Rotary, the
entire organization, must continually evolve otherwise it will cease to
exist (Please refer to Rotary's Branding Triangle in the right sidebar.) Change is never easy,
but Rotary does have a choice – manage change or change will manage Rotary, perhaps out of existence. In managing change, it is critical that
Rotary understands its core industry, recognizes who funds the organization
(the customer), and continually delivers value to them.
Rotary International’s core industry is
advancing the Object of Rotary. Its only
customers are its member clubs; clubs that depend on retaining and
attracting local business, professional, and community leaders into the Rotary
network. The Rotary Foundation, Rotary’s
charitable arm, is a key associate and a major player in advancing the Object of Rotary throughout the world.
But Rotary's strength lies in its over 34,000 local member clubs and their over 1.2 million members. Change must be managed with their points of view in mind because it is they who fund and advance the Object of Rotary, first within their local social fabrics, then the world. Change must continually deliver value to member clubs who must deliver value to their local members.
TheOrganization
Cemetery is littered with
graves of those who failed to manage change because they were seduced by
success and fell under the spell of one or more of what I refer to as Fishy
Fantasies. (Author’s note – A fishy fantasy is a slang
statement representing a deterrent that hinders addressing paramount issues.)
But Rotary's strength lies in its over 34,000 local member clubs and their over 1.2 million members. Change must be managed with their points of view in mind because it is they who fund and advance the Object of Rotary, first within their local social fabrics, then the world. Change must continually deliver value to member clubs who must deliver value to their local members.
The
Fishy Fantasy One – By
getting better at what they are doing, they believe their customers will
continue to demand their product or
service. Organizations, believing that they are the best at
what they are doing, tend to become arrogant, lazy, and gravitate toward
mediocrity. These conditions will become their enemy because
customers will eventually find a way to achieve higher levels of satisfaction;
more value for their time, treasure, and/or talent.
Fishy Fantasy Two – It
costs too much. Customers are lost primarily because they do not
believe they will receive, or are not receiving, value proportional to what
they are being asked to contribute in time, treasure, and/or talent. A
fundamental principle of any successful change is that if the
product or service satisfies customer’s needs, they will find a way to pay for
it. Obviously there has to be a reasonable cost/value ratio, but price is
seldom the primary reason people do not buy what an organization
sells.
Fishy Fantasy Three –
Increasing affluence will ensure the organization’s growth. In this type
atmosphere, organizations’ leaders often assume that they do not have to be
creative about their business or industry. Instead they tend to
concentrate on improving what they are already doing. What actually
happens is that they get better at their deeds rather than improving their
deeds’ values to their customer.
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