Sector and AuSAE News

  • 22 Jul 2014 9:55 AM | Louise Stokes


    Do you currently face any of the below challenges as an association executive?

    • Creating a powerful membership growth plan 
    • Cultivating a high performing board 
    • Writing effective content for your newsletter and website to increase member engagement 
    • Understanding NFP Legal responsibilities and how you could be liable as an executive 
    • Staying relevant
    • Choosing membership management software and other NFP technology needs
    • Growing your team (do you hire for talent or culture in multigenerational workplaces)
    • Understanding which taxes affect your association and the tax implications of revenue generation
    • Finding sponsors that add value to your membership and keeping them year after year
    • Understanding Gamification – the current buzz word. How do you use game design to influence behaviour and build for the future?

    Did you know that the above are among the top challenges faced by AuSAE members and therefore became the foundation of our 2014 Leadership Symposium Program?

    If you haven’t yet had a peek, click here to download the program and register today! It is shaping up to be an engaging and insightful two days.

    Early Bird Registration closes on August 15. We hope to see you there!


    Warm Regards,

    Kimberley Miller
    Events and Communications Manager
    Australasian Society of Association Executives

  • 21 Jul 2014 9:39 AM | Louise Stokes
    Sending an email newsletter to customers, clients and prospects can be a great way of marketing your business.

    But there are easy mistakes to make which can annoy your customers and could even mean you end up on the wrong side of the law. Here are the top seven things not to do when sending email newsletters:

    1. Don’t spam everyone you know
    You need to put effort into building your subscriber list. It’s very important your customers and prospects agree to receive your email newsletter before you send it to them.

    Take time to build a quality list of both active and prospective customers. Use every possible customer interaction to invite them to receive your email newsletter – client visits, phone conversations, trade shows, your website, LinkedIn, etc. You may start with a few dozen subscribers but you’ll have hundreds within the first year if you make it part of your day to build your list.

    2. Don’t use your own computers to send your email newsletter
    If you send newsletters from your personal PC or server, there is a much greater chance that the email will be marked as “spam”. There is also a chance your IP address might be “blacklisted”, which means all of your day-to-day emails are much more likely to be caught as spam.

    Many companies send their email newsletters via large cloud-based email providers like MailChimp and Campaign Monitor because these services are secure and can overcome a black-listing event.

    3. Don’t attach your email newsletter as a PDF
    Your online newsletter should appear as soon as the recipient opens their email. If you instead choose the ‘old school’ method of attaching it as a downloadable file, your readers are 40% less likely to read it. File downloading is not ideal, especially on mobile devices or from within businesses with tight email security policies.

    Our research suggests that 92% of readers would rather view the newsletter in the email body than download an attachment. Meanwhile, 76% of business professionals surveyed believe companies who attach their newsletter as a PDF are “behind the times”.

    4. Don’t cram in too many words
    Most of us are time poor so we tend to skim newsletters. Make your email newsletters easier to read by separating your articles with images and white space. Each article should feature a catchy headline and a brief synopsis so the reader can click-through to the website to read more if they are interested. This technique also allows you to measure clicks, so you can see which topics resonate best with your audience. Your articles should be punchy (no more than 600 words) with clear sub-headings. Avoid long blocks of text.

    5. Writing good quality content
    Readers will soon tire of emails that are poorly written or contain irrelevant content. It’s good to personalise your newsletter with local happenings (e.g. a new staff member) but don’t overcrowd it with this type of material. Spend time to plan your content and always proof-read it (and use a spell check!) before you send.

    Don’t write too technically – the language you use in your email newsletters should be understood by primary school students. Remember, you are the expert in your field and your readers don’t want too much technical information – that’s why they rely on you.

    6. Don’t send your email and then forget about it
    Instead, you need to track your results. Take the time to review your results so you can learn about what your readers are interested in. You should expect at least 25% of your recipients open your email as this is a reasonable benchmark for a “unique open rate”. If you are writing interesting clickable content then expect at least 15% of those who open will click-through to read more. Compare your results for each and take note of the articles that get the most clicks. The article you post at the top of your email will naturally perform better than others (your readers don’t like to scroll).

