Required attendance disengages members over a period of time. Requiring attendance minimizes the importance
of sustaining and improving an event’s value. Voluntary attendance will improve any event’s
value quicker and more effectively than any form of leisurely
investigation. This simple truth applies
to clubs as well as events such as North American Rotary hierarchy’s favorite
exhibition platform – Presidents-Elect Training Seminars (PETS), where presidents-elect are supposed to be customers; persons to be attracted and served.
Attendance requirements should be dropped at all events
where members or clubs have to pay to attend. By eliminating attendance requirements, event
conveners, to attract and engage attendees, would have to (1) market the event’s
value and (2) assure that the event delivers its marketed value. Delivering value will engage members – attendance
and membership will increase. Not
delivering value will disengage members – attendance and membership will
decrease. Voluntary paid attendance is
the simplest, most effective measure ever devised to gauge whether or not an
event is delivering value.
This post will create a flurry of objections from Rotary
leaders who want to force attendance to PETS. From the clubs’ point of view, PETS contracts
to deliver services that should assist presidents-elect (PEs) in guiding clubs
to become more effective. Is PETS delivering this service? North America is the epicenter of multi-district PETS yet North American membership has been declining for twenty years. If PETS attendance had been voluntary, would
Rotary leaders have learned years ago that a president-elect's major concern is membership development and running their club; that attracting and retaining (engaging) members is the only true measure of an effective Rotary club?
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