Sent: Monday, November
21, 2016 2:09 PM
To: wtroy@asq.org; spowell@asq.org; plalonde90@gmail.com; Eric.Hayler@bmwmc.com
Cc: communitydevelopment@asq.org; dblevy@optonline.net; dlbrecken@sbcglobal.net
Subject: ASQ Transformation: Proposed Responses to Association Micro-Trends
To: wtroy@asq.org; spowell@asq.org; plalonde90@gmail.com; Eric.Hayler@bmwmc.com
Cc: communitydevelopment@asq.org; dblevy@optonline.net; dlbrecken@sbcglobal.net
Subject: ASQ Transformation: Proposed Responses to Association Micro-Trends
Good afternoon Mr. Troy, ASQ Leadership:
In response to the recent communication by Bill Troy of the
micro-trends affecting Associations, I reviewed all of the comments carefully,
assessed the impacts to ASQ operations, and proposed constructive
approaches to meet these challenges. Please circulate or redistribute
this note as you deem appropriate.
I am communicating these personal perspectives from two
decades of experience with ASQ in multiple capacities:
- ASQ member (currently a Fellow member),
- ASQ Certificant (currently possess 7 renewable ASQ Certifications),
- ASQ Member-Leader (currently active as a Regional Director and voting member of Section Affairs Council, along with other roles across multiple ASQ Divisions and member units),
- ASQ Subject Matter Expert and Communicator (co-author of Quality Press bestseller, Certified Six Sigma Green Belt Handbook, WCQI presenter and reviewer).
I hope that you will take these proposals under advisement
and apply them as inputs toward the current ASQ Transformation reviews and
solutions. I believe that it is necessary for ASQ to continue its 70 year
legacy as a pioneer of the international Quality movement, and continue to
serve as the definitive professional resource for Quality practitioners of all
levels within all industries and domains. Sustaining ASQ while meeting
the dynamic professional demands and expectations of current and future ASQ
members and applying technological innovations will require careful and
deliberate effort and prioritization of all options and opportunities.
Within the Quality domain, ASQ should always compete as a leader from strength
as no other organization in the world has our track record, capabilities, or
global reach.
I welcome feedback from you or any of the ASQ Transformation
participants. By communicating this response, I also offer myself as a
volunteer to participate in and support the ASQ Transformation initiatives,
discussions, workshops, studies, and reports.
Sincerely,
Daniel Zrymiak
ASQ Member (Year 20), ASQ Fellow 01148728
Below, I share 10 micro-level
trends, specific to associations, which directly impact our strategy for change
and require us to explore new models.
1. Economic concerns are
leading companies to re-examine every cost, cutting out memberships and travel,
encouraging staff to access free resources.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
This will trend to a reduced
percentage and overall revenue generated from corporate sponsorship of
individual membership fees and expenses, shifting financial burdens directly
to members.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Emphasize the financial and
career advantages and returns from ASQ membership and involvement.
Career growth and opportunities to extend earnings through teaching and
writing should also be emphasized to support individual commitment.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
ASQ has been very beneficial
to me personally and professionally, and I view my continued involvement as part
of a virtuous cycle that aids and benefits me, my employer, my profession,
and my community.
I have a recent example
showing how participation in ASQ conferences and recertification programs
offers nearly a 10:1 return on investment. If an individual gets $10
for every $1 committed, the returns will justify the costs and support the
argument for individual membership.
From 2014-2016:
-
Synchronized recertification with a promo code, will enable 7 ASQ
recertifications for $20 USD; compared to the $763 USD ($109 X 7) for
non-members which represents a 97% cost savings
-
3 year WCQI reviewer (restricted to ASQ Senior and Fellow members) with
complimentary registration, saving $3785 USD in registration fees
(non-member WCQI costs in 2014, 2015, and 2016).
-
The cost recovery and financial returns ($743 + $3785 = $4528 USD)
represents a 9.5:1 return on investment for the $159 annual ASQ
fees
|
2. Organizations are
increasingly seeking to build their own in-house training and certification
processes. Train-the-Trainer offerings are commonly requested.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
This trend will reduce
revenue for ASQ as a provider of corporate training directly to
organizations.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
ASQ can adapt and shift to
emphasizing knowledge base and infrastructure for corporate resources,
offering “Quality as a Service” backed by updated references.
ASQ can use its ITEA team competition
initiative to augment training by showcasing examples of Quality methods and
practices applied, resulting in savings and improved performance. This
takes training out of the classroom and into practical application.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
ASQ can promote itself as a
valuable partner and organizations can outsource their Quality knowledge base
and curriculum development to ASQ. This actually creates consistency of
education and enables organizations to use their own talent.
|
3. Individuals are more
frequently moving from job to job, industry to industry and / or organization
to organization, resulting in increased career changes and less stability in
organizational memberships.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
Organizational memberships
will decline in response to individual attrition or relocation.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Promote the ASQ advantage of
Mobility and encourage the adoption of individual ASQ memberships that travel
with the individual throughout their career.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Individual memberships offer
more benefits and potential for member value, and can be retained across
multiple employers or career transitions.
