By perfecting your brand and increasing your credibility, retaining and attracting your target audience becomes much easier.
Jim Henry, Zone 34 Membership and Rotary Coordinator, 2009 - 2011.
In Rotary Zone 34, and throughout North America , indications are that Rotary still has
credibility but has ceased perfecting its Brand. In the five years from 2005 through 2009,
Zone 34, with over 34,000 Rotarians, inducted 22,467 new members and lost 23,053. This indicates that, after decades of
building respect and credibility, the name Rotary still attracts its target
audience – members – but many Rotary clubs have lost the ability to retain members.
Examine possible reasons why
from a different point of view.
Successful Organization History 101 (reference Distinctive Position Edition workbook on the right sidebar) tells us that when organizations
begin, they furnish goods and/or services different from others that compete for their target audience’s
time, talent, and treasure. This difference is the organization’s Distinctive
Position, its driving force; its Brand.
If the organization wants
long-term success, it is critical that it adheres to, perfects, and jealously
guards its Brand.
Second to the Brand, and this first/second relationship is vital, is that the organization must have attributes that Relate to the target audience’s wants and
needs, which change with time and location.
Why? It is the manner in which
the organization’s attributes Relate to the target audience that builds Brand loyalty.
The extent to which the organization
fulfills its stated or implied Brand establishes the Respect the
target audience has for it. Respect
does not occur without having a Brand and attributes that Relate. Respect reflects the
credibility and reputation the target audience has for the organization. Respect can outlive the Brand by many years.
Knowledge the target audience has of the
organization follows Respect and can also
outlive the Brand by many years. Knowledge means that the target audience has
bought into what the Brand stands for, its difference, and further enhances the
organization’s credibility. Brand Knowledge cannot be purchased with advertising or public
relations. It must be gained through
experience and education. In Rotary, that translates to retaining members, which will enhance attracting members.
What has this got to do with Rotary?
Some organizations reach their
mountaintop and score high in the Brand, Relate, Respect, and Knowledge categories, then falter and start
slipping down the mountain or fall off the cliff. Why?
Most often it is because its leaders become complacent about perfecting the Brand and allow, or encourage, attributes to exceed the Brand in priority. This affects everything the organization does: strategic planning, daily
operations, associate educational programs, advertising, public relations, etc. The leaders mistakenly believe that its
attributes, things like products, projects, and programs, are its Brand, but an
organization’s Brand cannot be defined by attributes; attributes must support
the Brand. Attributes change with time
and location and frequently lose Relevance.
Popular attributes are often copied.
Respect and Knowledge continue to attract the target audience, but they
soon learn that the organization has forfeited differentiation, hence credibility, strictly because it failed to perfect its Brand.
This
relates to Rotary at all levels. The target audience, and only the target audience, authenticates a Brand. Rotary International can't; The Rotary Foundation can't; the over 34,000 Rotary clubs can't! If target audiences are not
properly identified, and their wants and needs are not served by Relevant
attributes, Rotary's Brand cannot be perfected. Respect and Knowledge will slowly slip away, and the North American experience indicates that Rotary is in danger. Will, or can, Rotary revitalize its Brand?
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