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Association Members Must Become Evangelists
By Ed Rigsbee, CSP
(874 words)
If you expect your
trade association or professional society to serve you well; you must
become an actively engaged evangelist for your association. You must
bellow it from the rooftops; the value you receive from your membership.
You must tell all your colleagues, competitors, and suppliers why they
too should become members. It is
your job to drive a continual membership recruitment campaign. More
members, among other things, mean a louder voice in legislative matters,
more programs to help you improve your business, and better affinity
programs.
A trade association or
professional society should be a wonderful, industry
wide strategic alliance enabling all stakeholders to harness the
collective strength and thereby receiving the value they need. The
members that are actively involved as functionaries in their industry
should be the ones driving an association, not the paid staff and not
the suppliers. Your paid staff members already get their benefit—a
paycheck. Not to diminish the roll of
paid staff however, there is a different dynamic between the persons
that ”pay-to-play,” members and associate members verses the ones
that are “paid-to-play,” the staff. The times when the paid staff experience this “pay-to-play” dynamic
is mostly if they participate at ASAE, MPI, PCMA, etc. where they too
are a paying member.
The
suppliers always get a huge amount of value from
participation—networking with their customers. However, it is you, the
functionary member that stands to gain the most through participation. At this point I must
stop and be clear to you on the idea that I firmly believe suppliers, or
affiliate members, should be able to participate in your association and
should hold board positions. But, too many associations are currently
addicted to the opiate of having their suppliers do all the work of
driving their industry’s association. It is not their job—it’s yours! Your suppliers will happily do
all the work, but by relinquishing your responsibility, you will only
weaken your association.
What about the paid
association staff? Sure, their job is to enable, support, and encourage
the membership. If a prospective member calls or emails an inquiry, they
are to instantly jump on it, get out some membership marketing
materials, and then forward the inquiry to the volunteer membership committee to close the deal. If staff does
their job and does not function as a stumbling block or impediment, then
there is no excuse—every inquiry should be converted to membership.
However, if the paid
staff is too busy doing the work that the volunteer leaders and their
committees should be doing, then they will not instantly jump on
membership inquiries, and another potential member is lost. Remember, more members mean a
louder voice in legislative matters, more programs to help you improve
your business, and better affinity programs.
Association board
members always receive a higher level of value from their association
membership by virtue of their increased engagement. This is the reason
that I refuse to conduct my member value process for determining the
yearly sustainable real-dollar value at board meetings in contrast to
conducting the process at member meetings. Board member numbers will
always be higher. To become an
evangelist for your association, you must truly understand your
return on investment (ROI). When you are clear on the yearly ROI you
receive from your membership investment of time and financial resources,
you will want to shout from the rooftops.
For over a decade I
have been traveling
North America
conducting my proprietary member value process at association and
society meetings. I have NEVER found an organization to deliver less
than a 2X ROI—many deliver 10X. One, the American Society for Quality,
delivers 50X. While there may be an exception, my belief is that the
collaborative efforts of association members will always deliver
value—the challenge is that most associations really cannot
quantitatively document the actual value they deliver. Unfortunately,
that can leave the perception in the minds of some members that their
trade association or professional society is falling down on the job.
While some organizations might, in fact, be falling down on the
job—most deliver value quite well.
I have always advocated
that business is about results, not excuses; and as such so should
associations and its members. To get results, become an evangelist for
your association. For squeezing
even more value from your association or professional society
membership, my recommendation to you:
1. Learn more about the
services your association offers and pledge to take advantage of the
value for which you are already paying. Admit it; you’ve been throwing
money away.
2. Attend your
association’s annual convention this year—no excuses.
3. Volunteer at the
convention to do something for the following year.
4. Get to know your
association’s paid staff as they can be a stellar resource in times of
need.
5. Commit to yourself
that two days a week you’ll take only a 45 minute lunch rather than
your usual hour and a half. With that extra time, you’ll call
non-association members that are involved in your industry and ask for
the order—invite them to participate through membership.
6. Do more year-round
networking with the members of your association. They truly are an
invaluable resource in both good and bad times.
Visit
www.rigsbee.com/association.htm
for more articles on trade association and professional society success.
To
access helpful additional information from Ed Rigsbee at no charge,
please visit www.rigsbee.com/downloadaccess.htm.
Copyright
(c) 2008 Ed Rigsbee
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Ed Rigsbee, CSP is the
Chief Member Evangelist at
Rigsbee Research located in the Los Angeles, California metro area. He
has also authored two additional books on alliance relationships: PartnerShift-How to Profit
from the Partnering Trend, Developing
Strategic Alliances
and The Art of Partnering. His articles are frequently
published in business magazines worldwide. He travels internationally
sharing his insight on alliance relationships through his consulting and
keynote presentations. Rigsbee may be contacted through www.rigsbee.com,
ed@rigsbee.com or (800) 839-1520. To
access helpful additional information from Ed Rigsbee at no charge,
please visit www.rigsbee.com/downloadaccess.htm.
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