Sector and AuSAE News

  • 20 Sep 2016 11:55 AM | Deleted user

    ICMYI – in case you missed them, here’s a selection of Jamie’s posts on Association Success from August, each “busting a myth” about engagement.


    The Employee Engagement Trap


    “What do you do if the data says your managers don’t care, or people don’t have friends at work? Train your managers in empathy? Force people to go to happy hour together? Even the equipment one—if you buy new macs for everyone, are you really certain that true engagement is going to increase? Our approach to employee engagement has been to force improvements in the engagement metrics without understanding what drives engagement in the first place.


    If you found that people with clinical depression laughed a lot less than people without depression, would you force depressed people to laugh more? No, you’d treat their depression, and if your treatment was successful, you’d probably find them laughing more.


    Engagement is fundamentally driven by a culture that truly works. A strong culture is one where what is valued internally is sharply aligned with what drives the success of the enterprise, and the people there see that, understand that, and live that. When that is happening, you’ll see your engagement scores go up. Ironically, however, you don’t need to measure your engagement scores in order to figure out how to build that strong culture.”


    3 Tips for Engaging Millennials


    “The reasons Millennials don’t listen to your marketing messaging is because it’s YOUR messaging. It’s what YOU want, and you’re still trying to interrupt us as much as you can with your message until the sales numbers go up. This is the digital age, folks. Millennials are expecting to be delivered content that is actually useful to them—that they would WANT to share with their friends. That’s not because they’re “entitled.” It’s because that’s what they’ve been getting their whole lives.


    So what does this have to do with member engagement? If you want to engage Millennials, then learn how to deliver them actual value. And that’s before they join, before they sign up, and probably even before you’ve forced them to give you their email address (seriously, do you not realize that they have an email address they use ONLY for giving it away to spammers like you?). In the digital age, you start by delivering value. Membership and even revenue will come later. So as you think about engaging Millennials, here are some tips.”


    Engagement: Local vs National


    “Here’s the deal: maybe the new operating environment is asking us to shift our culture. Maybe the very separate cultures we have nurtured over the years at the national and local levels are now creating a negative experience for our stakeholders. Maybe in order to succeed today, we need to do things differently. Maybe we will have to change the way we share information with the chapters, make decisions about programming, or even share resources.


    If that sounds impossible to you, then maybe you should look for a new line of work. Sorry to be harsh, but maybe you need to go find an industry that is not in flux, that has a super-stable customer base whose experiences and expectations aren’t changing rapidly. Go find that job, so you can show up every day and implement according to the plan and the way it’s always been done.


    Because we need to make room for a different kind of association executive. One who recognizes that the work of associations—the work of engaging members and stakeholders in ways that produce extraordinary value for both the stakeholders and the organization—requires innovation, new practices, and a much stronger focus on the role of culture.


    Culture makes it clear what is valued, and our traditional local/national split is all about valuing efficiency and control in a centralized hierarchy. It puts the association at the center of the universe, and that’s not what today’s stakeholders are expecting. We need cultures that are open to integrating local and national engagement experiences.”


    This article was originally sourced from Social Fish and was written by Maddie Grant.


  • 20 Sep 2016 11:41 AM | Deleted user

    A new benchmarking study sheds some light on common chapter-relations practices at associations, but it falls short of stating the value of chapters—because so few associations are measuring it.


    Early this year, I profiled a few associations that had recently restructured their chapter systems in the Associations Now Volunteer Leadership Issue. The International Association of Administrative Professionals, for instance, surveyed members and found that a poor member experience at the chapter level was a primary reason members were lapsing. Air Conditioning Contractors of America, meanwhile, had association chapters in about half of the states, and its membership was growing in states without chapters but declining in states with chapters.


    In both cases, these associations knew it was time for change. They had evidence. They knew their chapters’ impact (or lack thereof) on their missions.


    If your association has chapters or components, what evidence do you have? How do you know whether chapters are a lift or a drag on member value and the pursuit of your association’s mission?

    When a volunteer chapter leader has to gather and send membership data manually, that’s a process ripe for breakdowns.


    Well, if you’re like most associations with chapters, you probably don’t know.


    In August, Mariner Management & Marketing released the results of its “2016 Chapter Benchmarking Study” [PDF], a survey of 162 associations conducted in partnership with Whorton Marketing & Research. Among a trove of data about this less-studied side of associations was one perhaps troubling finding:


    Just 5 percent of associations with chapters say they calculate the return on investment (ROI) of their chapter systems.


