Sector and AuSAE News

  • 18 Mar 2016 9:35 AM | Deleted user
    These special AuSAE Workshops are suitable for anyone involved in managing and implementing Membership strategies.


    This educational program is a fantastic way to gain knowledge and insights in how to attract the next generation of members, influencers, decision-makers and super-users to your organisation. In addition to Membership Managers, this program would be useful for Boards and Senior Management seeking to gain a better understanding of the innovative ways to structure membership programs and improve member response rates. 


    The Presenter


    Sheri Jacobs, President and Chief Executive Officer, Avenue M Group.


    Sheri started her Association career in 1994 when she became the Director of Membership and Marketing at the American Academy of Implant Dentistry. Sheri went on to become Chief Marketing Officer and Director of Membership at Association Forum of Chicagoland where she produced award-winning campaigns which resulted in double-digit membership and meeting attendance growth. 


    Sheri is a top-rated speaker and a contributor to various associations and publications including the renowned ASAE publication “Decision to Join”. She currently serves as chair of the ASAE Foundation Development Committee and a member of the Professional Development Council.


    Sheri’s success in the field has led her to become an accomplished author. She is the co-editor and a contributor to ASAE’s best-selling membership book, Membership Essentials (ASAE 2007) and author of the marketing book 199 Ideas: Powerful Marketing Tactics That Sell (ASAE 2010).


    Join Sheri  at one of our upcoming or find out more about the event details by clicking on your location below. For AuSAE Members to attend is $395 AUD and non-member, not for profit professionals is $595 AUD


    Sydney| Association Educational Program: The Art of Membership - How to Create and Cement Lifelong Relationships on Friday 22 July 2016 [more]


    Melbourne | Association Educational Program: The Art of Membership - How to Create and Cement Lifelong Relationships on Monday 25 July 2016 [more]

  • 17 Mar 2016 2:52 PM | Deleted user

    “The national new home building sector has made an outstanding contribution to overall economic activity in Australia over the last four years, as the latest Housing Industry Association National Outlook*- released today - clearly demonstrates,” said HIA Chief Economist, Dr Harley Dale. “Without this contribution from residential construction the domestic economy would have been considerably weaker than has turned out to be the case over recent years.”


    “Looking beyond the current cycle, a strong focus on housing supply and policy reform is crucial to Australia’s future economic and social prosperity as we look to successfully house a growing and ageing population, along the way reducing pressures on the nation’s burgeoning health budget,” said Harley Dale.


    “Australia will fail to achieve this objective without federal government leadership and involvement in housing policy reform, including strategic planning for the future housing and residential infrastructure requirements of our growing and ageing population.”


    “Tinkering with negative gearing and capital gains tax provisions doesn’t represent real reform, but risks damaging confidence towards the housing industry at a crucial juncture in the cycle. A key finding in the latest HIA National Outlook is that a peak in new home building activity will be followed by a significant cyclical downturn extending to 2017/18.”


    New dwelling commencements are forecast to decline from a record peak of 220,000 last year to a trough of around 160,000 in 2017/18, while the growth in residential property prices will continue to slow.


    “The outlook for renovations investment, which is recovering from a 12 year low, is looking a little brighter,” said Harley Dale.


    “Having grown by just 0.9 per cent during the 2014/15 financial year, renovations investment is forecast to grow by 2.8 per cent in 2015/16. Growth is anticipated to increase by a further 1.7 per cent in 2016/17, with activity then projected to see modest yet steady increases out to the end of the decade.”


    “This outlook for the renovations sector doesn’t look like shooting the lights out, but it is considerably more promising than what we have faced for some years now,” concluded Harley Dale. “As with the new home building outlook, if we delve below the national surface there will continue to be a wide divergence in conditions for renovations activity across states and territories over coming years.”



    This Media Release was sourced directly from Housing Industry Australia online here.


  • 17 Mar 2016 1:20 PM | Deleted user



    AuSAE has welcomed new members from the following organisations this month.



    Is your organisation on this list? If your organisation is on this list as an AuSAE organisational member but you are unsure if you are part of the membership bundle, please contact the friendly AuSAE team at info@ausae.org.au.



    Not on this list? To join AuSAE today please visit our membership information page here.



