Sector and AuSAE News

  • 18 Nov 2016 10:27 AM | Deleted user

    Professor Julian Eaton-Rye is certainly persistent. After bidding three times in six years, the University of Otago biochemistry professor is finally bringing the 18th International Congress on Photosynthesis Research to Rotorua in 2020. His commitment will see some 1,300 academics and professionals across a broad range of fields associated with photosynthesis meet in New Zealand for the first time. These will including world-leading specialists in plant science, agronomy and agriculture, ecology and climate change, to those looking to capture solar energy into useable fuel.


    What finally secured the win? “We showed them we were organised,” he says. “The conference cycles between Europe, the Americas, and the rest of the world. I was on the international committee. It was the turn of the Americas in 2013 and in the 2010 bidding period they didn’t bid, so I thought, ‘why not?’. However, the US put in a late bid and they decided to go with them.


    “In 2013 in St Louis, I decided I was going to bid again. The conference was expected to go to Europe, but I wanted to let them know we were still interested. We tied for the conference in the initial voting, and again in the second round. Then, after a long discussion they decided it was Europe’s turn. This third time everyone knew it was ours and we didn't even have a competing bid. In essence we won it in St Louis as long as we were prepared to be patient.”


    Eaton-Rye notes that support from Tourism New Zealand in all three bids was vital to his ultimate success. This included comprehensive bid material and promotional marketing material, from slides to videos, that made a positive impression. “In every bid we’ve been the most professional. People think we’re obviously capable. And I know New Zealand's reputation and appeal has definitely been a big drawcard. A large number of delegates plan to bring their families and stay longer. Throughout this process there has been strong support and great enthusiasm for bringing the conference here: ‘Keep going, Julian, people want to come to New Zealand!’”


    He adds: “Tourism New Zealand’s Conference Assistance Programme backing was very important to making this all work out. I received financial support to attend the conference in the Netherlands to deliver the third, successful bid. That was very important; The University of Otago will support me to attend one international meeting a year but I had already been to one this year. If Tourism New Zealand hadn't paid that would have come out of my own pocket, so that was a big boost. I was surprised it was an option, but it was great.”


    Personal victory aside, Eaton-Rye says winning a conference like this has multiple benefits for New Zealand, not least an estimated $3 million injection for the local economy.


    “It’s an opportunity to do something for this field. Science funding in New Zealand is not so good, particularly in basic research for plant sciences. We can't do some of the research we’d like to do, but this will raise the profile of the plant science community in New Zealand. Usually these things are held in big cities and become quite anonymous, but here it will have a much bigger profile with the community, and in terms of media attention. Its great for the local students and professionals in these fields to have these people on their doorstep to learn from and network with. A number of universities will get involved, and we aim to have a website with educational materials on it for schools, as well as hosting public lectures around energy security, food security, the implications for climate change.”


    Rotorua also played a starring role in winning the event, thanks to its appeal as a tourism destination and its excellent events infrastructure, including conference venue the Rotorua Energy Events Centre. Eaton-Rye adds: “Given the city’s focus on forestry and forestry sciences, the opportunity in Rotorua to involve the local community is unique and we will harness the local expertise. We have invited Scion, the Crown Research Institute for the New Zealand forest industry, to become involved. A conference like this will have lots of spin offs for plant science and the energy sector in New Zealand.”


    If you would like to find out more about Tourism New Zealand, please visit www.businessevents.newzealand.com


  • 17 Nov 2016 10:11 AM | Deleted user

    The business has a plan, the staff are engaged. Management and employee KPIs have been identified and bonuses to be paid for meeting same. Management KPIs have been set, operational costs minimised, and employees encouraged to use their initiative. "Relevance" is now fully operational; happy staff, happy customers and profitability for all ensured.


    As a direct result of implementing the above plan the San Francisco based bank Wells Fargo has just, September 2016, terminated 5,300 employees and been fined some USD$180 million. To both meet and exceed the first of their KPIs employees created fictional PIN numbers and fake email addresses to enrol existing clients into fake online banking services. That done they achieved their second KPI by transferring client's monies from real accounts into the fake accounts. This was replicated for "at least" 1.5 million "new" accounts. The third KPI was met when employees submitted 565,443 applications for new credit card accounts; without the client's knowledge. Finally the fourth employee and management KPI was met as the clients incurred fees; such as annual fees, interest charges and overdraft-protection fees.


    Wells Fargo has announced that it will pay "full restitution to all victims". One wonders what it will take to achieve "full restitution of its business reputation".