    Meanwhile, the percentage of associations that measure chapter performance along individual metrics looks much better, but that’s only because 5 percent is so low. Still less than half do so:

    • 41 percent said they measure chapters’ membership retention (this was the highest among the metrics asked about in the survey)
    • 40 percent measure chapters’ member recruitment
    • 27 percent measure chapters’ event participation levels

    Peter Houstle, CEO/COO at Mariner, says this type of measurement is too often overlooked. “Lots of people have metrics by which they assess performance of the chapters, but those metrics invariably are around organizational metrics rather than mission metrics,” he says. “They’re focused on things like: Are you legal? Are your bylaws up to date? Do you have a certain number of meetings? Stuff that in the grand scheme of things represents activity but doesn’t necessarily represent value.”


    These checklist items are easy to track, but more detailed membership and engagement data is difficult to share. If chapter and headquarters data systems are independent of each other and a volunteer chapter leader has to gather and send that info manually, that’s a process ripe for breakdowns.


    One of the fundamental problems that associations have when it comes to this value assessment and performance evaluation process is that, in the majority of the cases with associations with chapters, the data sets are fragmented. They don’t have a unified data set,” Houstle says.

    About two-thirds of associations, however, process dues payments for their association chapters. Peggy Hoffman, CAE, president at Mariner, says taking on this role could make chapter-membership data collection easier.


    One of the low-hanging-fruit services is to be the dues collector, so you could actually get the data that would help you have a better understanding of how chapters are having an impact on retention and recruitment,” she says. “Another easy thing to do is to provide some sort of event-registration support, which now gives you really important information: You can take a look at who’s participating in events at a chapter level, which gives you a more compete picture, because someone could be ‘checkbook’ at the national level and very active at the local level, or vice versa.”


    The challenge associations often face, however, is getting chapters’ buy-in to adopt recommended practices from headquarters. That’s why healthy relations between the two are crucial. “If there is a good symbiotic, collaborative relationship, then people would be looking at each other and saying ‘How can we do better?’” says Houstle.


    A few other notable findings from the benchmarking report showed some of the common structural practices associations follow with their chapters:


    Charter type. About two-thirds of associations’ chapters are formed so that the association has “substantial control”:

    • 46 percent use a “separate chartered” model, in which chapters are separate nonprofit organizations but cannot exist independently of the central association.
    • 20 percent use a subsidiary model, in which the chapters and central association are all one organization.
    • 29 percent use a “separate affiliated” model, in which chapters are separate and could exist on their own if they chose to.
    • 5 percent responded “other.”

    Membership requirements. Here, associations are broadly mixed:

    • 31 percent use a unified membership structure, in which membership in a chapter and the central organization are packaged together.
    • 29 percent require membership in the central organization before a member can opt to join a chapter.
    • 11 percent require membership in a chapter before a member can opt to join the central association.
    • 20 percent are “non-contingent,” in which a member can join at either level with no requirement to join the other.
    • 9 percent responded “other.”

    Hoffman says she sees the unified structure growing in use among associations as they revamp their chapter structures, which she says is “an interesting counter to the fact that so many associations are looking at membership models and they’re asking the question, ‘Should we unbundle? Should we have more variety so people can have choice?’”


    Staffing. Associations reported an average of 3.3 full-time employees at headquarters significantly devoted to chapter relations. And 65 percent said they have no full-time employees at their chapters, meaning they are dependent on volunteer leadership. “You realize how important the staff at the headquarters can be,” Hoffman says.


    Overall, Houstle and Hoffman note in the benchmarking report an “undercurrent of discomfort with the status quo on chapters.” While the data in their report can offer associations an understanding of how their chapter-relations practices compare to other associations, a stronger commitment to performance assessment and measuring ROI of chapters will give an association a clearer picture of how they do or do not advance its mission, Houstle says.


    “The problem is, if you ask this question, what do you do if you don’t like the answer?” he says. “I suspect there is some inherent fear of the answer, because some organizations have invested a lot of energy into [chapters]. It’s the classic sunk cost problem; they just can’t get around the notion that these things could be not worth the effort.”


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


  • 20 Sep 2016 11:29 AM | Deleted user

    Social media is a powerful way to build a following, turn prospects into leads, and drive sales.


    One of the biggest complaints I hear is that business owners are investing lots of time in social media and not seeing the returns on those efforts.