Organizational memberships
can be strategically positioned as a source of future individual ASQ members
and leaders.
|
4. Millennials are not as
motivated to join membership organizations as previous generations. As a whole,
young professionals do not believe they should have to pay for networking,
information, etc.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
Membership does not have the
same appeal and will decline over time.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Emphasize the advantages of
networking, particularly to cultivate new mentors and industry experts for
informational interviews. Contrast this to the expensive option of
hiring executive coaches, or having the competitive disadvantage of lacking
mentorship and context.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Membership supports
interactions and personal connections with experienced professionals, who are
more inclined to help mentor or provide informational interviews to those
with whom they are already positively acquainted. These are critical
assets to a progressive career, and ASQ is an excellent resource for both
capabilities.
|
5. Individuals are under
greater time constraints –working longer hours –and are less likely to be
involved in professional organizations or volunteer.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
Reduced participation in ASQ
meetings and events, particularly when travel and overnight stays are
considered.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Shift mentality from
leadership groups or committees that meet for the sake of meeting to a
hierarchy of programs and projects which are specific to a portfolio (i.e.
education, certification, membership) or an event (i.e. conference).
Enhance recognitions for
individual contributors. I am already very impressed with the Member
Leader engagement by ASQ Community Development, and would support the
propagation of this model across all of ASQ.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Projects imply flexibility
and finite commitments. People are more inclined to volunteer for
limited commitments with clear terminations. Nobody wants to be stuck
in a necessary but unappealing role with the inability to find a successor.
|
6. Growth in associations
has been greatest in specialized organizations. For example, while the American
Medical Association has drastically lost membership and market share, the
number of specialty medical societies has grown.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
Increased specialization will
cause membership preferences to shift from large organizations with a general
orientation to small, nimble groups with a targeted focus.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Emphasize the ASQ advantages
of having experienced and committed staff and management. I would especially
like to acknowledge particular individuals within ASQ Head Office with whom I
have had the pleasure to collaborate for many years, and of whom I have come
to regard not just as service providers but cherished acquaintances and
personal friends.
Continue to incorporate
specialized groups as ASQ Divisions and Member Units, through partnerships
and Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) agreements with specialized groups for
collaborations.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
ASQ is really a composite
aggregation of professional relationships with specific individuals.
The best ASQ advantage comes from the personal interactions with the top
performing long-term ASQ resources. ASQ has a great employee culture
which promotes exceptional service and teamwork, and this should be
emphasized as a competitive advantage.
ASQ offers the overall
Quality mentality and perspective, and can benefit from industry-specific
partnerships. For example, ASQ members interested in IT Service Management
can collaborate with ISACA to jointly raise awareness and compliance to
Sarbanes-Oxley regulations.
|
7. The environment is
changing… but the association model has generally stayed the same. This leaves
many organizations expending greater resources just to maintain membership.
Many associations have been
trying to address decreasing membership by increasing their services and
broadening their target market –trying to be all things to all people –but
inadvertently increasing their cost base.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
ASQ does not get the
necessary contributions from members to sustain its overhead and capital
investments.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
ASQ should serve all of North
America first and yield the full benefit of all Quality practitioners within
the proximity of Canada and USA.
-
Translation of
Products and Services into French to get access to a 10 million Francophone
community within proximity of ASQ head office.
-
Expansion of
Customer Care live agent availability to 5PM Pacific to more effectively
serve 40 million residents in Pacific time zone (currently underserved with
mid-afternoon ASQ closure)
Management of expectations to
members. Reinforce that ASQ is an association which must manage costs
and commitments and that work is done by real people with full day-jobs and
heavy workloads.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Overhead is reduced when more
local opportunities are captured and yielded, spreading the costs more
equitably across individual and organizational members to grow resources
locally for future expansion (The author, Og Mandino, referenced this
is his Acres of Diamonds book.).
Trying to be all things to
all people is a response to appeasing the well-intentioned but impractical
expectations of members who seek to stretch ASQ capabilities. Evaluate
the impact of extended services by people affected and potential for future
sustainability.
|
8. New competitors are
responding to the environment…Delivering on the core value propositions of
traditional membership associations.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
ASQ will lose members and
revenue to competitors
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Compete as a leader from
strength by emphasizing the advantages or “Powers” of ASQ:
-
Availability:
ASQ is offered to all levels, backgrounds, ages, cultures
-
Prestige: ASQ
originated from Pioneers of Quality with 70 year legacy
-
Precision: ASQ
experience adapts and customizes to fit members
-
Mobility: ASQ
offers comity and acceptance across many locations
-
Rewards: ASQ
provides discounts, savings, honoraria, and benefits
Have long-term members
provide positive testimonials for publication and review.