    7. Don’t forget why you are writing in the first place
    If your goal is to write email newsletters to stay top-of-mind with your customers and prospects then make sure you include your company logo and contact details in both the email and on the landing pages. To maximise the number of enquiries you receive we recommend that each article should have a corresponding enquiry form to make it easy for the reader to contact you.

    A final thought. We often get asked the question “how often is too often?” when sending email newsletters. Too often and your readers might get sick of you, and you will see more readers unsubscribe. Meanwhile, if you send too infrequently, you will notice less people open your emails.

    Our statistics show the best performing email newsletters are those that are sent monthly. If you only send your email newsletter once a quarter or bi-annually then you are missing a marketing opportunity.

    Joel Montgomery is the founder and managing director of digital marketing company Affiniti.


  • 21 Jul 2014 9:38 AM | Louise Stokes


    BY Joe Rominecki / JUL 23, 2014 Sourced from here: http://associationsnow.com/2014/07/carry-flag-membership/?utm_source=AN%2BDaily%2BNews&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20140723%2BWednesday

    One association membership pro shares his ideas for keeping colleagues ever mindful of their impact on the member experience.

    One of my favorite descriptions of an association is that it is “essentially a conglomerate of small businesses, all targeted at a highly focused market, with a consensus-based governance model slapped on top.” In that context, it’s easy to see how silos form and staff lose sight of the big picture. They focus on their business lines and not the overall wants and needs of the association’s members.

    So, it has to be someone’s job to keep everyone connected and keep membership always in mind. Dan Ratner relishes that role. Maybe even a little too much.

    “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,” Ratner wrote last month in a discussion in ASAE’s Collaborate forum [member login required].

    Director of membership development and industry outreach at the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), Ratner says “pestering” only half jokingly. I spoke with him last week to dig deeper on his thoughts on promoting a member-centric mindset at an association, and he says the first step is “being nosy,” so he can see how every part of the association factors into the member experience.

    “In membership, at least in my current organization and in previous roles, you really have to know everything about what’s going on in the organization as the membership leader, because how does it affect your membership? What’s going on that really ends up impacting the membership experience? So, the nosiness is really about just making sure you are aware of those things, because a lot of times I’m the one getting the call from the members,” he says.

    Ratner shared a few methods he has used for getting staff at ANSI and previous associations where he’s worked to put members first:

    A monthly update on membership. He picks a few data points, works up some charts, and sends it out via email to staff at the same time every month. It’s short: two pages, with minimal text. Ratner says the reports spur conversations with colleagues. “The executive director or the other C-suite folks are coming to my office, saying, ‘OK, I’m not understanding why the numbers look like this on here,’ or ‘How can sales be up but revenues be down?’ So, I’ll explain the nuances of membership,” he says. “These data points at least give them the baseline and the foundation to ask other questions.”

    Presentations in all-staff meetings. These are good opportunities to talk about membership themes, perhaps pulling quotes or lists from books and articles on membership, Ratner says.

    Membership talks in staff orientations. Ratner says one of his previous associations developed an organization-wide retention plan, and a key part included a 10-minute visit from Ratner in mandatory staff orientations for all new employees. “We’d always talk through the main points of how they’re connected to membership, so on a daily basis they wouldn’t wonder. They would know they have an impact on our members,” he says.

    “Remember retention” mirrors. One year, after member-retention goals weren’t met, Ratner bought small mirrors for the entire association’s staff with the words “remember retention” printed on them. “We handed them out to everyone and said, ‘OK, now, whenever you’re wondering who’s responsible for retention, you know, because it’s sitting on your desk and you can look in that mirror and know it’s you.’”

    Ratner says he has also spent time listening in on customer service calls, asking IT for walk-throughs on fulfillment processes in the association’s database, and even volunteering to contribute to strategic planning, all in effort to understand as much as he can about the association and, in turn, spread the membership perspective throughout.