    The lesson to be learned is simple. "ticking all the business relevance" boxes is not the "be all and end all". Businesses are complex. A set of operational rules, no matter how complete require continual revisiting and oversight. Finally consider firstly giving written instructions, "how to tie your shoelaces" to a 5 year old; and secondly the skills needed to write said instructions in the first place.


  • 16 Nov 2016 10:32 AM | Deleted user

    The usernames and passwords of nearly 70 million Dropbox users were stolen and posted for sale on the internet, the company disclosed in August, due to a 2012 hack. While a Dropbox company blog post assured its users that their passwords remained safely encrypted and stored data was not exposed, the hack serves as a reminder why cloud storage and file-sharing service should not be used for storing and sharing sensitive board documents.


    By taking advantage of the widespread availability of high-speed network connectivity and the declining cost of storage, Dropbox’s proposition led many companies to replace local data storage with cloud storage.


    However, some of the very features that make Dropbox so popular—such as easy access to files on mobile devices and easy sharing with anyone—pose a serious security risk when the service is used to store and share boardroom data. So much so that, according to a 2016 report by MobileIron, a developer of enterprise-level secure mobile access management solutions, the Dropbox mobile app remains the most banned app by American employers.


    Dropbox Drawbacks


    Here’s why Dropbox may not be secure enough for board use:


    1. Multiple instances of files. Dropbox, by default, creates a duplicate mirror folder on each user’s computer, containing all of the files uploaded to the cloud. Once the link between the local and the cloud folder is severed—such as when the user is not connected to the internet— the two folders become separate entities.


    2. You don’t know where your files are. With Dropbox, users have no way to determine where their “cloud-stored” files are physically stored. Cloud storage services do not disclose this information, nor do they disclose which other companies’ files share the same server or servers. According to InfoWorld, “multi-tenancy”—the practice of storing the files of multiple customers on the same server—poses not only the risk of private data accidentally leaking to other tenants, but also that of data theft due to vulnerabilities in other tenants’ files.


    3. Concerns over encryption and file transfer security. Even though, according to Dropbox, file data is stored in discrete file blocks that are fragmented and encrypted, IT administrators have no control over the data security and encryption.


    4. Data on a stolen laptop can’t always be remotely wiped. While Dropbox provides the ability to remotely wipe the Dropbox folder from a stolen laptop containing sensitive data , for example, it can only do so if the stolen laptop is connected to the internet. Without internet connection there’d be nothing to prevent an outsider from copying the files from the Dropbox folder.


    5. No control over the encryption/decryption key. Dropbox, not the user, holds the encryption/decryption keys for the user’s files. If this key falls into the wrong hands (as, according to Symantec, was the case in the Stuxnet malware attack) a company’s files may be compromised.


    Companies can and should do better to protect their sensitive data than rely on one-size-fits-all cloud storage services. Beyond finding the right platform for your company—whether it be a dedicated board data portal or a custom system—the challenge lies in educating employees and executives of the perils of sharing sensitive files using the same cloud storage services they use for their own personal files. There’s simply too much at risk.


    This article was originally sourced from Dilligent.



  • 10 Nov 2016 9:59 AM | Deleted user

    AuSAE is delighted to announce that The Future of Associations is now being printed, and will be available in Australia from 29th November.


    The association sector’s response to the cover choice was almost unanimous, with most association professionals preferring the contemporary red front cover shown below, over an alternate white cover design with different graphics.


    Interestingly Brendon Ward, CEO of AuSAE and Omer Soker, author of the book both initially felt that the white cover might be more practical. However, both let go of their own perceptions in a commitment to give members what they want.


    “I do like the crispness and cleanness of the red cover,” said Ward.


    “This is salient for all associations,” added Soker. “One of many lessons shared in the book is to give members what they want and need, regardless of your own personal preferences. It’s about being truly member-serving.”


    AuSAE members can now order copies from the first print run at the discounted member rate of $18.99 plus postage by clicking here. The non-member price is $23.99.


    Writing in the book’s Foreword, Brendon Ward said “AuSAE is delighted to publish The Future of Associations. Omer Soker has done a wonderful job – his conversational writing style, astute analogies and frank advice result in a compelling and easy read that will keep you engaged and wanting to come back for more. This is a must-read for all association professionals who are serious about the sustainability of their organisations.”


    The book’s synopsis is highlighted on the back cover, reproduced here.


    To order this first ever book on the association sector in Australia and New Zealand, click here.


