In a lot of ways, acquiring new members is all about marketing. Cool brochures, solid reputation, word of mouth, presence at conferences, getting the word about your association out there to prospects, developing benefits you feel are exclusive to your association and that people can’t find anywhere else. There’s no reason not to join, right?
But it’s the renewal rate of those members that will tell you how well you’ve done on delivering value to them during their membership year. For it is then that a member sits down with his or her renewal notice and checkbook or credit card and asks an important question: Was it worth the money?
You can use a number of markers throughout the year to get an idea on whether you are delivering value. These, in turn, can lead to a number of questions to ask yourself and your staff.
All of these items can give you an idea of how engaged your members are and what they consider “valuable.” If you believe that legislative advocacy work is of significant importance as a member benefit, yet when you send an e-mail newsletter about your work, make a Facebook post about it, ask members to sign up in show of support, and showcase it with a four-page spread in the publication and all you get are a couple of thumbs-up, no shares, a handful of signatures, and less-than-average opens, your members might be telling you something.
Being able to adapt during the year is essential if your staff feel as though they are on an island pushing information at members without receiving any valuable participation or engagement in return. You must be ready and willing to make the necessary changes to improve the member experience so that when renewal time comes around again, they’ll be much more willing to send you their membership dollars.
So put yourself in the shoes of your typical member, and be honest. The executive staff, board, and chapter leaders should all be asking themselves on a routine, strategic-planning basis: Is what we offer our members worth it?