mainly due to numerous verbal reports. I learned other associations had that same meeting in 15 minutes by consolidating into written reports or adding bullets to a sole president’s report. We tried it and then surveyed attendees. 98% liked the shorter format. We could have gone to eternity scheduling the same long meeting the same way.

4. Stop forcing president to be spokesperson on every association topic. Reporters call all the time on many topics and never once have they insisted “I must talk with the president of the association”, they just want SOMEONE to talk with who knows the topic. The president as spokesperson is not media driven, it’s internal association driven. One thing we’ve learned from media consultants is the public doesn’t know what “association president” means but it doesn’t sound like a practitioner. Consider giving president the option to interact with the media or not - and identify issues spokespeople, regional spokespeople, and those excellent in front of a camera/microphone to speak. Is the intent to have message delivered best manner possible or to help build skills of one person in front of everyone?

5. Have more doing than planning. Last year I facilitated a strategic planning meeting where the entire association staff was exhausted and the volunteers frustrated. One thing I found was there were 4 staff and 240 meetings - mostly monthly committee meetings. One committee reviewed several hundred awards applications but no one wanted to show up for the awards ceremony except the recipients. Serious meetings mania. Of course staff had no time to implement, they were constantly involved with committee meetings. Try changing monthly meetings to quarterly meetings, replace multi-month deliberations for “one day” deliberations. Reasons to try it: gasoline prices, many volunteers don’t want to commit that kind of time so will never attract a portion of membership, better decisions, there needs to be time to implement.

6. If attendance at meetings is dropping, start reducing frequency. Number of meetings scheduled may be driven by the need to secure facility space in advance so rather than discuss if there’s a different way to do something, or eliminate entirely, the facility contract is already signed and it’s a go without thought. Before you sign all those contracts, try removing one … then maybe two … then maybe three. If your members want those meetings, they’ll be there and you wouldn’t be discussing how to get them there. If they’re not showing up they’re not going to miss the meeting you never hold. And you’ll have time to implement things the members MIGHT care about.

How many habits are never broken because no one thinks to change or desire to avoid the potential discomfort change brings?

If afraid to try any of the above, here’s an assurance you can give: if it doesn’t work out, we can always change back. Because you can.

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Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.

The Year Social Media Changed My Life

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

Over the past few days I’ve been doing a personal retrospective on the year that was 2007. And it has been a really wild one. For some reason, I hesitate a little to toot my own horn, but I really think this year has been remarkable, and I think it stands as a testament to the power of social media and personal branding to transform a career. Being in the right place at the right time doing the right thing pays off. It’s serendipity: I don’t share this to pat myself on the back. Honestly, if I knew the details of anyone’s year that was like mine, I’d share them. I can’t draw a straight line from this blog to any of my accomplishments this year. But I can draw a squiggly line. There is no doubt in my mind that the time I have spent blogging and doing other social media stuff over the past three years as contributed either directly, or indirectly, to my story.

I mostly have my family to thank. I think my wife really empathizes with this video. She has become a little more understanding of the time I spend pecking at the keyboard when the successes started snowballing this year.

This will come as a surprise to him, but I am indebted to Wes Trochlil at Effective Database Management. So many of my contacts and successes have come through my participation in the Membership Section Council, and Wes was instrumental in getting me appointed to that council back in 2004.

After three years of blogging, it really paid off for my bottom line this year. Between the new job and some sideline projects, I’ve had a very good financial year. But it’s not all about money. I have raised my profile in the association profession dramatically, and even hold down the number one Google result for Ben Martin. I’ve gotten into good physical condition by exercising regularly, and I celebrated my 10th wedding anniversary. Here’s a month-by-month recap of my year.

January: Attended Great Ideas Conference at the Marco Island (Fla.) Marriott, which was evacuated due to an electrical fire. I live blogged the fire story from my BlackBerry using Blogger’s post by email feature. I start a workout routine.

February: I was quoted in USAE Magazine because of my experience at the Marco Island Marriott.

March: Started using Twitter, became an instant evangelist.

April: ASAE & The Center published a paper I wrote for the Journal of Association Leadership. The Virginia Society of Association Executives hosted me and two others on a panel for their monthly meeting. Learned that a member’s step son was among the victims in the Virginia Tech massacre. Appointed vice-chair of ASAE & The Center’s Membership Section Council. My workout routine begins to both pay off (lost 15 lbs) and cost me dearly (buy a bunch of new clothes and make alterations to all my suits and slacks).