    AUSAE WELCOMES NEW MEMBERS FROM:


     Organisation Membership level 
    Planning Institute of Australia Association (Organisational - Large)
    LPG Association of New Zealand Association Executive (Individual)
    Queensland Law Society Association (Organisational - Small)
    Arbitrators' and Mediators' Institute of New Zealand Association Executive (Individual)
    Institution of Professional Engineers New Zealand Association Executive (Individual)
    Monte Cecilia Housing Trust
    Association Executive (Individual)
    New Zealand Recreation Association
    Association Executive (Individual)
    Diabetes NSW
    Association Executive (Individual)
    Community Colleges Australia
    Association Executive (Individual)


    Note; To respect the privacy of our members, we only release membership type and organisation details publicly each month.

  • 17 Mar 2016 11:06 AM | Deleted user

    Even though membership is their core business model, not as many associations have membership staff as you might expect. Here’s a look at some of the varying ways associations do, or don’t, build membership into their staff structures.


    It’s time for another edition of “Possibly Surprising Information About Staffing Practices at Membership Organizations” here at Associations Now.


    In our previous installment, we pondered why most executives at membership organizations, it appears, don’t have previous work experience in a membership role. Today, we find out that perhaps that’s because not as many associations as you’d think even have membership departments.


    Let’s begin with some data from ASAE benchmarking and compensation research conducted in the past few years (thanks to my ASAE colleague Terri Ashton, manager, research and intelligence, for help in gathering this):


    • 43 percent of associations report at least one staff member devoted to member recruitment and retention (28 percent among associations with 1-10 staff; 67 percent among those with 11 or more staff).
    • Between 30 percent and 47 percent of associations with 11 or more staff report having a membership chief or director position in their staff structure (varying in that range with staff size), while just 11 percent in associations with 10 or fewer staff have such a position.


    For as long as I’ve been observing associations (going on nine years now with ASAE), I hadn’t thought much about this, mainly because I simply assumed that associations, as diehard membership organizations, had membership staff. That, evidently, was a bad assumption.


    There’s a noteworthy follow-up data point from the benchmarking research:


    • 5 percent of associations report outsourcing member renewals. No other membership function was reported as outsourced by more than 3 percent of associations.


    Do the math: If 43 percent of associations have membership staff and 5 percent (at most) outsource membership work, that leaves more than half (52 percent) where membership functions such as recruitment, retention, engagement, and customer service are distributed among other staff.


    Clearly two general philosophies exist, more evenly matched than I would have guessed, about operating a membership association: One view is that membership needs a champion on staff, someone specifically assigned as caretaker of the business model. The other view is that membership is a part of everyone’s job.


    Each of these approaches comes with ups and downs, and they are not mutually exclusive. The nature of any particular association likely dictates some of the decision.


    A small-staff association, for instance, probably can’t dedicate a full staffer to any one single function, let alone membership. In a pair of discussions in ASAE’s Collaborate forum [member login required], one association said it was considering either significantly rescoping or simply not refilling a vacant membership director position because it enjoyed a high market penetration and high retention within its niche industry. A commenter in the discussion suggested this may be common in trade associations, where member relations can be taken on by the CEO, dues processing is handled by the finance department, and recruitment and retention are handled by marketing staff.


    The “champion” model, on the other hand, fends off the problem of responsibility. As the saying goes, “If it’s everyone’s job, it’s no one’s job.” Dan Ratner, former director of membership development and industry outreach at the American National Standards Institute (who has since moved on to the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges), embodies the champion role well. In 2014, he characterized his role at ANSI as such: “I am the guy staff members don’t want to make eye contact with in the hallway. I’m constantly pestering staff about what they are doing for members.”


    The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology has adopted the distributed model, having decided not to refill its membership director position after it became vacant in 2014. Joanne Olson, deputy executive director, says ARVO opted instead to elevate its customer service role to the senior-manager level, and it created its first marketing manager position, as well, which soon became assistant director of marketing. The customer service manager handles much of the transactional functions of membership as well as database management and member service, while the marketing staffer manages recruitment and retention efforts. Olson herself oversees both positions and sets membership strategy. While membership is clearly stated in their job descriptions, no one at ARVO has a job title with “membership” in it.