    He also emphasizes the importance of data in changing staff minds about membership. (See item 2 in an article Ratner wrote for ASAE in 2012, “3 New Wakeup Calls for Change.”) Of course, that requires having good data about members, whether through surveys, engagement tracking, or both.

    Despite carrying the flag for membership at the associations where he’s worked, Ratner has a measured take on how an association’s revenue should be generated. The discussion in Collaborate that he responded to had originally asked whether an association’s dues should be at least 50 percent of its overall revenue. Ratner says he thinks a good mix is roughly one-third dues revenue, one-third meetings and/or education, and one-third other nondues revenue. Balance is the key. “They should be interacting well together to boost each other’s growth,” he says. “The hard part is when one of the programs or one area goes off and ignores the membership side of things.”

    On a basic level, every association employee knows his or her work affects and is affected by members, but it can be easy to forget in the course of day-to-day work. Ratner’s ideas for changing that dynamic are a great place to start. You could also focus on shifting the culture at your association, adopting staff incentive plans for improving member satisfaction, or even simply avoiding overloading your staff to the point that their work and the member experience suffer.

    This is a challenge most association membership pros are familiar with. What have you tried at your association?
  • 18 Jul 2014 9:56 AM | Louise Stokes


    Do you currently face any of the below challenges as an association executive?

    • Creating a powerful membership growth plan 
    • Cultivating a high performing board 
    • Writing effective content for your newsletter and website to increase member engagement 
    • Understanding NFP Legal risks and how you could be liable as an executive 
    • Staying relevant
    • Choosing membership management software and other NFP technology needs
    • Growing your team (do you hire for talent or culture in multigenerational workplaces)
    • Understanding which taxes affect your association and the tax implications of revenue generation
    • Finding sponsors that add value to your membership and keeping them year after year
    • Understanding Gamification – the current buzz word. How do you use game design to influence behaviour and build for the future

    Did you know that the above are among the top challenges faced by AuSAE members and thus became the foundation of our 2014 Leadership Symposium Program?

    If you haven’t yet had a peek, click here to download the program and register today! It is shaping up to be an engaging and insightful two day event.

    Early Bird Registration closes on August 15. I hope to see you there!


    Warm Regards,

    Brett Jeffery
    General Manager - NZ
    Australasian Society of Association Executives

  • 17 Jul 2014 12:03 PM | Louise Stokes
    Social media is changing the global landscape for charities by providing new ways to reach strategic objectives. Many charities consider social media to be an important channel to deliver on their communications and fundraising goals. Some use social media to deliver services. Only a few incorporate social media as a core strategy to capitalise on its interactive opportunity to engage with new communities. These pioneers will reap the benefits.

    A new report from Grant Thornton, 'Growing communities: How charity leaders govern social media globally to thrive online', interviews charity chief executives from around the world and reveals how they are using this tool to deliver to their beneficiaries. The report features interviews with charities from Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, the UK and US, revealing that there is a real need for board-level understanding of social media.

    Carol Rudge, Global leader – Not for Profit at Grant Thornton said, “Social media is a game changer. Charities looking to engage with a more technology literate audience need to harness the power of this rapidly evolving environment. Without an informed social media strategy – and the internal governance and operations to support it – funding may erode.”

    While some charities have made great progress, there is currently a social media knowledge gap at senior levels in charities worldwide – the very people expected to govern the opportunities and risks to achieve their charity’s goals. To fill the gap, Grant Thornton Not for Profit and social media specialists asked senior executives a range of questions covering five key areas: strategy, governance, education, risk and measurement.

    Their responses are brought together with insights from Grant Thornton experts to draw tangible lessons that every charity type can use. From documenting policy to informal training and measurement tools, the report places emphasis on practical advice and shared learning.

    This report also equips charity leaders with key questions to ask their operational teams, to ensure the charity’s resources invested in social media deliver greatest value to their beneficiaries.

    The 'Growing communities' report features embedded links to relevant sources and aids for charities, as well as specific calls to action that can help senior management embrace social media.