  • 08 Nov 2016 2:16 PM | Deleted user

    What this year’s thriller of a World Series can teach meeting planners about designing and executing conferences or meetings.


    Earlier this week, the Chicago Cubs did what many believed would never happen: They won the World Series for the first time since 1908, breaking a 108-year-long curse by beating the Cleveland Indians 8-7 in a game 7 thriller—in a series that saw them down three games to one at one point—that not only went for 10 innings but also included a 17-minute rain delay.


    Even I, a lifelong Yankees, found myself rooting for the Cubs.


    And, as a meetings blogger watching and reading news coverage related to the Cubs-Indians matchup, I couldn’t help but draw some lessons and reminders for meeting planners from a World Series that’s sure to go down in history.


    The power of fans. Both teams have a long list of celebrity fans. Among them: Michelle Obama, Eddie Vedder, LeBron James, Tom Hanks. But Bill Murray may be the biggest Cubs fan ever—and his reaction following their win is must-watch. Then there’s less-known fans like 104-year-old Emily Serian, who was in the stands in 1948 when the Indians last won the World Series and threw out the first pitch on her 100th birthday. Her message to the team: “Win one before I die!”


    As a meeting planner, consider how you can engage your long-time attendees and share their stories to give a face to your meeting—and hopefully woo other prospects to attend!


    The energy of live events. A World Series ticket was one of hardest to get—and also one of the priciest. But, even as I watched from home, I could sense how electric and engaged the crowds were at both ballparks.


    Think about how your next meeting or event can harness the energy and camaraderie found at a live sporting event. What content or speakers could you offer that would inspire attendees’ passions and really connect them with one another? And while this same energy could be hard to re-create in a virtual or live-streaming environment, consider how you can bring a stadium mentality to these events as well.


    The potential for the greater good. Following the fifth inning of game 5, the Cubs and Indians put competition aside for a few minutes to support Stand Up to Cancer. Players, staff, and spectators stood and held up signs with the names of the loved ones they’ve lost to the disease. This World Series tradition is now in its eighth year.


    Consider how your association can use its conference to bring attention to a larger message or platform. Or give attendees the opportunity to give back and volunteer in the local community where the event is taking place.


    The article was originally sourced from Associations Now and written by Samantha Whitehorne.


  • 07 Nov 2016 4:51 PM | Deleted user

    Enterprise Care have just released the 2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report. This Report is the most reliable and professional go-to-resource for all of your queries concerning remuneration across the whole of your organisation. It covers operating budgets, number of employees, locations, types of organisations and more.


    2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report


    Enterprise Care are now offering AuSAE Members a special price to purchase the 2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report.



    To access this special discounted price, click here.



    Overview and Purpose

    What are you worth? Use Australia's leading and most comprehensive Not for Profit Remuneration Report. This Report offers valuable information on the remuneration of a comprehensive range of position LEVELS within the Australian Not for Profit sector. It covers CEOs, Board members, all senior managers and staff positions. It includes important benchmarking data from the most recent financial year, and tracks critical trends in remuneration levels for CEOs and senior positions over the last decade.


    Have the confidence that your remuneration decisions accurately reflect the latest information on Not for Profit sector remuneration in Australia.


    The report presents results for each position by:

    • total organisation expenditure;
    • benefits paid;
    • total number of employees;
    • number of employees reporting to the position;
    • number of paid members;
    • geographic scope;
    • headquarters location;
    • organisation classification;
    • incumbent's gender; and
    • length of time in position.

    Functions Covered (each with 3 staff Levels)

    • Board;
    • Executive;
    • Accreditation / Certification;
    • Administration;
    • Business / Commercial Operations;
    • Centre or Facility Operations (New in 2016);
    • Communications;
    • Conventions / Meetings / Exhibitions;
    • Education / Training;
    • Finance;
    • Fundraising;
    • Human Resources;
    • Information and Communications Systems;
    • Marketing;
    • Membership;
    • Policy / Government Relations / Advocacy;
    • Publications;
    • Specific Program or Service;
    • Technical / Research; and
    • Welfare and Community Development / Support (New in 2016).


    2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report PLUS the Governance Intelligence® Salary and Benefits Snapshot


    In addition and separately, Enterprise Care are also providing a special offer to all AuSAE members which includes the 2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report PLUS the Governance Intelligence® Salary and Benefits Snapshot as a package deal.



    To access this special package deal, click here.



    Salary and Benefits plays an important role in successful recruitment and employee retention strategies. Your ability to attract and retain high achievers is critical to your organisation's ongoing success.


