IN THIS ISSUE
FRONT PAGE
FEATURE
Effective
CEO Evaluation
VIEWPOINT
Is it
Time for Whistleblower Protection in Associations?
ASSOCIATE ARTICLE
Look Out! Environmental Scanning for Associations
GUEST ARTICLE
Building Trust Between Boards and Staff
GUEST ARTICLE
Customer Service in Member Based Associations
GUEST ARTICLE
The
Changing eStrategy Context for Associations
GUEST ARTICLE
How
To Make New Members Feel Welcome
GUEST ARTICLE
Executive Coaches Offer Associations a New Game Plan
GUEST ARTICLE
A Virtual Success
REGULAR COLUMNS
Change Management with Peter de Jaeger
Customer Relationships with Paul Ward
TOOLS, TIPS AND RESOURCES
PAST ISSUES
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GUEST
ARTICLE - Catherine Lada
A Virtual Success
Whether you manage components face to
face or in cyberspace, your tasks are often the same:
stimulating member discussions, keeping an eye on
various details, and helping volunteers work toward your
association’s goals.
About two-thirds of the more than 5,300
individual members of the American Chamber of Commerce
Executives (ACCE) belong to one or more virtual networking
groups. The ACCE has special interest groups for each of
the five core chamber professional competencies
(government affairs, communications, business development,
membership, and workforce development). The ACCE also has
community peer groups (CPGs) for chamber of commerce
executives based on the size of the population that they
serve, the number of members, and other CPGs for all staff
professionals that work at chambers of commerce in similar
communities (a large employer is a university or military
base, for instance).
New virtual groups begin when at least a
few members are interested in the same topic. Members can
use our online tools or work with staff. Generally, we’ll
create a more formal group for members if their topic
impacts a large number of members. Some groups are
long-standing; others focus on an issue and end when that
particular issue is no longer a threat or an opportunity.
A forum for sharing
ACCE made electronic message boards
available to these virtual communities in 1997 and
participants quickly made them a forum for sharing ideas,
solving problems, getting to know their peers, and
obtaining just-in-time information about emerging trends.
We’ve gone through two major upgrades of the Webboard
software and two computer server changes since then, and
the investment (under $10,000) has been well worth it in
sustaining the cohesiveness of these virtual communities.
Each group varies in its goals for
activity levels. Our popular CEO groups and other
peer-to-peer groups, for instance, have one staff person
who posts questions he gets from them, as well as brief
summaries on relevant issues. Their expected activity
level is 2-4 threads per month (they use e-mail, not our
message boards), and a few groups just had their first
conference call.
Our virtual professional interest groups,
on the other hand, are for staff-level employees (although
many of our CEOs at smaller member associations also
participate). They have active message boards, an online
members-only samples database, and an online peer
database. These virtual groups create how-to publications
and annotated bibliographies, contribute articles to our
bimonthly magazine, set up teleseminars and regional
seminars, and help put together the content and speakers
for our annual conference.
We’ve assigned three full-time staff
members to about 14 formal and 30 informal groups. We
stimulate discussions, take minutes during conference
calls, and keep volunteers working toward our goals of
providing education, information, and networking
opportunities to others in the professional development
interest area. We occasionally summarize discussion
threads for members and we also conduct informal polls by
asking such questions as, “Who uses paid advertising to
support lobbying efforts?" and "Who can share his or her
job description?” We sometimes tabulate the responses with
survey software such as Perseus Survey Solutions, which
automatically collates and presents the data graphically.
From virtual to visible
ACCE constantly markets and educates
members about how to use the message boards or online
resources because of turnover and the natural tendency to
cocoon or dig in to the daily details of work. We’ve
enabled e-mail-based participation in the message boards
so members don’t have to come to our Web site. We also
allow attachments for them to more easily share samples
(and for staff to then collect and post the samples in our
online database). In addition, this year we’ve created a
networking vice-chair position on the advisory team for
each professional virtual group. This person will focus on
sustaining conversations on the message board, among other
tasks.
To further encourage participants, we
ensure that each virtual networking group gets visibility
in our ACCE publications, on our Web site, and at our
national conferences. This has helped members connect with
each other and create an identity. We also provide online
and face-to-face public and private spaces for them to
network and form a community. Every member can self-select
into and out of most networking groups 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, using the MyACCE online service module.
If a networking group requires certain criteria, members
can indicate an interest in the group and staff follows up
on the notification.
One of the biggest hopes for the future of
ACCE’s virtual networking groups lies in the ability for
members to go to MyACCE to form their own groups around
about 30 interest areas, including tourism, health care,
and transportation. Through MyACCE, members can now access
an online roster of their peers who share these common
interests. Upon request, we’ll create a message board for
a group to network more publicly. Until these virtual ad
hoc groups become more visible, however, or until we learn
that there’s a need, we’ll nurture them in their private
networking space through e-mail reminders that the groups
exist as well as information on how to use the online
resources.
Catherine Lada is director of member services for the
American Chamber of Commerce
Executives.
Reprinted with permission. Component
Relations, December 2003, ©American Society of Association
Executives, Washington, D.C.
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MAY
2004
OUR MISSION
To build better
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