IEEE-USA President's Column

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Ralph W. Wyndrum,
Jr.
2006 IEEE-USA
President |
President's Column
May
2006
The Value of Membership: It's About Access
I’m not a medical doctor but I like to take the
pulse of my fellow IEEE members wherever I go —
figuratively speaking, of course. As IEEE-USA
president, it behooves me to find out all I can
about my colleagues’ concerns and aspirations.
There are several common threads in the feedback
I get, threads that are symptomatic of the
American engineering profession today. Among the
reported comments are the feeling of being
sidelined on the job due to rusty skills, the
desire for more connection to one’s peers,
concerns about keeping one’s innovative edge,
and even the simple desire to save money with
better insurance policies and credit card
arrangements. I am dedicated to solving these
issues.
But there is an overriding theme to these
conversations whether it is spoken or implied:
Engineers are asking about the value — both
monetary and otherwise — of being an IEEE
member.
Value is a subjective and amorphous issue — one
of those “one man's fish is another man’s poisson” discussions. But it is legitimate and
germane in these times when the ground under our
feet is not what it used to be. That’s why I
relish the opportunity to talk about the return
on investment of IEEE membership. In terms of
continuing education programs, benefits, fast
and useful online tools, professional
literature, public awareness and advocacy, the
value is considerable.
But there’s another measurement that ties all
the others together, especially in these
information-laden times. It’s not mentioned in
so many words on the assessment breakdown, but
it’s there. I’ll call it Access.
Certainly membership dollars fuel the creation
of vital products. But access is the switch that
makes all this “wiring” come to life for you.
It’s the difference between your taking valuable
time to track down courses on your own (and
paying top fees for them), or taking advantage
of such focused, affordable mid-career training
and other vital educational aids as
Expert Now IEEE, the
Education Partners Program, and
Leadership for Results, to mention a mere
few. If you're not familiar with Expert Now
IEEE, it's a new and innovative tool that
delivers the best IEEE educational offerings
directly to your desktop. In a unique offering,
U.S. members can try it now for free for a
limited time, while earning CEUs. All you need
is an Internet connection and an IEEE Web
account to try it out. (Learn more at
www.ieee.org/web/education/secure/Expert_Now_IEEE/trials.html)
Instead of grappling with the vast number of job
listings scattered among hundreds of employers’
sites, you can instantly plug into
Career Navigator,
Employment Navigator and the
IEEE Job Site. Want to reach out to your
peers? Access the
Employment and Career Strategies Virtual
Community. Want to know where you stand, and
what the outlook is, in your area of expertise?
Check out the surveys on salary and employment.
These are just a handful of “instant
gratification” tools for furthering your career
prospects.
On another time horizon, IEEE-USA provides a
different kind of access: access to
policy-makers through its government relations
efforts and the
legislative action center as well as
opportunities for you to participate directly on
one or more of eleven policy-related committees
with issues from the specific (medical
technology) to the broad (intellectual
property). This is when the value of belonging
to the IEEE comes from what you bring to it.
Let no one forget that we are a frontier-making
profession. IEEE-USA is now pursuing the
establishment of an Innovation Institute, where
the concept of access takes on blood-stirring
dimensions. We plan to recruit the most
incisive, creative minds in electrotechnology to
teach workshops to top students on the
principles and process of innovation, with the
ultimate goal of keeping this fresh thinking on
U.S. soil, in U.S. jobs. (Read more about this
on our Web site at
http://innovation.ieeeusa.org)
We will continue finding dynamic new ways to
power-up the careers and reputation of American
electrotechnology engineers.
Updated:
12 February 2008
Contact: Pender M. McCarter,
p.mccarter@ieee.org
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