IEEE-USA President's Column

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Gerard A. Alphonse, Ph.D.
2005 IEEE-USA President |

President's Column
July/August
2005
The Membership Imperative for IEEE-USA
The IEEE’s U.S. membership is IEEE-USA’s
lifeblood; it is the purpose and reason we
exist. The primary source of support for our
programs is the assessment paid by U.S. members.
At this time, the IEEE’s U.S. membership is in
steady decline, with the loss of approximately
one to two percent of higher-grade members in
our Regions (1-6) each year.
Membership attrition can be attributed to many
causes, and their effects may be cumulative. Our
membership is aging, and we lose a substantial
number of members each year as they leave the
workforce and no longer need to sustain their
careers. Student membership rates rise and fall
with enrollments, but only about 31 percent of
student members make the transition to
higher-grade membership their first year out of
college. After five years, that figure drops to
about 13 percent. The price of membership rises
with inflation, prompting individuals to make
decisions about the value of their investment,
especially in a highly competitive economy that
has seen considerable displacements in the
high-tech sector. Engineers in industry with
access to their company’s IEL subscription do
not need membership to access the IEEE technical
information they need to remain current. Some
analysts even emphasize sociological and
economic factors
— such as the time constraints on two-income
families with children — as factors which limit
free time for association membership and
volunteer commitments.
Whatever the causes, the impacts on IEEE-USA
cannot be ignored. Declining U.S. membership not
only reduces our influence in Washington, it
also creates a cycle where fewer and fewer
members contribute financially to our
operations, as well as those of corporate IEEE.
With our member-service focus, member assessment
subsidizes most of our products and services,
which we provide to members for free or at a
reduced price. As the U.S. assessment and other
costs of IEEE membership increase to cover the
shortfalls caused by inflation and declining
membership, some individuals choose to
discontinue as members, thus fueling the
downward trend.
There are two ways to break the cycle. The first
is to find a way to increase the U.S.
higher-grade membership. This would enable us to
spread our operating costs and thereby reduce
the cost of membership. The second is to develop
income sources other than dues and assessments
that would reduce the burden on members.
With regard to increasing membership, IEEE-USA
supports current efforts of the IEEE Membership
Development Committee. The IEEE will launch a
direct-mail recruiting campaign this fall that
will reach out to non-IEEE members eligible for
membership. A technical segment initiative is
also in the research phase. The latter is
designed to branch into new disciplines, such as
IT in health care and multimedia. A recently
completed telemarketing campaign restored IEEE
membership to about 3,000 U.S. and Canadian
members who had been in arrears, and was
successful in restoring over 2,600 Society
memberships.
IEEE-USA is also working to develop
non-assessment revenue sources for services that
we hope, over time, will reduce our reliance on
assessment income. The key is to identify
products and services that can be provided to
our members at little or no cost as a member
service, while generating sales among non-member
consumers. A good example of this is the new
IEEE-USA Salary Service. In exchange for
participating in the annual IEEE-USA Salary
Survey, U.S. members have free access to a
salary calculator that can be used to do
personal salary planning. At the same time,
employers are offered paid subscriptions to the
database and a set of analytical tools they can
use to track salary trends and set their
compensation models.
IEEE-USA’s great challenge is to show value for
the assessment dollar collected, and I take this
opportunity to share with you the value we
provide. Currently, your dollars support four
broad IEEE-USA program areas. IEEE-USA provides
a voice in Washington on issues that affect our
members and the profession. We engage our
government relations capabilities on a variety
of issues ranging from retirement security,
protection of intellectual property, promotion
of sound technology policies to enhance U.S.
competitiveness, electricity reliability, and
sustaining a strong domestic engineering
workforce, to name a few. We lobby directly and
through our grassroots; we place Fellows in
Congress and the State Department; we help
educate Congress about technical issues through
congressional briefings; and we educate our
membership on policy issues through speakers,
workshops, articles, and the
Eye on Washington e-mail update.
Besides government relations and technology
policies, IEEE-USA provides career and member
services aimed at enhancing non-technical skills
and promoting professional opportunities. In
addition to the new Salary Service, the
IEEE-USA Employment Navigator allows IEEE
members to connect with hiring employers, build
and send effective resumes and link to other
career resources. IEEE-USA’s
Alliance of IEEE Consultants Networks and
new entrepreneurial activities serve targeted
member segments. IEEE-USA’s
Employment and Career Services virtual community
is the Institute’s largest, with nearly 2000
subscribers who use the network to share
career-related advice and information.
IEEE-USA’s professional activities (PACE)
support efforts by local IEEE sections,
chapters, student branches, regions and
technical divisions to inform members of the
non-technical components of an engineering
career. For example, IEEE-USA has co-sponsored
32
S-PACs (Student Professional Awareness
Conferences) at colleges and universities across
the United States so far this year.
IEEE-USA’s communications programs are designed
to keep you informed of the products and
services we offer, as well as keep you up to
speed on issues affecting the profession.
IEEE-USA
Today’s Engineer is a primary
communications vehicle, appearing quarterly in
print, monthly as an online magazine and e-mail
update, and four times a year as an advertorial
in IEEE Spectrum. Our other
communications focus is improving public
awareness and appreciation of engineering, which
we do through such programs as the annual
EWeek
celebration.
IEEE-USA understands the imperative to increase
member value and control costs. The alternative
is to see the IEEE’s U.S. membership continue to
decline and watch our ability to provide
valuable products and services to you, the U.S.
member, diminish. We cannot let this happen.
You can view our strategic and operational goals
online at
www.ieeeusa.org/volunteers/strategicplan/.
And you can track our progress for the year to
date at
www.ieeeusa.org/about/yearinreview.asp. The
IEEE-USA Web site also provides links to all
applicable programs and services at
www.ieeeusa.org.
In the final analysis, we need your help to
succeed. There are two ways that you can make a
difference. The first is to actively promote
IEEE membership and participate in such
membership development efforts as the
“Member-Get-A-Member” program (www.ieee.org/organizations/rab/md/mgm.html).
The second is to give us feedback on what
IEEE-USA can do to better deliver programs and
services that you value. Send us your thoughts
and suggestions at
feedback@ieeeusa.org.
Updated:
02 January 2008
Contact: Pender M. McCarter,
p.mccarter@ieee.org
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