    This Value Offer provides you with the sector’s most up-to-date salary information as well as the strategies to improve your recruitment and remuneration practices.


    The just released 252 pages 2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report contains the latest salary information; and our Governance Intelligence® Salary and Benefits Snapshot pinpoints those strategies that can improve your recruitment and remuneration practices.


    The 2016/17 Not for Profit Remuneration Report covers twenty (20) different Functions, with three (3) Position Levels for each Function (Senior Executives to Lower Operational), covering all levels of staff in one informative report. The Report provides:-

    • the latest salary information in easy-to-understand charts and tables
    • detailed commentaries
    • 10-year salary trend analysis and
    • cross-tabbed information offering benchmarking data across multiple categories, e.g. Total Expenditure, Organisation Classification, Geographic Scope, Head Office Location and Gender.

    Our Governance Intelligence® Salary and Benefits Snapshot is a simple online diagnostic tool that enables you to:

    • identify risks and priorities to successfully attract, reward and retain quality talent
    • focus your recruitment process
    • reveal what currently motivates staff and
    • improve remuneration and reward strategies.

    You receive a written report from our authorised partner, the highly experienced advisor hranywhere, which offers an excellent snapshot of the effectiveness of your current remuneration practices and pinpoints key areas for improvement.


    For a limited time only, you receive BOTH the NFP Remuneration Report and the Governance Intelligence® Salary and Benefits Snapshot at the very special price of $726 for a Member and $781 for a Non-member.


    Take advantage of this special offer to improve your recruitment and remuneration practices and make sure your organisation not only thrives but stays on top.


  • 07 Nov 2016 4:20 PM | Deleted user

    Tomayto, tomahto. Trade association, professional society. How different are the two types of membership organization? A pair of association pros who’ve worked in both share their thoughts.

    Outside the world of associations, most people probably couldn’t tell you the difference between a trade association and a professional society. Even some people inside associations might not know the distinction.


    But it’s not terribly complicated: Though they’re not hard-and-fast terms, a “trade association” generally has member companies, while a “professional society” has individual members. (“Individual membership organization” is a common term for the latter, as well.)


    They’re both, of course, still associations. The difference is material to the workings of either organization and yet doesn’t vastly change what they are. The best analogy I can muster up is that of the choice of transmission in a car: Driving a manual stick shift is a much different experience from driving an automatic, and yet in either case you’re driving an automobile.


    While I have driven both types of car, I have only worked at a professional society. So, I’ve always been curious how much the fundamental difference in the type of member an association serves actually changes the nature of the work to be done. And who better to ask than association pros who have worked in both settings?


    I posed a few questions on this subject to Kim Lawyer, QAS, manager of association operations at the North Carolina Nurses Association, and Liz Peuster, director of membership at the National Wood Flooring Association. Each has previous career experience in the opposite type of association, and they offered some interesting insight into how the jobs compare and contrast.


    WHAT’S DIFFERENT?

    Both Lawyer and Peuster say the focus of the member value proposition is the key factor in how a trade association or professional society operates.


    “In the professional society, we prioritized the value to the individual member first and the employing company second,” says Peuster. “Within the trade association, the prioritization of the value proposition is much more focused on benefiting companies. … The challenge is different in that we are working to influence the key decision maker in the company and justify the line item. Our association does offer services to benefit individuals; however, the communication of those services focuses more on improving the company as a whole as a result of enhancing the individual’s skills.”


    That difference in appeal influences the level of engagement among individuals within the membership, Lawyer says. At a trade association, “while the company paid the dues and we had more individual members because they were automatically a member, not all were truly engaged. On the other side, for a professional association, when the individual pays their own dues, they have more buy-in and are more invested in what they are paying for,” she says. “Between the two, I would say individuals who choose to be a member of a professional organization have more buy-in from the early stages of their career throughout their entire career.”


    For Peuster, making the switch from the Missouri Society of CPAs to the National Wood Flooring Association required a mental shift.


    “My mindset had to adjust to the inverse of how I communicated about the association,” she says. “Career development and local networking are not necessarily valuable to a flooring contractor who has been installing wood floors for 20 years. He is not looking to advance his career, like a 30-year-old CPA may be, and he is not necessarily interested in sharing best practices with a like-minded individual in his area because they are competitors. We have to position NWFA as a means to add credibility to the contractor’s business in the eyes of his customers.”


    WHAT’S THE SAME?