    If you aren’t getting the social media results you are looking for, perhaps it’s time to look at new tactics.


    If you are ready to get more out of your social media marketing, here’s 6 techniques to try:

    • Use Facebook Live. Video marketing is a powerful addition to your marketing mix. But live video is shown to keep users watching for 3 times longer than a recorded video.Fans love the feeling of listening to what you have to share in the moment. Try answering questions and providing tips while live.Other ways to use Facebook Live is to broadcast an update when you are networking or attending events. Or share a Facebook live update on any launches coming down the pipe.
    • Offer Opt-In Gifts to Grow Your Marketing List. People can’t resist getting a checklist, blueprint, app, or white paper that offers valuable information.When you give value first, it goes a long way to building trust and rapport with your followers. Plus, this allows you to capture your social media leads into your email marketing list. Give them something they can’t refuse and send them to a landing page to sign up. That way you can keep in contact via email sharing additional offers and information in a drip campaign.
    • Invite People to Take Action. Be strategic with your calls to action to get the most out of your social media efforts.In addition to sharing a mix of posts, be sure to offer ways your fans can dive deeper with you. This can include a free consultation, special offers and discount deals, webinars, participation in your Facebook group, and more.
    • Build Your Fan Base Organically. Never hire someone from Fiverr who can add 10,000 fans for a fee. This is a bad idea on many levels.Instead, find groups with people in your target audience. Be helpful. Start real conversations. Invite them to join your social media page or group. Don’t be afraid to reach out with private messaging to respond to questions they have or share resources or advice. So don’t buy followers. It’s about quality of followers, not quantity. It’s better to have 1000 raving fans you have attracted, than to have 10,000 fans who don’t really know you or have investment in the connection.
    • Offer a Mix of Post Content. People love variety. Be creative and provide a variety of content formats including how-to articles, videos, graphics, and infographics.An ideal content marketing strategy is to always keep your target market in mind and post what you think they will best want to receive from you.
    • Post at the Ideal Time for Best Exposure. Timing is everything. If you share an incredible post, you want to ensure the most people possible can see it!There are many social media tools to help you see the best times to post content to reach the biggest audience. This may vary from platform to platform. So don’t guess when you can use analytic tools with reports that help you identify the ideal time to post.


    Social media is evolving and growing fast. There is a lot of opportunity get leads, drive sales, and build a following but you have to get creative. You can’t just rely on the old tactics you have used in the past; you need to implement new techniques and tools if you want to stay ahead of the competition.


    Discover Step-By-Step How To Boost Your Social Media Marketing Results in just 21 Days


    Starting Sept 21st, I’ll be sharing my best social media secrets with a small exclusive group of individuals in a new 21 Day Social Media Challenge.


    I’ll be posting short, powerful tasks you can do to take your social media to the next level.


    What’s great is these are simple things you can do in literally 5-10 minutes. So if you are ready to ramp up your social media results for the Fall, you’ll definitively want to check this out here.



    This article was originally sourced from Business 2 Community and was written by Susan Friesen. 


  • 20 Sep 2016 11:21 AM | Deleted user

    Recent research into the impact of corporate sponsorships of nonprofits suggests that the wrong collaboration can prove poisonous. One analyst suggests thinking long and hard about what a sponsorship means for your organization.


    Sponsorship is a fact of life—and an important revenue stream—for many associations and other nonprofits. But could sponsorships be putting some negative marks on your brand? A recent study published in the Academy of Management Journal suggests that the answer is yes.


    The study, “When Does Medici Hurt DaVinci? Mitigating the Signaling Effect of Extraneous Stakeholder Relationships in the Field of Cultural Production” [subscription], looked at that question specifically as it pertained to Russian theaters. The researchers, Yuliya Shymko of Belgium’s Vlerick Business School and Thomas Roulet of the School of Management and Business at London’s King’s College, found that, for every corporate sponsor a theater had, it was 10 percent less likely to receive a nomination for the Golden Mask award, the highest professional honor in the Russian theater world.


    This point translates elsewhere, of course. In a Harvard Business Review article describing the research, Shymko and Roulet highlighted the saga of the Royal Opera House in London, which stoked controversy in the theater community and among the broader public after it accepted corporate support from the oil industry giant BP.


    “In other words, corporate donors may provide a recipient with crucial resources, but accepting this financial support makes the beneficiary less likely to be recognized as artistically and culturally valuable,” the researchers wrote in HBR. “This in turn reduces the visibility and reputational benefit of the donor’s gift; after all, most donors want to been seen supporting the very best cultural institutions.”