    Olson says the new structure came at a time when ARVO was re-evaluating its broader strategies for membership after the federal budget sequester significantly affected its members’ funding. Redistributing the membership functions went hand in hand with a more “proactive” approach to recruitment, retention, and engagement.


    “So far we’ve never looked back,” she says. “We haven’t felt a lack because we were very careful to redistribute the processes. The job was all process. It was all transactional. There was very little strategy involved. So it was almost easy to farm out the transactions but also up the game in terms of strategy.”


    The transition was not without hiccups, though, as Olson recalls an instance when a change to the renewal-notice schedule affected the organization’s overall cash flow, but so far membership numbers are steady. And, while there is no membership staff by title, Olson says the membership torch has not been dropped. “I have a great champion with our senior manager for customer service. We’ve actually made sure she’s at the table a lot more,” Olson says. As the person most closely interacting with members on a daily basis, the customer service manager’s presence maintains a clear connection between ARVO’s various programs and the membership experience. “There’s almost no example where we don’t want her at the table,” says Olson.


    In one of the Collaborate discussions about the membership director position, another commenter suggested keeping the position but focusing it on enhancing the member experience, getting members engaged in the association’s “purpose and programs” so retention remains high.


    All of these approaches show a varying range of possibilities for staffing the membership operation at an association. The question of dedicating staff to “membership” by job title may be a matter of semantics, or symbolism, or perhaps something more, but it shines a light on the sometimes peculiar nature of associations, in which the core business model, membership, is a unique combination of several professional disciplines.


    How does your association staff its membership functions? Do you have membership job titles? Or do all staff have membership responsibilities? How might that change in the future? Share your thoughts in the comments.


  • 17 Mar 2016 10:18 AM | Deleted user

    You know your meeting’s attendees. You even love them—well OK, some of them. But are you unintentionally doing them a disservice? As a frequent meeting-goer, here are some traps I see planners fall into all too often. But they don't have to!


    1. Thinking about your attendees as “attendees.”
    Sure, you want them to physically show up at your meeting, but is their body the only thing you want to check in? What about their hearts, their minds, their attention, their intentions? If you want all that to show up at your event, you have to think holistically about the people who are coming to experience what you’re offering. And that starts with what you call them, especially in your own mind.


    Instead: Think about what you want them to get from the experience, then walk it back to who you’re appealing to. Do you want participants? Learners? Connectors? How you think and talk about them will, intentionally or not, color how you craft the experience you want them to have.


    2. Thinking you can please all the people all the time—if you just throw enough stuff at them.
    Do you have so many concurrent sessions scheduled that people complain that they have to miss some they really need? Do you pack sessions in back to back with barely a bathroom break in between? Do you keep them partying until midnight, and then expect them to show up for an early morning yoga session followed by a networking breakfast and then straight into session after expo hall after session? I get that planners feel they have to pack every minute to give people their money’s worth, but all that really does is exhaust them, shut down their ability to learn, and ultimately frustrate them as they drag their overcooked brains home to try to make some sense of it all. Or, more likely, forget pretty much everything they learned.


    Instead: Think again about the people who are coming, and what will bring value to their experience. What will make it a successful experience for them? Then provide just those things, along with quiet time to let what they’re learning sink in, to discuss solutions with peers, and to translate how what they’re learning could play out in real life.


    3. Missing opportunities to connect them with your organization, the content, and each other. 

    Is your registration line just a line of people avoiding eye contact and shuffling their feet? Are your hallways between session rooms just spaces to pass through as quickly as possible?


    Instead: Think about all the blank spaces in your event as perfect opportunities to make connections. Can you put thought- and conversation-inspiring objects along your hallways and lining-up spots? Give each person entering a line something that connects with the conference theme or your organization’s goals that they can compare and discuss with others? Hold a trivia contest with questions relating to your market?


    4. Assuming they want continuity and tradition above all else. Also known as the “We’ve always done it this way” syndrome, you’re right, “attendees” who have been coming to the same meeting for years do expect to get the same meeting they’ve always gotten, even if it doesn’t really do much for them in the long run.


    Instead: Show them what they’ve been missing, how much more effective—and interesting—it is to be a participant than an attendee. Sure, some long-timers may grumble at first, because change is uncomfortable. Until they see how much better their experience can be.


