Wearing your colors: How association leadership is (a little bit) like joining a gang

Posted by Ben Martin under Uncategorized

It seems all movies about gangs have the same story line. A good kid’s friends fall into hanging out with some other kids who are up to no good. The bad kids are part of a gang. The good kid wants to be accepted, and decides to join the gang. But as a rite of initiation, they make him do something awful. Rob an apartment, beat up another kid, or worse. The gang requires new entrants to prove that they’re truly committed and worthy of admission.

I admit it’s hyperbole to the Nth degree, but it seems to me that moving up the leadership hierarchy in many associations may have analogous initiation rites, although these are more likely to be self-imposed by the volunteer herself.

Imagine this scenario. An aspiring association volunteer has visions of being elected to the board; even of becoming board chair. But before she can get into the good graces of those in power, she has to prove her commitment to the way that those in power think. She has views about the association that she feels compelled to suppress. She discourages herself from speaking her mind about matters that don’t appear to respect and assent to the orthodoxy. To have any chance of moving up the ladder, she needs those in power to believe that she with their view of things.

As the years go by, she continues suppressing her opinions and eventually ceases to remember them. She has killed off the unique views that bring an alternative view to the table. One day, she forgets that she even held different beliefs about the future of her association. This scenario – or some close variation of it – must get played out every year to many association volunteers. I’ve not only witnessed it, I’ve experienced it as a volunteer leader.

I sympathize with volunteer leaders who want to get to the top. What do you do? Stay true to your dissenting opinions at the risk of looking like a renegade and missing out on the nomination? Or suppress those dissenting opinions and try to convince the others that you’re “one of them”?

Through member outreach, I often bring association members into the volunteer fold and jokingly tell them, “Don’t become one of them.” I’m starting to think this might actually be a more serious matter.

What do you think of this phenomenon? Do you see it happening in your association or the one you belong to? Do you think it’s a problem? What should be done about it, if anything?

It takes a confident volunteer, board, and staff to allow – even encourage – dissenting opinions around the boardroom table. I like Jeff De Cagna’s idea of a dissent agenda, forcing association boards to grapple with issues that are often avoided simply because they do create uncomfortable dissent. There must be other strategies.

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Read & discuss at Ben Martin's blog.

Building Credibility Even When You Can’t Say Anything

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

Great example from the Direct2Dell blog of listening to the online conversation about their future products, summarizing the discussion, and simply stating what they can share about it right now (not much):
Dell’s Secret Mini Laptop: Speaking of D6, a Gizmodo post about a forthcoming Dell mini notebook sparked hundreds of reactions in the blogosphere. Anne […]

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

Social Media in Plain English

Posted by Dave under Uncategorized

Lee and Sachi Lefever of Common Craft are it again. This time on the broad topic of Social Media:

Social Media in Plain English from leelefever on Vimeo.

Speaking of social media, my fellow association professional, blogger and good friend Jeff DeCagna of Principled Innovation LLC has launched the first-ever survey designed to capture information on the state of social technology adoption in the association community. He is are conducting this survey with the financial support of Omnipress, one of the association community’s leading producers of [read more]

Read & discuss at Dave's blog.

Where to get your cheap gas

Posted by Sue Pelletier under Uncategorized

If you have a drive-in meeting, you might want to send attendees this URL, courtesy of MSN. You just plug in your zip code and it tells you where to find the cheapest gas (and most expensive–no idea why you’d want to know that, but whatever).
This tip of the day comes via Access All Areas. […]

Read & discuss at Sue Pelletier's blog.

Social Technology Survey

Posted by Rick Johnston under Uncategorized

If you work for any type of nonprofit organization, I urge you to invest a few minutes to take a survey about your current or planned use of social technology (any type of tool — blogs, message boards, listservs, wikis,…

Read & discuss at Rick Johnston's blog.

Principled Innovation launches unprecedented association social media adoption survey. Please participate!

Posted by Ben Martin under Uncategorized

You may know about Principled Innovation’s association social media wiki, where the association community’s use of social media is catalogued. Now, Principled Innovation is launching a new survey designed to help association leaders gain a greater context and understanding of association social media metrics association professionals all wonder about. This survey seeks to answer questions like:

  • What’s the average number of subscribers to an association blog?
  • What are the primary motivations for starting an association social networking initiative?
  • What percentage of association blog subscribers receive posts by email instead of RSS?
  • What kind of blog comment moderation procedure is most common in associations?
  • And many more.

The survey will be open for responses through 11:59 pm PDT on June 30. A free executive summary of survey results will be released by the middle of August. A more detailed analysis of the data will be available for purchase in either late September or early October.

I’m proud to have been intimately involved in the development of this survey, which is being launched with the financial support of Omnipress. I hope you’ll take a few minutes to complete it and/or to spread the word to others in your circle of influence who might be interested in the survey.

Read more at the Principled Innovation blog.

Tagged: ; ; ;

Read & discuss at Ben Martin's blog.

Participate in the State of Social Technologies Adoption Survey!

Posted by jeffpi1@gmail.com (Jeff De Cagna of Principled Innovation LLC, the association community's leading voice for innovation!) under Uncategorized

We invite you to participate!

Read & discuss at jeffpi1@gmail.com (Jeff De Cagna of Principled Innovation LLC, the association community's leading voice for innovation!)'s blog.

How much are you paid?

Posted by AEM under Uncategorized

Would you like everybody to know your salary? Even though it?s available on tax forms, very few people, other than job hunters, ever seek that information.

Publishing individual salaries can cause a big staff morale problem.
Lower paid employees often resent being asked ? or forced ? to work extra hours. They feel that higher paid employees should work more.

Publication of salaries also makes people more focused on monetary payment than they normally would be and reduces the impact of other factors on job satisfaction.

While salaries are generally set in accordance with market demands, lower paid employees often feel their jobs are undervalued.

Jamie Notter suggests publishing all salaries, but he may simply be trying to stir up discussion about larger issues.

It?s best to keep salary information confidential. Don?t share it with employees or board members and don?t list it in budget documents.

Read & discuss at AEM's blog.

The Nadir of PowerPoint

Posted by Sue Pelletier under Uncategorized

Presentation Zen brings us two examples of just how bad PowerPoint can be (not that we need any more examples, but these are doozies): Obama, JFK vs. Bad PowerPoint. As Garr says:
If bad slides can take some of the impact off even this kind of speech, imagine what wordy slides could do to your ability […]

Read & discuss at Sue Pelletier's blog.

Stream of Consciousness (2008-05-31)

Posted by admin under Uncategorized

Finally getting caught up again. It’s taken me a lot longer than I thought. #

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Read & discuss at admin's blog.