    That sounds like bad news for nonprofit organizations that need corporate support for their missions. But it also comes at a time when many corporations are increasingly speaking up on social issues, driving greater interest in social sponsorships across the board.


    In a Nonprofit Quarterly analysis of the study that extrapolates beyond cultural institutions, Common Impact CEO Danielle Holly suggests that nonprofits take care when considering the advice suggested by the study, including that sponsorship funding be directed toward specific programs.


    “Nonprofits would be better served by incorporating this study’s findings as one of the many inputs they weigh when considering a corporate partnership, looking at two factors in particular,” Holly writes.


    Those factors? First, analyzing how philosophically comfortable the organization is with teaming with a specific corporation; and then, analyzing what conflicts of interests the partnership could create down the line, addressing those concerns as needed.


    This article was originally sourced from Associations Now.


  • 20 Sep 2016 11:15 AM | Deleted user

    Texting is a powerful (though underutilized) marketing platform because of its high engagement rate and effectiveness in reaching those who may be less inclined to pick up the phone or check their email regularly. We want information conveniently delivered to us through our mobile phones, and nearly everyone is texting.


    Short Message Service (text) marketing is a reliable way to get in front of your members, and it makes engagement quick and easy. It’s very visible and harder to ignore than email. Using a mass texting program, you can send SMS messages to a list of subscribers who have opted-in to receive your texts. This program can be used to send messages quickly to every subscriber on your messaging list and to run campaigns in which texts go out automatically.


    SMS is also a good way to send reminders, information, alerts or promotions directly to the mobile phones (and by extension, hands) of all of your subscribers at once.


    Text marketing software providers:

    Mass texting providers such as Ez Texting, TextMarks, SimplyCast, Mozeo and Tatango use short codes and keywords as the foundation of their SMS marketing software. With one of these services, you can send and receive texts from an easy-to-remember, short code. When you send a mass text with a call to action, you also need a keyword for subscribers to use to opt-in to your campaign. You can set up different keywords to trigger texts with different information. This is an easy way for subscribers to interact with your campaign and for you to communicate your message.


    Note: Naylor and Association Adviser don’t endorse any of these texting providers above.


    Text marketing programs also allow you to divide your subscribers into lists or groups so that you can better target your campaigns to your subscribers’ needs. For example, you can divide your list into teams, geographic areas and more.


    With most texting programs, you can control all of your campaigns from your online dashboard. You can manage settings, add more keywords, view subscriber activity and even send text messages online.


    How it works:

    Once you’ve decided on a service provider, the first step in creating an SMS marketing campaign is to compile a solid list of subscribers who want to receive messages from you. Remember, you must obtain permission before sending any messages. Gather text subscribers by promoting the campaign on your website and social media accounts along with a simple way to join. For example, you could have prospective subscribers text a keyword like “JOIN” to your short code to sign up.


    The next step is to craft your message. Keep it brief, making sure to include only the most important details. You may also want to include a call to action that asks subscribers to text back a keyword in order to RSVP, receive a coupon or learn more.


    Every text message you send should include an unsubscribe option. Your provider may set this up automatically. If not, one of the easiest ways to do this is to set up an unsubscribe keyword like “STOP” that the subscriber can text if they want to stop receiving messages from you.


    What it costs:

    The two main costs associated with SMS marketing are the price per text and the price of keywords. Typically the price per text will decrease the more you send. Multimedia messages that include photos or GIFs will cost more. The number of texts you can send and the number of keywords you can use will initially be determined by the plan you buy, but additional purchases of extra messages and keywords are always an option later on.


    Text marketing is instantaneous, two-way communication that has the potential to revolutionize the way organizations and companies keep in touch with their members and customers. The number of SMS marketing providers out there is vast, so ask plenty of questions upfront to ensure you make the best choice for your business. As long as your campaign is well-executed, engaging and user-friendly, texting could be exactly what your integrated marketing strategy needs.


    This article was originally sourced from Associations Advisor.


  • 20 Sep 2016 11:10 AM | Deleted user

    Preliminary results of our unscientific reader poll show that association leaders have a wide variety of member challenges to address, and topping the list is the impact of a changing landscape. More than one in three (34 percent) respondents indicated concern about industry consolidation and retiring Boomers falling off their membership rolls.


