How Trade Associations Can Serve Members
By
Ed Rigsbee, CSP
(586
words)
Reduce
focus on ancillary activities.
Feel
good activities generally serve only a few members yet much of an
association’s valuable resources tend to be squandered in this area.
Generally association members, frequently senior within the organization,
with too much time on their hands will drive activities that matter to
them while only serving a small constituency of members.
Let
go of trying to control the small issues, which is common in associations.
Association leadership is a turnstile and as such each set of leaders
wants to make their mark and “resolve” small issues that do not need
to be resolved. They do this because these small issues are really low
hanging fruit, easily accessible. Rather, leadership needs to focus on the
issues that really matter to the majority of members and these issues take
real work, the kind of work that few leaders are willing to tackle.
Work
on what matters to members.
Here
is the challenge. I cannot tell you how many associations I have worked
with that the leadership’s approach was something like: “It doesn’t
matter what the members want, they need…”
There
are two basic kinds of association leaders, first there is the person that
truly desires to serve their industry and there is the second that desires
to serve themselves. Over time there have been fewer of these that truly
desire to serve and more that want to control or gain personal value. This
is where the association paid staff must exert strength to minimize the
damage that the glory and power seeking leader can cause.
What
do most association members want?
In
a nutshell most of the folks that join an association do so with the hope
of minimizing the learning curve in growing their business. Secondarily,
is to join in with masses in their industry to affect legislation that
might have a positive or negative effect on their business.
While
many association members site networking as a primary reason, networking
is merely a conduit for the above value they seek. Networking in itself is
an activity, not a benefit. However, proper intelligent networking will
generally deliver the business growth and legislative benefits that
members seek.
Recommendations:
-
Yearly,
offer an open ended survey to membership. Too many surveys that I’ve
seen associations send to their members only ask the kind of questions
that support the erroneous assumptions of its leaders.
-
Leave
the low hanging fruit for the paid staff. Volunteer leadership should
be involved in helping to set the strategy rather than be obsessed
with the daily operational activities of their association.
-
Focus
on the big (and difficult) issues that will truly deliver value to
members in their most important areas of business growth and
legislation oversight. Leave the petty and small stuff to the paid
staff.
-
Do
not fear the diversity of membership but rather embrace it. When I
mention diversity, I am talking about more than just racial, ethnic,
nationality, and gender—I am talking about diversity of thought. In
my experience, too many association leaders needlessly feel threatened
by diversity of thought and unfortunately squander resources
attempting to control that which should not be controlled; diversity
of ideas.
Most
folks join their industry’s trade association to grow their business
through new and innovative methods, learned through a collaborative
community—the trade association. It is not a religion or benevolent
society. Both paid and volunteer leaders would bode well to keep this at
the fore of their thinking and decision making during their leadership
tenure.
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Ed
Rigsbee, CSP is the Chief Member Evangelist at Grow Your
Association, a consultancy organization that helps trade associations and
professional societies to grow. He is the president and executive director
of Cigar PEG Educational Institute, a 501 (c) (3) public charity that
serves to improve the industry of professional speaking. Ed is the author of
four books: PartnerShift, Developing
Strategic Alliances,
The
Art of Partnering, and Kids,
Parents & Soccer. He has over 1,500 published articles to his
credit and is a regular keynote presenter at trade
association and corporate conferences across North America. He can be reached at
800-839-1520 or www.GrowingYourAssociation.com
Are you looking for an
exciting speaker for your next meeting? If so visit www.edrigsbee.com
to access all of Ed's Web Sites and Blogs. Experience the depth of his
insight, and share it with your members at your next meeting. For a quick
list of topics, visit www.rigsbee.com/presentations.htm
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