TRADE ASSOCIATIONS A New Form Of Networking
Seventy percent of Americans belong to one association. Twenty five
percent belong to four or more associations. Our professional existence is
held together by the network of people with whom we share common interests,
even common goals. As technology gives us new ways to link up, communicate
and share ideas, our need to identify with a collective presence reflects
our need to become more significant. Today, this need is being fulfilled
by privately organized, managed and funded trade associations.
FOR-PROFIT
If there ise anything that drives any venture to succeed, the principal
motivation is profit - the commercial purpose for which any trade activity
exists. Because we still maintain a mindset that associations should
not be a money-making venture, it is difficult to imagine a trade association
as a for-profit representative body of a particular trade.
However, as the efficiency, agility and productiveness of for-profit
trade associations become evident, members become more confident that operating
a for-profit trade assaociation is the only way to guarantee that the
association will remain productive and beneficial to its members.
OBJECTIVES
Unless your primary reason for creating a trade association is to lobby
issues in Washington, your association's principal objective should
more or less focus on information sharing.
If you are creating a trade association as a forum for its memgbers
to share ideas about their trade, it is essential that you provide your
members this vehicle by which they can communicate, maybe even interact.
BEYOND MEMBERSHIP
Since most associations get started with low membership dues, usually
in the $20 to $30 bracket. Many associations are lucky to break even
on membership dues alone. To guarantee its healthy existence, its financial
foundations should expand beyond being exclusively dependent on membership
dues.
Although most trade associations start off with a newsletter, it is
in an ideal position to organize conventions (that provide members a forum
to network, meet suppliers, and hear experts) which can be a prime money
maker for the association.