    Although only 13 percent felt that their member communications were ineffective, more than one in five (21 percent) were frustrated that members didn’t seem aware of all of the benefits they are entitled to with their membership. List segmentation was also cited as a significant challenge by more than one in six (17 percent) of associations.


    New data from Edge Research, commissioned by Abila, Inc., showed a significant disconnect between the reasons young people join associations and the reasons associations THINK young people join.


    At a recent webinar deconstructing the findings, Jamie Notter, founding partner at WorkXO, LLC, said many membership organizations are still stuck in the model of: “Pay to join us first and then we’ll show you our worth.” Notter said that’s a hard sell for always-connected young professionals who are “used to getting value instantaneously.”


    They’re used to the “freemium model,” Notter said, and then they upgrade to the paid model if they like it.


    Scott Wiley, CEO of the Ohio Society of CPAs, said it starts with “really knowing” your members.

    “At OSCPA, we have a dedicated business development team whose primary responsibility is to build relationships with members and understand their challenges and any gaps in service that we can fill,” he said. “The team regularly brings that information back to our staff so that our strategic priorities and the work we do is directly aligned with solving members’ pain points.


    This article was originally sourced from Associations Adviser.


  • 20 Sep 2016 11:03 AM | Deleted user

    Associations have the infrastructure to help remake the education industry, according to a new white paper. What’s lacking is the will to promote that fact.


    Associations are forever being scolded that they need to run more like a business. But what if they already are?


    That might be the case when it comes to education. In a recent white paper titled “The Association Role in the New Education Paradigm,” Spark Consulting’s Elizabeth Weaver Engel, CAE, and Alcorn Associates’ Shelly Alcorn, CAE, argue that associations have the educational infrastructure structure and industry connections that will be required to respond to the rapid shifts in secondary education. With the size of college debt leaving many learners skittish and many companies embracing microcredentialing, associations have an opportunity to fill the gap.


    Problem is, they say, associations don’t promote their capabilities on this front, which leaves the rising for-profit education industry—or corporations in general—in a position to snap up a market that associations should own.


    ”I think associations are the best secret going.”


    “We do a good job with this, and nobody knows,” says Alcorn. “Associations have been unfortunately obsessed with the idea of membership for so long that they are not seeing the fact that one of the reasons why those membership streams are drying up is those people aren’t making it into the profession in the first place.”


    In the paper, Engel and Alcorn lay out the various ways associations can play a major role in training. They have access to employers, who are often looking for skilled labor that doesn’t necessarily require a secondary degree; they have experience providing credentials and certifications, which may have more immediate relevance within an industry; they can provide relevant training more quickly than the two- or four-year degree process; and they can connect with students who don’t fit traditional definitions of students. “Association professional development programs have been designed from the beginning to be completed by people who are working full time and who have significant other responsibilities,” they write. “Associations don’t expect our audiences to put their entire lives on hold for multiple years while they attend in-person classes for months at a time.”


    So what’s standing in the way? For one thing, a cultural assumption that a secondary degree is the only meaningful path to a decent-paying professional career. But Alcorn and Engel argue that there’s plenty the association community can do to make a case for themselves. In the paper, they point to a handful of associations that have ramped up and broadened their education efforts. The HR Certification Institute, for instance, created a credential for newcomers in the industry but not necessarily HR professionals; state CPA societies in Maryland and Ohio emphasized training in soft skills and skills students needed; the National Association of Licensed Practical Nurses provides stepping stones for its members to climb the next rung in the nursing ladder. All of these efforts are still within the associations’ mission, but expand the community and find ways to betters support it.


    “They’re not completely throwing over the old stuff, but they had to say, ‘We need to start thinking a little bit differently about who we’re serving and how we’re serving them, and the forces that are affecting our industry, and position ourselves not just be looking ahead for next year’s programming,’” Engel says. Adds Alcorn: “Each one of those associations had to acknowledge that there was a broader constituency that they weren’t tapping into, and they had to look at the at the actual dynamics inside their professions and industries.”


    Simply recognizing the problem and its potential is one easy way to start. That’s especially true of associations that do work internationally, particularly in countries that have little interest in membership but are eager for training opportunities. (This is one theme of MCI Group’s recently released Global Engagement Index, a document I had an editorial hand in.) The white paper suggests that many associations already have a grasp of the employment environment and career paths in their industries—what’s left is to build a strategy and delivery system around it.