    Lawyer and Peuster noted, though, that many of the core skills of a successful association membership pro apply in both types of association.


    “I think in either type of association, the best skill is relationship building. The nature of that relationship makes the members’ decision to join or renew much easier,” Peuster says.

    Lawyer, meanwhile, cites attention to detail, effective communication, and strategic thinking, and she says such skills are universal because the goals of any association, trade or professional society, are much the same.


    “The association was created to be a resource for the member,” Lawyer says. “Often we provide professional development opportunities, networking opportunities, advocacy support, and often we are the resource to be researching into the future for our members.”


    And the membership experience matters in both settings too, Peuster adds: “We strive to promote our benefits and services and insist that engagement in the association will enhance our members’ businesses, but, at the end of the day, we know that we need to leave the member with a positive experience and a good feeling about the association.”


    MAKING THE SWITCH

    Because many of those skills transfer easily, Lawyer and Peuster say changing jobs from a trade association to a professional society, or vice versa, shouldn’t be a challenge for anyone dedicated to serving members. In offering advice for someone making the switch, their suggestions echoed each other (despite the interviews being conducted separately).


    “Remember to take time to get to know the new industry and the key players in your new association. The type of work can be similar, but the way you execute or communicate may change based on an industry or individual’s needs,” says Lawyer.


    “Get to know your audience, learn from them, and deliver services in a way that works for them, even if that is different than how you’ve always done it,” Peuster says.


    I’m curious about others’ thoughts on this subject as well. What has been your experience with trade associations and professional societies? How does the work, particularly in membership, compare and contrast? Please continue the conversation and share your thoughts in the comments.


    This article was originally sourced from Associations Now, and written by Joe Rominiecki. 


  • 03 Nov 2016 2:47 PM | Deleted user

    We all know the core fundamentals of how membership works in associations—or do we? Take a moment to consider how these bits of conventional wisdom may be off the mark.


    On two separate occasions last week, I found myself rethinking the same line of conventional wisdom—namely, that transparency in organizations is a universal good.


    First, in Mark Athitakis’ Leadership Blog post here at Associations Now, he highlighted research suggesting that the work of association boards—particularly their in-depth deliberations on strategic matters—can be hampered when put under the microscope in the name of transparency. “When those deliberations are public instead of private, opportunities for stifling critiques and playing to constituencies can take over,” he writes.


    The same problem can happen in government. On The Ezra Klein Show podcast last week, political scientist and author Francis Fukuyama discussed his view that government is bogged down by transparency rules that, while well intentioned, ultimately paralyze the ability of representatives and agencies to deliberate and make decisions. (Listen to the podcast for more, or see “The Limits of Transparency” at The American Interest for a good summary of this perspective.) He connected it to what authors Christopher Achen and Larry Bartels call the “folk theory of democracy” in their book Democracy for Realists.


    I hadn’t previously given much thought to this question beyond just a gut feeling that transparency is, in general, good. I still think that’s true, but I’m now persuaded that it is not an absolute.


    And that got me wondering about the conventional wisdom of associations and membership organizations. What “folk theories” about membership do we tend to accept as common sense? And which of these might, upon further reflection, be not quite so universal?


    Over the past few years of writing and blogging about membership, I’ve spoken to some smart people who weren’t afraid to reframe our common thinking. So, here’s a look at a few membership folk theories worth reconsidering.


    More engagement equals more retention. Associations want their members to get engaged for a couple reasons. On its own, every act of engagement is a positive contribution to an association’s pursuit of its strategic goals and mission. But associations also see dollar signs in engagement, noting the positive correlation between engagement and renewal. That effect might not be as direct as we think it is.


    In 2014, Sheri Jacobs, FASAE, CAE, president and CEO of Avenue M Group and author of The Art of Membership, pointed out that the desire to engage varies among members. She noted that some are highly satisfied to remain members while being generally uninvolved, as long as they’re receiving the particular benefits they seek. In other words, satisfaction, not engagement, leads to renewal. And so, rather than exerting effort to persuade uninvolved members to get engaged, “the real issue that needs to be solved is identifying ways to deliver more value to unengaged members,” she wrote.


    A renewal notice is a bill for membership. In “Turn Off the Churn” in the July/August 2016 issue of Associations Now, Erik Schonher, vice president at Marketing General Incorporated, took issue with the common way association pros refer to their renewal efforts: as a “billing cycle.” What might seem like merely a problem of semantics actually reveals a complacency about the process of renewal itself, he argued.