    Find out more by using the twitter hashtag #NFPSocialMedia.


  • 17 Jul 2014 8:30 AM | Louise Stokes

    I am excited to announce three inspiring Keynote Speakers who will be joining AuSAE members and other senior leaders from New Zealand associations at the 2014 AuSAE Leadership Symposium.

    Theresa Gattung  Named several times in Fortune magazine’s ‘top 50 most powerful women in international business’, Theresa is a leading New Zealand business personality, author and the past CEO of Telecom. Read more about Theresa.


     


    Ken Shirley entered Parliament as the Labour MP for Tasman in 1984 and served as the Minister of Fisheries, Associate Minister of Agriculture, Associate Minister of Forestry and Associate Minister of Health. Ken entered the not-for-profit sector in 1990 and has held numerous CEO positions including his current post as CEO of Road Transport Forum. Read more about Ken.

     


    belinda moore is Australasia’s foremost membership specialist and has assisted thousands of not-for-profit organisations with their membership challenges. Belinda’s current positions include Chief Executive Officer of the Australasian Society of Association Executives and Managing Director of Strategic Membership Solutions. Read more about Belinda.

     


    The 2014 AuSAE Leadership Symposium is being held at Millennium Hotel Rotorua on October 29-30 under the theme: GAME ON: Leadership in Motion. To register today or more for information please click here.

     

    Don’t forget our special EarlyBird rate ends on August 15 (Save $100!).

     

    I hope to see you there!


    Brett


    Brett Jeffery
    General Manager – New Zealand
    Australasian Society of Association Executives

  • 17 Jul 2014 8:00 AM | Louise Stokes

    AuSAE are excited to announce four inspiring Keynote Speakers who will be joining AuSAE members and other senior leaders from Australian and New Zealand associations at the 2014 AuSAE Leadership Symposium.

    DR JASON FOX is a motivation strategy and design expert on an epic quest to liberate the world from poorly designed processes. He is the author of The Game Changer and has worked with a range of clients around the world, showing forward-thinking leaders how to use motivation science and game design to influence behaviour and build for the future of work.



     

    MARK MCCRINDLE is an award-winning social researcher, best-selling author, and principal of McCrindle Research with an international renown for tracking emerging issues, researching social trends and analysing customer segments. Mark’s understanding of the key social trends as well as his engaging communication style places him in high demand in the press and on television shows, such as Sunrise, Today, ABC News 24, A Current Affair, and Today Tonight.

     


    CHERYL KERNOT is the Director of the Graduate Certificate in Social Impact and Social Business Fellow at the Centre for Social Impact. One of the National Trust’s 100 National Living Treasures, Cheryl was Leader of the Australian Democrats from 1993-1997 and the Member for Dickson and a Labor Shadow Minister from 1998-2001. Her political portfolios included, amongst many, Indigenous Affairs, Treasury, Employment and Women’s Policy.

     


    DARRYL LOVEGROVE The name ‘Darryl Lovegrove’ is synonymous with entrepreneurialism, innovation and quality in the world of entertainment. By the time he sold his financial interest in the award winning operatic sensation The Three Waiters in 2009, offices has been established in Sydney, London and New York. An accomplished musical theatre performer, today Darryl represents award winning corporate entertainment acts through his company “Lovegrove Entertainment”.

     

    The 2014 AuSAE Leadership Symposium is being held at Sydney Dockside on October 13-14 under the theme: GAME ON: Leadership in Motion. To register today or more for information please click here.

     

    Don’t forget our special EarlyBird rate ends on August 15 (Save $100!).

     

    I hope to see you there!

     

    Kimberley

     

    Kimberley Miller
    Events and Communications Manager

    Australasian Society of Association Executives 


  • 16 Jul 2014 2:54 PM | Louise Stokes

    Enterprise Care's highly acclaimed Not for Profit Remuneration Report is the major source of sector salary and benefits data for the NFP sector in Australia. The Report ensures that your organisation's salaries and remuneration packages are competitive. It is widely used to benchmark salaries and to conduct annual performance and remuneration reviews.