    5. Assuming that, because they’re highly trained professionals, they want their meeting to be deadly serious at all times. I hear this one a lot in relation to medical meetings in particular, that docs don’t want to be bothered with anything but the latest research results delivered by a key opinion leader from the stage. “They won’t stand for anything else,” I hear. Oh, but even the most serious-minded will if you give it to them!


    Instead: Inject a little fun. I’ve seen docs go into a competitive frenzy trying to outdo each other solving cases they work on in teams, have a ball doing a Jeopardy-style session, and connecting topics and treatments to patients through the use of art and music. Don’t underestimate your audience’s basic human needs, such as humor, storytelling, connection, competition, and physical movement. Whatever their profession, your participants are people first and foremost.


    What participant-related challenges do you see, either as a planner or at meetings you go to?


    This article was sourced directly from Meetings Not online here.


  • 16 Mar 2016 4:02 PM | Deleted user

    If you make it a point to create an online social community, you want to make sure you get the most out of it, right? Of course you do! And we totally understand why. So to help you out, we’ve put together a few tips for increasing engagement through social communities. Take a look!


    Take advantage of status updates and wall posts


    One way to spur conversation and really generate online member engagement is by taking advantage of status updates and wall posts. As an association leader, you should be posting status updates on a fairly regular basis. Two to three times a week is a pretty good number - it shows that you’re engaged with the community, without being a total pain. And if you see other members posting within your social community, be sure to comment back. This shows that you’re actively listening to what it is they’re saying and helps build that overall sense of community.


    Embrace photo galleries


    Photo galleries are a great way to showcase your organization’s personality. They show that you’re a real person, and not just a faceless organization. Plus, by making it a point to post pictures of your own, you’re setting an example for what you’d like your members to do. The more pictures you post, the more likely they are to contribute.


    Experiment with short videos


    Remember, not everyone likes to consume content in the same form. Rather than just posting status updates and wall posts, try throwing in a few short videos as well. This may encourage some of your more visual members to engage with you.


    Not sure what to even film short videos about? Here are a few ideas:

    • Interview the founder of your organization. People love to know how things all began.
    • Talk about an upcoming event or conference. Provide your members with packing tips or advice for conference newbies.
    • Repurpose an existing blog post. Take out the top three bullet points and convert them into video form.
    • Put together a compelling holiday video. (Publix’s holiday commercials immediately come to mind.)


    Offer topic-specific, opt-in e-lists


    E-lists are great for members who don’t log in to their accounts very much. They allow for members to still receive updates without having to log in or take any action.


    Now let’s rewind for a second. What are e-lists in terms of social communities? Well, just as a member can subscribe to your organization’s newsletter, they can also subscribe to the different components of your organization’s social community. So for example, if someone uploads a photo to one of their circles, all of the people who are in that circle and subscribed to that e-list will get an email notification - perfect for encouraging online member engagement.


    This article was sourced directly through Member Clicks and can be viewed online here.


  • 16 Mar 2016 3:56 PM | Deleted user

    The Grattan Institute report, Chronic failure in primary care, released today, is an unfair attack on Australia’s hardworking GPs, according to the AMA.


    Chair of the AMA Council of General Practice (AMACGP), Dr Brian Morton, said that the Report paints an unduly pessimistic picture of the care that GPs are providing to patients with complex and chronic disease.


    “The Report is a welcome contribution to the ongoing national discussion about how to best deal with the rapidly growing number of people suffering from complex and chronic conditions, but it is blatantly wrong for the Institute to blame GPs for any perceived failings in primary health care delivery,” Dr Morton said.


    “The Grattan Report singles out diabetes care as being one area where Australia is performing poorly, but other data contradicts this.


    “For example, hospital admission rates per 100,000 population for uncontrolled diabetes in Australia are among the best of the OECD countries at 7.5 - well under the UK at 23.9 and the OECD average of 50.3.


    “The Report even acknowledges that there is a lack of hard evidence and data to assess the performance of our primary care system in managing complex and chronic disease, which makes the attack on GPs even more surprising.


    “The Institute also admits that the evidence base for what works is still slim, so clearly its analysis and conclusions need to be treated with some caution.


    “The Government established the Primary Health Care Reform Advisory Group to consider potential reforms to help improve care for patients with complex and chronic disease.