May: Started using facebook, became an instant evangelist. Discovered four new association blogs this month. Struck a freelance consulting agreement with Jeff De Cagna’s firm, Principled Innovation, to become Architect of Participation.

June: Presented at ASAE & The Center’s Marketing & Membership Conference. Rode an elevator with snowboarding phenom Matt White and met Andy Steggles. I set up the ASAE2007 mobile backchannel and gave blog readers nine good reasons to think twice about setting up Wikipedia pages for their associations.

July: I tender my resignation to VSCPA, post my 700th entry to the Certified Association Executive blog and get hired by McKinley Marketing on a freelance basis to publish a monthly blog roundup column for their monthly newsletter.

August: Virginia Association of REALTORS welcomes me to their staff as Director of Communications & New Media. I attend ASAE & The Center’s annual meeting where the 3rd annual Association BloggerCon gathers nearly 30 attendees, the mobile backchannel gets association execs tuned into mobile social technology, and I present in three learning labs (one of which was among the highest rated programs of the entire convention). I meet Jackie Huba, author of Citizen Marketers. I start using a Mac as my travel laptop. After nearly three years with a BlackBerry, I switch over to a Motorola Q.

September: The Certified Association Executive blog pulls in its 200th RSS subscriber. I post the first review of ASAE & The Center’s newest research project, The Decision to Join. I continue my workout routine and get my weight down to 150 lbs. My wikipedia post gets reprinted in Associations Now magazine.

October: Virginia Association of REALTORS Convention & Expo is the venue for three social media initiatives: Virginia Real Estate BloggerCon, Social Media Lab, and a convention blog. Co-present a Web 2.0 seminar for ASAE & The Center with Andy Steggles. Renew my CAE for the first time.

November: The Virginia Real Estate BloggerCon creates a butterfly effect, with the National Association of REALTORS hosting a BloggerCon of their own in Las Vegas at their annual convention, due mostly to the efforts of Daniel Rothamel, a Virginia REALTOR. I am the opening keynote speaker for the Kansas City Society of Association Executives’ Innovation Symposium and pull down the top rating of all the speakers. I reach 200 LinkedIn contacts and 100 facebook contacts. I post my 800th entry to the Certified Association Executive blog. Quoted in Associations Now magazine’s Social Media supplement.

December: ASAE & The Center select me as one of five association executives to watch under age 35, and put me on the cover of Associations Now magazine. Celebrate my 10th wedding anniversary with a trip to Cancun. Continue my workout program and get my weight down to 140 lbs. I am published in a handbook for membership professionals released by ASAE & The Center. Caulk my bath tub.

So, what’s next for me? Well, I’ll be in lots more ASAE & The Center stuff. Specifically, watch for part two of my Journal of Association Leadership paper on the eight super trends in Mapping the Future of Your Association early next year, an article featuring two of my members and me discussing my approach to blogger relations at VAR in January’s Associations Now, a session at 2008’s Marketing & Membership Conference, and some yet-to-be-determined stuff at ASAE & The Center’s Annual Meeting. In addition, I’ll be speaking and doing some things at Fusion Productions’ Digital Now conference and presenting a seminar for the Virginia Society of Association Executives in June. And, I take over as chair of the Membership Section Council in August, so duck and cover.

Tagged: ; ; ;

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

Interferon and other holiday gifts

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

A favorite colleague is ending his month of the high-dose cancer treatment drug Interferon a few days after Christmas. He’s grateful and reflective that in spite of the painful side effects that there is a strong treatment. And I’m grateful he has that drug too. I’m sure my lack of interest in getting holiday gifts is because what I really want is for Interferon to work for anyone taking it, especially my pal. Cancer sucks.

Recently in group discussion about times of less worry - what wanted for Christmas when kids. I mentioned a rock tumbler and no idea why never got one. An AE friend sent link to a page in the 1971 Sears Wishbook that featured it. Each Wishbook page is on Flickr - so able to find others once thought to be great gifts - a View-Master, the game Masterpiece, and Malibu Barbie.

This holiday appreciate the gift of other association execs - send a note, send a link, say a prayer.

Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.

Links for 2007-12-21 [del.icio.us]

Posted by Hilary under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Hilary's blog.