    EXCITING NEW DEVELOPMENT in its 16th year!
    This year is YOUR chance to be directly involved in the Remuneration Survey which has been EXPANDED to cover a comprehensive range of position LEVELS within NFPs.


    Completing the NEW Remuneration Survey
    • ALL CEOs, Board members, managers, and staff of NFPs throughout Australia are encouraged to complete the Remuneration Survey in order to benefit both themselves and the whole sector.
    • The Survey is open from now until Thursday 31 July 2014.
    • Access the Survey using the link at bottom of page.
    Respondent Discount
    In appreciation, completing the Survey entitles you to purchase The 2014/15 Not for Profit Remuneration Report for only $99 (options will appear at end of Survey).


    Security of responses
    All information collected from the Survey will be strictly anonymous and Enterprise Care reaffirms its confidentiality commitment to you. Your trust is one of our most important considerations.


    Finally...
    For any questions about the Survey or your participation, simply telephone Enterprise Care on (03) 8862 6315.
    We look forward to receiving your completed Remuneration Survey and to helping you with compensation strategies through The 2014/15 Not for Profit Remuneration Report.


    Thank you in advance.
    DAMIEN J SMITH
    Managing Director



    Click here to begin the survey
  • 16 Jul 2014 11:15 AM | Louise Stokes

    Will associations matter in the future?


    Survey Matters has almost concluded our research into industry bodies, with fascinating insights! The results raise questions around what members expect from their membership in the future, and will give industry bodies guidance for their strategic planning.

    We are now embarking on the second study into professional associations. The Associations Matter Study for professional associations aims to change the conversation being held between members and their association. Instead of assessing current association services, it will examine members “up at night” issues. It will ask members about the causes of their challenges. And, it will ask for ideas about specific ways in which they think their association can help them.

    To take part in this study register your details here!

    About the research
    The second Associations Matter Study for professional associations will seek specific ideas and suggestions to guide strategic planning. It will examine:

    • What professional challenges keep your members up at night?
    • What does the “association of the future” look like?
    • Are you communicating with your members in ways that work for them?
    • What key factors will lead to a sustainable future for your association?

    What associations said about the 2013 study
    “Well done to Survey Matters, AuSAE and the participating associations for this important research - it makes for interesting reading… I'm already looking forward to seeing next year's results, and encourage all associations to participate: it was painless!”

    “The insights we have gained into member perceptions and needs are foundational to our strategic planning for the next three years.”

    “Easy to participate, a great benchmark study”


    We invite you to participate – it is free and all associations who take part will receive a complimentary electronic copy of the overall results.

    Find out more
    Call: +61 3 9452 0101
    Email: bmainland@surveymatters.com.au
    Register your interest: Complete the registration form
  • 16 Jul 2014 10:12 AM | Louise Stokes

    Sourced directly from: http://blogs.hbr.org/2014/05/how-boards-can-innovate/


    HBR Blog Network by Michael Useem, Dennis Carey and Ram Charan

    Governing boards might seem like the last place for innovation. They are, after all, the company’s steadfast guidance system, charged with keeping an even keel in rough waters. Corporate directors are the flywheel, the keeper of the flame, the preserver of tradition.

    All that is true, or least should be so, but companies are also forever having to reinvent themselves undefined IBM, Nucor, and Wipro bear only the faintest resemblance to their founding forms undefined and boards ought to be at the forefront of those transformations, not rearguard or resistant. New products are, of course, the province of R&D teams or research partners. But new strategies and structures are squarely in the board’s domain, and we have seen any number of governing boards innovating with, not just monitoring, management.

    If boards are viewed as partners with management, not just overseers, innovative ideas are as likely to come from their dozen or so directors undefined all highly experienced and certainly dedicated to the firm’s prosperity undefined as any dozen employees of the company. Some boards have taken the principle further by forming their own innovation committee. The directors of Procter & Gamble, for instance, have established an Innovation and Technology committee; the board of specialty-chemical maker Clariant has done the same; and Pfizer has created a Science and Technology committee.

