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IN THIS ISSUE
FRONT PAGE
FEATURE
Enhancing The Board's Monitoring Role...Without Micro-Managing!
VIEWPOINT
The Association Sandwich
ASSOCIATE ARTICLE
Mission, Vision, Values
GUEST ARTICLE
The Not-So-Mysterious Benefits of Mystery Shopping Your Association

GUEST ARTICLE
Members By The Dozen


GUEST ARTICLE
Working with Knowledge: Guiding Principles for Association Leaders


GUEST ARTICLE
Ethical Guidelines for Board Members of Not-for-Profit Organizations


GUEST ARTICLE
Setting Up Your Reserves
REGULAR COLUMNS
Change Management with Peter de Jaeger

Customer Relationships with Paul Ward
TOOLS, TIPS AND RESOURCES
PAST ISSUES
VIEWPOINT

The Association Sandwich

I recently had a meeting with some association clients in a boardroom in their office building.  Because the meeting was going to run most of the day, some sandwiches were delivered to the room.

As usual, the ham sandwiches had mustard on them. I find that annoying because I prefer them without mustard.  It turned out the host also disliked mustard on his ham sandwiches as well. 

The bread may be very good, and the ham especially tasty.  But it doesn't matter.  If it has mustard on it, I will pass on it.  It turns me off.

Of course other sandwiches are usually included.  Perhaps some good Alberta roast beef, egg salad, or some Montreal smoked meat.

But it makes me wonder why fundamental preferences are not addressed.  If mustard is provided on the side, then I would be happy as would the person that likes mustard.

I call this the association sandwich because it reflects the fixed aspect of many member services.  The bread and ham may be great, but the addition of the mustard makes it unpalatable or undesirable for some.

The assumption is that everybody wants their service or program a certain way.  But it may be better to allow some customization with add-on features than to load it up with options that members don't want and are unwilling to pay for.

Many sandwich and sub shops provide full choice on bread used, the main contents, as well as all condiments. In most cases, you can decide if you want it heated up as well.

That degree of flexibility is not always possible or feasible with association services, however some flexibility may be the difference between customer satisfaction and dissatisfaction.

The core aspect of the member service or program may be fine.  What may be turning members off is aspects of the experience or particular product/service attributes.  It may be as simple as making one element optional.

What mustard-laced association sandwich are you serving up?  You may not know, but your members do!



Wayne Amundson is president of Association Xpertise Inc., a consulting firm serving associations and non-profits. He is also a writer and speaker on association and non-profit management and governance, and is editor of The Canadian Association e-zine and co-author of the new “Primer for Directors of Not-for-Profit Corporations” published by the Industry Canada and three non-profit umbrella groups in Canada. 
Phone: 403-374-1822 E-mail: admin@axi.ca  Website: www.axi.ca 

Association Xpertise Inc. (AXI) is a full-service company providing consulting and other services to associations and non-profits.    Details

 

MARCH 2004
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