    “The AMA has made a range of recommendations to this group, including:


    • The need to retain and support the GP-led model of primary care to support continuity of care and reduce the potential for fragmentation of care.
    • Support for blended payment models, complementing FFS.
    • Reform of existing Medicare chronic disease items to strengthen the role of the patient's usual GP, cut red tape, streamline access to GP referred allied health care services, and to reward longitudinal health care.
    • The adoption of pro-active models of care-coordination for patients with higher levels of chronic disease and who are at risk of unplanned hospitalisation - similar to the Coordinated Veterans' Care program that has been established by the Department of Veterans' Affairs.
    • The introduction of an incentive payment through the Practice Incentives Program to support quality improvement, informed by better data collection.
    • The introduction of non-dispensing pharmacists in general practices to help improve medication management, particularly for patients with chronic disease.
    • An enhanced role for private health insurers to fund targeted programs that support general practice in caring for patients with chronic disease.
    • The utilisation of Primary Health Networks to support GPs in providing care for patients, particularly in improving the connection between primary and hospital care.
    • Better use of technology, including the use of point of care testing.
    • Principals that should underpin the operation of the medical home, if the Government decides to adopt this model in Australia.


    “The burden of complex and chronic disease in this country continues to grow, and the Government needs to take a long term view if it is to tackle this problem effectively.

    “The Government needs to invest significantly in general practice, preferably in the upcoming Budget, in the knowledge of savings in later years, better patient outcomes, and less pressure on our hospital system.


    “Government measures to address this impending crisis must include immediately lifting the current freeze on the indexation of Medicare patient rebates.


    “It is important that when new models of care are considered, they are carefully designed in consultation with the profession, and thoroughly tested through pilots and trials.


    “What may work overseas may not be relevant in the Australian context, and we need to make sure we get things right so that patients can access the services they need.


    “In the meantime, coordinated efforts to develop and implement workable solutions to meet the growing demand for chronic disease care can do without unfair and unnecessary attacks on dedicated primary health care professionals, especially GPs,” Dr Morton said.



    This article was sourced directly from the Australian Medical Association online here.

  • 16 Mar 2016 3:29 PM | Deleted user

    For immediate release Friday 4th March 2016 – The Australian Logistics Council (ALC) and GS1 Australia have officially launched the new Australian Transport Standards for Freight Labelling and EDI developed by the ALC Supply Chain Standards Work Group for the Australian Transport & Logistics Industry.


    The standards were launched at the ALC Forum 2016 in Sydney with Michael Kilgariff, ALC Managing Director and Bonnie Ryan, Industry Manager – Trade and Transport from GS1 Australia in front of approximately 250 senior industry and government leaders attending Australia’s premier freight logistics event.


    The Australian Transport Standards include the ALC endorsed Australian Freight Labelling Guideline and Australian Transport EDI User Guides to provide one common label format to identify freight and one common file format to exchange data throughout the freight transportation process. A new Australian Industry Glossary will also assist as an easy reference to common industry and GS1 standards terminologies.


    Speaking at the ALC Forum 2016, Bonnie Ryan, Industry Manager – Trade and

    Transport from GS1 Australia said the Australian Transport Standards for Freight Labelling and EDI is an extensive body of work in consultation with the ALC Supply Chain Standards Work Group.

    “The Australian transport industry’s freight system is at the heart of our economy. The adoption of the Australian Transport Standards for Freight Labelling and EDI will give us the opportunity to improve freight efficiency and better connect all modes of transport in the Australian transport and logistics sector,” said Ms Ryan.


    Based on GS1 global supply chain standards and best practice, the Australian Freight Labelling Guideline provides guidance to industry on how to physically identify and label logistic and transport units to support efficient transport management processes from point of origin to destination. To support the physical identification of freight, the accompanying Australian Transport EDI User Guides define the necessary data exchanges required to effectively execute the physical delivery.


    Combined, the suite of standards outline a roadmap for industry to move from costly manual processes to full automation. “This new roadmap will be a game changer in the efficiency, interoperability, visibility and productivity of freight movement across the supply chain,” said Michael Kilgariff, ALC Managing Director.


    “With ALC research showing that a 1% increase in supply chain efficiency would increase GDP by $2 billion*, the implementation of the Australian Transport Standards for Freight Labelling and EDI package will support industry’s efforts to achieve that goal,” Mr Kilgariff added.