    The value of a board’s active engagement in innovation can well be seen at Diebold, a $3 billion-company whose 16,000 employees make ATMs and a host of related products. Founded in 1876, the company had survived far longer than most major manufacturers because of a readiness to embrace new technologies undefined virtually none of its products today have any resemblance to those of 100 years ago undefined and its directors hope to ensure that the company incorporates new technologies to survive another 100 years.

    To that end, Diebold recruited a new CEO in 2013, Andy W. Mattes, who had previously led major divisions at Hewlett-Packard, Siemens, and other technology-laden companies. And then, in conducting its annual self-evaluation, the board found that a number of its directors had recommended that a board committee be created to work explicitly with the new CEO on technology and innovation undefined not to manage it, but to partner with management on it. With the concurrence of the new CEO, the directors created a Technology Strategy and Innovation committee with a full-blown charter requiring its directors to “provide management with a sounding-board,” serve as a “source of external perspective,” evaluate “management proposals for strategic technology investments,” and work with management on its “overall technology and innovation strategy.”

    The chair of the new three-person committee, Richard L. Crandall undefined the managing partner of private-equity firm Aspen Partners, who also runs a roundtable for software CEOs and is a former CEO himself undefined was mindful of the lurking risk that directors might stray into the weeds and step on management prerogatives. He accordingly worked out an explicit understanding among the CEO and his committee members on where the directors should and should not go. “I watch like a hawk,” he said, “to ensure we do not go too far.”

    Diebold’s innovation committee members are on call for everything from brainstorming to networking. When Diebold executives began looking for new technologies it might buy, Crandall and his two colleagues undefined rooted in tech start-up and venture capital communities undefined helped the CEO and his staff connect with those who would know or own the emergent technologies that could allow Diebold to strengthen its current lines and buy into the right adjacent lines.

    Innovations at the top extend even to how the board itself operates, and Blackstone Group undefined one of the leading investment groups in the world undefined has been pressing the case. Sandy Ogg, an operating partner in Blackstone’s Private Equity Group, had previously served as a senior vice president for leadership and learning at Motorola and chief human resource officer at Unilever. Having thought a lot about what makes for effective company leadership, whether in the executive ranks or around the board table, Ogg wants to know if the directors of an investment prospect for Blackstone bring a profile that is complementary to their CEO’s, “filling holes that need to be plugged.” He wants to know how prospective directors will react if a CEO tells the directors to get lost. And at companies where Blackstone has invested, Ogg presses directors to “do the work” and not just be a “business tourist.” In other words, Blackstone has been innovatively working to get more out of their boards than traditional norms might have allowed.

    Innovative companies that are not innovating in and around the board room run the risk of becoming less so. For example, we are familiar with the boardroom of one of America’s premier technology makers, which is dominated by a non-executive chair who underappreciates how vital but difficult it is to create new products in its recurrently disrupted markets (the innovator’s dilemma). The board has too few technology-savvy directors, and its nomination committee has blocked suggestions for more experienced innovators on the board.

    Without innovation at the top in how boards lead, companies may come to see less innovation from below. Viewed affirmatively, directors who learn to work with executives on product and service innovations constitute an invaluable undefined and free undefined asset during an era when creativity is increasingly at a premium. And for that, observed David Dorman, former AT&T CEO and now board chair at CVS Caremark Corporation, “we need a robust set of thinkers on the board who know the market place.” With that, the board can take responsibility for ensuring that its enterprise transcends the ever-present dilemma of innovating or dying.


The Australasian Society of Association Executives (AuSAE)

Australian Office:
Address: Unit 6, 26 Navigator Place, Hendra QLD 4011 Australia
Free Call: +61 1300 764 576
Phone: +61 7 3268 7955
Email: info@ausae.org.au

New Zealand Office:
Address: 159 Otonga Rd, Rotorua 3015 New Zealand
Phone: +64 27 249 8677
Email: nzteam@ausae.org.au

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