    And also, Alcorn and Engel told me, a will among association leaders to adapt their mindset enough to make education as much a tentpole of their model as membership and the big annual conference. The clock is ticking—for-profit organizations will happily take over the kind of niche education that associations specialize in if associations themselves don’t pursue it, Alcorn says. (As an example, last week I received a PR email from Amazon trumpeting its nursing training for employees in its fulfillment centers.)


    “I think associations are the best secret going,” Alcorn says. “You can have an impact, and it’s time to embrace some optimism. The kind of member loyalty that you have always said you wanted to create? I don’t know of any better loyalty than ‘They helped me get a job, keep a job, and get a better job.’”


    This article was originally sourced from Associations Now and was written by Mark Athitakis.


  • 20 Sep 2016 10:58 AM | Deleted user

    THE Australian Farmers’ Markets Association has published a new Food Safety Guide for Farmers’ Markets in collaboration with Food Safety Australia New Zealand to help stallholders and managers understand their duty of care and comply with regulations.


    AFMA spokeswoman Jane Adams said the guide is the first of its kind and will help the more than 180 farmers’ markets trading regularly across Australia.


    “AFMA ranks food safety as a major priority,” Jane said. “To date there has not been a commonsense farmers’ market-specific document to help facilitate the delivery of a strong food safety culture in farmers’ market settings.”


    The guide covers regulations for horticulture, poultry, dairy, seafood, meat, wine, food sampling, food handling, labelling and nutrition panels.


    This media release was originally sourced from Weekly Times Now.


  • 20 Sep 2016 10:55 AM | Deleted user

    The SMSF Association welcomes the Government's proposed changes to their non-concessional contribution (NCC) lifetime cap policy, believing they represent very positive and sensible policy that will reduce administrative complexity and increase opportunities for adequate retirement savings.


    SMSF Association Managing Director/CEO Andrea Slattery was responding to the Government's statement today that it is amending its super package by replacing the $500,000 lifetime NCC cap with a new measure that reduces the annual NCC cap from $180,000 to $100,000 up to a superannuation balance of $1.6 million.


    She says an annual cap of $100,000, with a three-year bring-forward of up to $300,000, will give people a better opportunity to save an adequate superannuation balance for retirement than that afforded by the lifetime cap.


    "The move to cap NCCs to people who have super balances under $1.6 million is an appropriate compromise in light of the original proposal outlined in the 2016 Budget, with the policy goal of making the system more sustainable and better targeted still intact.


    "In addition, the new proposal's prospective application date is a welcomed move, removing the lifetime cap's issue of counting contributions back to 1 July 2007."


    Slattery says the Association will work with the Government to ensure that the deferral of the ability to carry forward contribution caps made to offset the loss of revenue from the NCC cap shift can still be implemented by 1 July 2018.


    "The Association has been a long-time advocate of allowing the carry-forward of concessional contribution caps because they assist women and people with broken work patterns achieve adequacy.


    "We believe that this change was a positive element in the 2016 Budget package as they increased the flexibility of the superannuation system and allowed further opportunity for people to make catch-up contributions closer to retirement."


    This media release was originally sourced from SMSFA.


  • 20 Sep 2016 10:50 AM | Deleted user

    The Royal Automobile Association of South Australia (RAA) has selected Empired as their primary partner to build a new digital platform to help RAA deliver on its digital transformation strategy.


    According to RAA group information officer, Mike Walters, Empired was chosen for its “right mix of skills and culture” to aid the association in its customer engagement digital overhaul.


    As part of the three-year deal, Empired will develop a platform that will allow RAA to offer a strong, personalised customer experience to its existing membership and potential customer base.


    The company is committed to the key strategic objective of developing a new platform based on the Sitecore Experience Platform and Microsoft’s Azure cloud service that will boost customer engagement and accelerate the association’s membership acquisition.


    “Empired is thrilled to be selected as RAA’s primary partner in helping them drive their digital transformation strategy,” Empired client executive, Tim Kelly, said.


    “We look forward to working with RAA by leveraging our national digital capability to help them drive member engagement, retention or acquisition and deliver a competitive advantage to RAA in the growing digital marketplace.”


    Walters said whilst RAA is well known for its physical service to members on the road, in calls centre or shops, a digital presence will enable both customer acquisition and retention.

    “Transitioning to a new digital platform will also allow us provide best practice, customer-centric, personalised and seamless services in the digital environment,” he added.


    This article was originally sourced from Arnnet and was written by Holly Morgan.



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