January 2008 Blog Watchdog focuses on the association membership experience

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

Welcome to the first Blog Watchdog of 2008. As with the last edition, this month’s Blog Watchdog report focuses on themes covered in a chapter in ASAE & The Center’s new book, Membership Essentials. The chapter, The Member Experience, is co-authored by the Managing Director of McKinley Marketing’s Chicago office, Sheri Jacobs, CAE, and the Director of Member Experience & Conferences at the Humane Society of the US, Sara Miller, CAE. As always, the full disclosure not-so-fine print: I’m a paid freelance writer for McKinley Marketing. Don’t forget to subscribe to McKinley Matters to get this column and others from McKinley.

The experience that members have with your association isn’t limited to just meetings, phone calls to your offices, or visits to your website. It also extends every piece of direct mail that they receive. Ben McConnell at Church of the Customer recently weighed all of the catalogs he received during the holiday shopping season and came up with an astonishing 21 pounds of unsolicited paper shoved into his mailbox. And he transfers this experience to the entire industry. With the association community’s focus on social responsibility and new research findings which indicate that members transfer their distinct association experiences to all associations, are your association’s marketing efforts helping the industry to improve its’ members experience?

For far too many members, one of the few experiences they have with their association in a year is the annual dues payment. Ordinarily, I avoid linking to my own blog entries in Blog Watchdog, but something I wrote recently at Certified Association Executive seems especially relevant for this edition. A debate is raging over whether or not associations should announce dues increases to members. Recent research shows that not announcing dues increases tends to yield a higher retention rate. But is there a cost in member experience?

From blogging, to commenting, to developing social networking sites, the use of social media as a marketing tool is becoming more common by the minute. Social networking sites could be considered the internet’s most potent experiential marketing medium: they allow your members to experience the community aspects of your association without leaving their desks. Buzz Canuck, a Canadian social media blog, outlines more than twenty useful tips for those who aspire to develop online communities or social networking sites for their market.

Some associations are less technology savvy than their members, and some are far more. If your association is one of the latter, and you’re frustrated by your inability to explain RSS, blogs or wikis to your members in a way that ensures that they “get it,” take a look at the CommonCraft show. In five minutes or less they explain technologies in plain English. If your association has a blog, you should consider embedding the Blogs in Plain English and RSS in Plain English videos into the prevalent “About this blog” page.

As always, if you have feedback or a tip for Ben, e-mail him at bkmcae at gmail dot com.

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

Links for 2008-01-30 [del.icio.us]

Posted by Hilary under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Hilary's blog.

Dangerous Labels

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

Do you tear the mailing label off the front of magazines when you leave them on an airplane? I always have and end up with a purse full of labels by the time I make it to the hotel in whatever city. Last night as my plane hovered over Chicago O’Hare for an hour bumping and bumping in the air, wondered why am I afraid of a magazine label? Is it a prehistoric identify theft concept or real.

After briefly (as in 3 minutes) investigating online, the (limited) thought is that anything with personally identifiable information could be a risk; and there’s a bar code. Apparently the bar code has same info as label. Considering ease of Internet, is there risk someone on a next flight will take that label and do something with it. Like the intrigue of finding a message in a bottle and seeking something more about the person who dropped the bottle? Or does a magazine label on a plane lack that intrigue.

When plane finally got clearance to land in a storm, ultimately decided not to tempt fate and took the label. Do you do that?

Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.

More on “More Experts, Less Meaning”

Posted by msrops under Uncategorized

In response to the More Experts, Less Meaning post, Ben asked, “how do you balance the Frans Johanssen school of thought on broad collaboration against this death by committee phenomenon?” When it comes to association content-based products (articles, books, educational products, etc.), my short answer: solicit broad feedback, but limited decision-makers (and NOT a committee when at all possible). Associations too often try to make everyone happy. Reality check: it’s not possible. So, when feasible…

Read & discuss at msrops's blog.

Green MBA

Posted by Ann under Uncategorized

Dominican University of California now offers a Green MBA, an accredited Masters of Business Adminstration in Sustainable Enterprise. The curriculum includes courses in: Ecocommerce Models; Entrepreneurial Finance; Managerial and Environmental Accounting; Ecological Economics; and Thriving Regenerative Enterprise. “In the Green…

Read & discuss at Ann's blog.

Clear Writing Strikes a Nerve!

Posted by Jamie Notter under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Jamie Notter's blog.

What an Assortment of Oddballs…

Posted by Cynthia D'Amour under Uncategorized

   And all in one dish.
James loves to cook. Tonight he tested a new chili recipe on me.
Usually I’m up for whatever he whips up - but tonight he had a real oddball combination in the works…

Cinnamon
Dark Chocolate
Chipotle Pepper

Not exactly what I would expect in a chili dish.
I’ll admit I was rather skeptical - and […]

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

Association Technology Conference - The Roadtrip

Posted by Dave under Uncategorized

The 2007 Technology Conference marked my first real introduction to ASAE. It also served as my introduction to the Jeff and Ben, which led to me introduction to the Blogoclump as a whole, which in turn jump started my blogging and involvement in the association community. That chain of events made the event more than […]

Read & discuss at Dave's blog.

Heads Up… It’s PITV!

Posted by Maddie Grant under Uncategorized

I’m psyched to let everyone know that I have been invited to do a video blog show for Principled Innovation TV, a new video blog officially launched today by uber bloggers and innovation specialists Jeff De Cagna and Ben Martin. You may have also heard that Matt Baehr’s 501c(3)TV will now be a show on PITV too, which is awesome.

My show is called Maddie’s Musings, and will be a series of short (2 minutes or less, if possible), miscellaneous, and hopefully fun and interesting thoughts and tips from me about the future of associations. There will be some of just me at my desk talking to you, but I plan to start mixing it up and finding lots of cool things to video for the show in due course. I will of course be in attendance at the Technology Conference, armed with my flip video, so if you see me and have anything fabulous to say on video, feel free to give me a nudge! Don’t be shy! : )

Seriously though, I hope some of you will feel comfortable enough to post video comments, or even send in videos of your own. I am still in the “this is scary and embarrassing” stage, but getting more comfortable with it as I go along. If I can put myself out there, so can you! Hope you enjoy the vlog and the shows. Please let us know any feedback; we trust you to be our beta-testers!

Read & discuss at Maddie Grant's blog.

Association Technology Conference Underway

Posted by rjohnston@ironworks.com (Ironworks Consulting) under Uncategorized

ASAE and the Center’s Technology Conference kicks off this afternoon with a Town Hall meeting pre-session to gauge the pulse of associations on technology issues. Participants will have voting machines to indicate their perspectives on current issues such as social…

Read & discuss at rjohnston@ironworks.com (Ironworks Consulting)'s blog.