    David McNeil, Chair of the ALC Supply Chain Standards Work Group and eCommerce Manager for OneSteel says, “The labelling and EDI initiative provides an innovative and effective integration roadmap for the Australian Transport & Logistics Industry, now and into the future. It will be of benefit to all Australian businesses to work together seamlessly and efficiently to grow our economy.”


    To learn more about the Australian Transport Standards for Freight Labelling and EDI, contact us today or email Bonnie Ryan, Industry Manager – Trade and Transport at GS1 Australia at bonnie.ryan@gs1au.org


    About GS1 Australia
    GS1 Australia is the leading provider of standards and solutions for over 20 industry sectors.


    We introduced barcoding to Australia in 1979 and today we enable more than 17,000 member companies, of all sizes, to become more efficient by implementing the GS1 system.


    We bring businesses, associations and industries together. This blended community comes to GS1 Australia for advice, networking and solutions to their supply chain challenges. For more information visit http://www.gs1au.org/


    About Australian Logistics Council. 

    The Australian Logistics Council represents the major Australian logistics supply chain customers, providers, infrastructure owners and suppliers. Their members span the entire supply chain, incorporating road, rail, sea, air, sea ports and intermodal ports.


    ALC works with all levels of government to ensure it considers the needs of the logistics industry in its investment and policy decisions. Visit www.austlogistics.com.au



    This Media Release was sourced directly from the Australian Logistics Council online here.


  • 16 Mar 2016 1:58 PM | Deleted user

    The Australian orthopaedic community has contributed over $200,000 over the past four years to OzHarvest's efforts to feed Australians in need.


    AOA CEO Adrian Cosenza proudly participated for the fourth year running in the OzHarvest CEO Cookoff. The generosity of the Australian orthopaedic community has contributed over $200,000 during these four years, meaning nearly half a million meals delivered to some of the most vulnerable members of the Australian community. To find out more about OzHarvest, or to donate, head to www.ozharvest.org


    This article was sourced directly from the Australian Orthopaedic Association online here

  • 16 Mar 2016 1:32 PM | Deleted user

    A national registration system for social workers is being urged by the South Australian Government in the wake of damning coronial findings after the tragic death of Adelaide girl Chloe Valentine.


    Coroner Mark Johns investigated the child's death in 2012 after she crashed when forced to ride a small motorbike in her backyard as her mother and then-partner watched on.


    Mr Johns recommended formal registration for social workers as part of the National Registration and Accreditation Scheme because he found shortcomings in the handling of the Valentine case by workers at government agency Families SA.


    SA Health Minister Jack Snelling will put the registration proposal to next month's Council of Australian Governments health council meeting in Perth.


    "It does require unanimity on the council because obviously you can't have different states with different registration systems," Mr Snelling, who chairs the health council, said.


    Chloe Valentine's mother and then-partner were jailed for criminal neglect over the child's death.

    The inquest was told social workers had been inadequately trained and relied on emotion rather than professional knowledge in their work.


    Mr Snelling conceded any legal registration of social workers could still be years away.


    "When South Australia agitated for a national accreditation scheme for paramedics it took some years before we were actually able to get all the states to agree to do that," he said.


    Social worker registration could ensure adequate standards 


    The Association of Social Workers said it had sought a registration system for two decades.


    SA branch president Mary Hood said not all people who called themselves social workers were qualified as such and a registration system would lead to greater accountability.


    "We would also be able to hold those qualified social workers to standards that we set up as a professional association, so that certainly is something that we think would raise the bar," Dr Hood said.


    University of South Australia child protection expert Elspeth McInnes agreed with the association that universities could help boost the calibre of social work.


    Current degrees covered such things as working with the elderly and homeless, but Dr McInnes said there was a case for introducing undergraduate electives or post graduate degrees with a focus on child protection.


    Dr McInnes said people from a range of different professions potentially had something to contribute to child protection.


    "Lawyers who work in that area and that whole criminal justice system could benefit from understanding child protection more concretely," she said.


    "There are others like medical workers, the whole health workforce, that come into contact with children who have experienced abuse."


    Uni SA and Flinders University said existing courses covered child protection, but the content could be boosted.



    This article was sourced directly from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation online here.


The Australasian Society of Association Executives (AuSAE)

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