Showcase the international
organizations and initiatives (i.e. ISO, Baldrige) in which ASQ is a
participant and contributor.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
New organizations do not have
the ASQ track record or influence. In comparison they are social clubs
that do not have the extensive knowledge base, international acceptance, or
networking connections offered by ASQ.
|
9. Associations are spending
extensive resources to be at parity with more modern, tech savvy competition.
New platforms are needed to enable traditional value propositions in a digital
future -24/7 access to assistance, digital resources with great search
functionality, remote networking, etc. just to name a few.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
This will require capital
investment to remain relevant and operational, potentially increasing annual
membership dues and expenses.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
As a cost of doing business,
make the necessary commitments to procure and deploy the technical applications
and infrastructure.
Promote this as Innovation,
and build support within ASQ for best practices and innovation emotionally by
wanting
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Manage expectations by being
transparent about how much of the membership revenue is being directed to
technology advancement. ASQ members could be encouraged to have
additional sponsorships in a manner similar to the campaign to raise money
for ASQ HQ relocation to its current building.
|
10. Associations are
struggling to explore cutting edge topics with the traditional volunteer labor
base. Membership lacks the time to attend meetings regularly, much less the
extensive time required to create new topics, generate insight and develop
content. This means that relevant subject matter, such as Big Data or the
Internet of Things, goes unexplored.
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
ASQ is missing opportunities
to adopt and gain expertise on new topics, perpetuating its eventual
obsolescence.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
ASQ should incentivize its
thought-leaders to pursue these topics.
(Disclosure: ASQ has started
on this path with excellent work published and presented by “ASQ Fresh
Faces”, Dr. Nicole Radziwill and Austin Lin, in these innovative topic areas)
Articles related to these
topics should be assigned to the participants of the ASQ Emerging Leaders
program as part of their course work, to expand the ASQ Quality Body of
Knowledge.
ASQ Scholarships and
Publications should be created and targeted to innovative topic areas.
This could be done in collaboration with International Academy for Quality.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
By explicitly recognizing
current thought-leaders and promoting this to the new generation of ASQ
Leadership, ASQ will have tangible outcomes within 3-5 years. This
should be connected to ASQ’s recognition and education programs (i.e. Fresh
Faces, Emerging Leaders, Scholarships) so that membership and the Quality
Body of Knowledge advance concurrently.
|
These
trends provide insight into what we are faced with. Understanding them is
important, but we can’t stop there. We must develop creative ways to adapt our
current business model to address them. Some questions we will have to answer:
1) Do millennials value
in-person networking and interactions or are they content with virtual
meetings?
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
Meetings do not appeal to
Millennials, who can get the details virtually.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Emphasize the social and
networking aspects of meetings for Millennials and ASQ members of all ages,
and redirect intensive quality presentations and lectures to online podcasts.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Maximize “face-time” as a way
to build relationships and become better acquainted with interactive
“ice-breakers” and group brainstorming activities, not sitting quietly in an
uncomfortable chair listening to a lecture and watching powerpoint
presentations in a windowless room.
|
2) If professional
advancement is the primary concern of younger members, how will we have to
adjust our offerings to respond to that need?
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
If ASQ is not seen as a
necessary component of professional advancement, it will simply be a social
club and lose the sense its urgency and necessity to Millennials.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
Emphasize the versatility,
resiliency, and holistic preparation offered by ASQ as a way to move from the
ranks of the replaceable or outsourceable practitioner to the indispensable
quality leader or subject matter expert.
Emphasize the value of ASQ
for people who are thrust into a quality role later in their career (i.e.
Registered Nurse promoted to be Continual Improvement Manager for the
hospital). ASQ augments the clinical knowledge with specific methods
and techniques.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
Career advancement is not
necessarily linear, and is often more about responding to changes in work and
organizational situations to preserve employment and grow influence during
difficult times.
|
3) How valid is our argument
that we have specialized, accessible knowledge now available from competitors
on the internet?
Expected impact to ASQ
operations
|
ASQ will no longer be
perceived as the definitive source of Quality knowledge, and will have to
compete with internet providers offering similar value with lower cost and
overhead.
|
Recommended ASQ response
|
ASQ should compete as a
leader from strength.
ASQ should acknowledge and
integrate internet resources, and position itself as a moderator and
aggregator of such knowledge.
|
Justification/ Rationale
|
ASQ cannot compete with
infinite internet sources, nor should it. As long as ASQ is the
definitive first point of contact, people will default to ASQ as the first
option.
ASQ should also emphasize
that material on the internet may be suspect or obsolete, and not
definitive. For example, while the ISO standards from 2000 are now
freely available online, organizations are better served by purchasing the
current 2015 versions from ASQ.
|
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