    A bill or an invoice requests payment for services already provided, but “with renewal, you’re reselling,” Schonher said. “If I haven’t delivered it yet, then I’m asking you to pay upfront. I’m asking you to do me a favor, and it’s a different ask, and it’s a different approach.”


    Membership is a yearly commitment. Of course, your terminology for renewal notices only matters if members need to renew periodically. In most cases, that’s once a year. But, for the increasing number of associations offering automatic renewal, the need for members to decide to renew every year is decreasing.


    Air Conditioning Contractors of America adopted a monthly membership option in 2015, in which members pay automatically via credit card. The membership term is indefinite, which means auto-payment simply continues every month until the member cancels. It’s a model that feels totally familiar in the context of fitness centers, cable TV, streaming music, and the like, but it’s rare (as of now) in associations.


    More members is a cure-all. Associations regularly tout their membership totals, because there is “power in numbers.” But it’s also true that growth brings change, which might not always be good. With more members, staff and resources must scale upward; if not managed well, an association may sacrifice the quality of its member service in favor of the quantity of members served.


    As Harrison Coerver and Mary Byers, CAE, wrote in 2011’s Race for Relevance, an association may be better off to “focus on the needs of a definable segment.” Growth, however, can often mean targeting new segments, which can diversify an association’s membership base beyond the association’s ability to vary its services.


    Membership is the defining quality of associations. This is still perhaps my favorite questioning of the prevailing perspective, an oldie but a goodie. In 2013, Mark Golden, FASAE, CAE, now executive director at the National Society of Professional Engineers, urged us to restore mission to its rightful place atop associations’ collective list of reasons for being. Membership, while of course well suited to the pursuit of such missions, is but a means to an end, he said.


    “None of our organization founders ever got together in a room and said: ‘What we need to do is collect a bunch of money so we can hire a staff to sell us stuff,’” Golden wrote in an address to a TED-style association industry symposium [PDF]. “What is needed is to get our heads out of membership models and back into a focus on mission first: What (specifically) does our organization exist to accomplish? Then, and only then, ask: What role (if any) could membership play in achieving the mission?”


    What do you think? Which of these “folk theories” of association membership have you closely subscribed to? Do any of these arguments change your mind? What other convention wisdom out there ought to be debunked? Share your thoughts in the comments.


    This article was originally sourced from Associations Now and written by Joe Rominiecki. 

  • 28 Oct 2016 3:21 PM | Deleted user

    The Australasian Society of Association Executives (AuSAE) has partnered with Omer Soker to launch The Future of Associations, the first ever book written specifically for the association sector in Australia and New Zealand.


    “AuSAE’s role is to be the home for association professionals, and we are delighted to bring them this best practice resource to strengthen their knowledge and share effective and sustainable strategies for the future. A book on the Australian and New Zealand sector is long overdue.” said Brendon Ward, CEO of AuSAE.


    The book’s author Omer Soker said “It usually takes a crisis to ignite real change. This book is a wake-up call that the urgency is now. Associations are being disrupted, competition is increasing, member expectations are growing and government policy is changing.”


    The book will be available in print format in November at $23.99 plus postage, or $18.99 for AuSAE members. To pre-order your copy for delivery in November, please click here.


    “Partnering with AuSAE, we hope to make the book available to every CEO, board director and association employee in Australia and New Zealand,” added Soker.


    For more information, contact:


    Omer Soker

    0401 099 821

    omer@ethicsofsuccess.com.au

    www.ethicsofsuccess.com.au


    Brendon Ward (AuSAE)

    1300 764 576

    ceo@ausae.org.au

    www.ausae.org.au


  • 27 Oct 2016 11:11 AM | 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.


     Organisation  Membership Level
    Family Business Australia Association (Organisational - Large)
    General Practice SA Association (Organisational - Small)
    Australian Dental Prosthetists Association Ltd Association (Organisational - Small)
    Speech Pathology Australia Association (Organisational - Small)
    Master Builders Western Australia Association (Organisational - Small)
    WA FISHING INDUSTRY COUNCIL (INC) Association (Organisational - Small)
    AMA Queensland Association (Organisational - Small)
    Motor Traders' Association - NSW Association (Organisational - Small)
    Society of Automotive Engineers - Australasia Association Executive (Individual)
    New Zealand Riding for the Disabled Association Executive (Individual)
    Suicide Prevention Australia Association Executive (Individual)
    NZ Hereford Association Association Executive (Individual)
    Cancer Council of Australia Board or Committee Participant


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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