Social media, popularity and connections

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

Social media sites sometimes ask you to give what your connection is, but I couldn’t find the choice to indicate “I love him” or “he’s my brother”.

Linkedin recently surprised me by having my stepbrother on a list of people they “suggested” I might have a connection with, and I truly can’t imagine how they connected us. I clicked his name and it didn’t have a reason for anticipating where we were connected. I have a small group of association colleagues on my list, and he has gigantic list of business school and other colleagues on his. We’ve never had the same last name, never lived in the same city at the same time, don’t have any colleagues connected to each other, not in same industry. But the database gods know it anyway. Just like Facebook knew to connect my personal and professional info when displaying a purchase.

So I indicated we’re in a “group” together, since no box for love.

I keep finding that if have a social media site, even with intent just to learn, it’s really important to keep checking to see what’s evolving with it. And don’t start adding people unless you know why you’re doing it (there are privacy and display settings worth investigating too - some require proactive steps.)

What’s your social media “connections” strategy:
1. As many as you can get (like Tila - what’s “popularity”)
2. Those you know
3. Those you know and sort of know

4. Never adding name to any social media site

Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.

Five Phases of the Membership Life Cycle

Posted by Tony Rossell under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Tony Rossell's blog.

Happy Holidays

Posted by Cynthia D'Amour under Uncategorized

  From our family to yours!
Not sure how much I’ll be writing over the next week.

There’s part of me that has a fantasy of lazy days of nothing.
I’ve got a lot to do.
Time will tell…

So, Raindrop and I decided it would be best to share her photo today.

A local doggy rescue group held a photo […]

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

Links for 2007-12-20 [del.icio.us]

Posted by Hilary under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Hilary's blog.

Woo-Hoo! (Or, Just ?Whew?)

Posted by Kevin Holland under Uncategorized

Wow, this has been an unforgivable time between posts considering with my last post I was starting a small series. I still have #2 ready to go soon (with a brief pause for “Part 1 Subpart A” to address a good question Ben asked and clarify something I said earlier.)
But the last month has been […]

Read & discuss at Kevin Holland's blog.

ASAE: 3 Weird and 3 Extraordinary things

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

Attended my first American Society of Association Executives (ASAE) conference in August; but ASAE member and CAE for years.

Here are 3 things I find weird about ASAE:

1. Number of times they announce things related to merger (ASAE & The Center) before, during and after it happened. I’m sure it’s huge deal for those close to it, but for some it’s possible tedious governance reporting overkill. Many organizations forget members don’t want years of governance news.

2. Lack of representation from rural America and/or small organizations on ASAE governance Board. Heavy if not exclusive weight towards national associations, those in DC/VA, and large states/cities. Don’t like that at all. Joint Leadership Committee (group that recommends) needs serious look at better balancing their Board; but they say: “The Joint Leadership Committee develops a slate of candidates for board service that best exemplifies ASAE & The Center’s membership profile and is representative of the organizations’ diversity – including geography, size, gender, ethnic balance, skill sets and areas of experience. ” WHAT?! Explain that geography and size part ….

3. There’s an ASAE designation called “Fellow” for members identified as “thought leaders”. Love the concept. Met 3 Fellows at ASAE who were truly superb. But includes “once a Fellow, always a Fellow”. It’s unlikely EVERYONE selected is a thought leader FOREVER. Someone from 10 or 20 years ago not active in association management (or who froze in time from involvement or progressiveness) may get to continue the title? I’d call it an Award, or establish criteria to maintain the designation if it’s called a designation.

Here are 3 things I find extraordinary about ASAE:

1. The continuous quality and value of their print magazine - I’m one of those people who would join even if the only benefit was the magazine.

2. Responsiveness of leadership and staff. I have no historical relationship with anyone at ASAE but was really mad about something once and heard back from CEO John Graham within a day (didn’t change his position but excellent speed of response/explanation). Emailed Tom Dolan the current President because I loved a speech he gave and wanted a copy - received same day. Having CEO and President quickly communicate with an unknown rank and file member is ASAE response. And ASAE’s Lisa Junker made me feel welcome to the association blog world, even though didn’t know me.

3. Willingness to get negative feedback - and display it. The first time I read the ASAE blog and saw the open environment for member disagreement or complaint was shocking/impressive. I don’t know how many organizations openly invite (and display) feedback/comments.

What do you identify as extraordinary in organizations?

Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.