RCE Industries 2004 - The Grand Masonic Lodge of Iowa
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Transcript RCE Industries 2004 - The Grand Masonic Lodge of Iowa
Welcome!
Robert Conley, PGM
Administrator MRC
What Happened?
How did we end up here?
What can we do about it?
Where have we been?
In
1959 there were 4,000,000 Masons in
the United States
Today there are under 1,700,000
Once we made the cover of Life
Today nobody knows our name
Once we created change, today we
don’t even react to it!
©RCE Industries 2004
Lets do some thinking
What
do you believe is at the root of the
membership decline?
What
caused this problem?
©RCE Industries 2004
You Answered
Apathy
TV
Moral
Decline
No Commitment
No Concern for Tradition
Young People are just stupid
Who cares, I don’t like them anyway
©RCE Industries 2004
Keep Thinking!
What
is the average age of your Lodge?
What is the average attendance in your
Lodge?
©RCE Industries 2004
The bigger picture.
Every
group has had significant decline
in numbers.
Most organizations have not been able
to sustain themselves over the long
term.
No single answer is available.
Today we do know a great deal.
©RCE Industries 2004
It isn’t all our fault.
Society
changed.
People changed.
Generations changed.
Entertainment changed.
Education changed.
Our Membership Changed
Attitudes and Viewpoints Changed
©RCE Industries 2004
Society Changed.
Freeways
took people out of city’s
Men’s “roles” have changed since the
50’s
Women “certify” their men’s involvement
Men take a more active role in child
raising
Family structures are very different
©RCE Industries 2004
People Changed.
Men
are living longer today
Women are living even longer
Divorce rates went from 5% to 55%
The average family went from 1 home
per lifetime to 11
Adulthood begins at 28 compared to 18
More-©RCE Industries 2004
Our Members Have Changed
In
1954 Married Couples composed
80% of the Adult Population
In 2003 Married Couples composed
50.7% of the Adult Population
11% of Children were being raised by a
single parent in 1970
In 2001 that percentage had risen to
33%
©RCE Industries 2004
Generations Changed.
1900-1945,
Traditionalists-Chain of
Command, Loyal
1946-1964, Baby Boomers-Change of
Command, Competitive
1965-1979, Generation X-Don’t
Command me at all, Skeptical
1980-2000, Millenials- Don’t Command,
Collaborate, Realists
©RCE Industries 2004
Traditionalists
DiMaggio
Lindbergh
Edward
R. Murrow
Bob Hope
Pearl Harbor, Normandy, Bay of Pigs,
Korea, Victory Gardens and Radio
The New Deal and the GI Bill
©RCE Industries 2004
Baby Boomers
Martin Luther King
JFK
The Cleavers
Manson Family and the Osmond Family
Captain Kangaroo and Captain Kirk
Monkees, Beatles and the Stones
Watergate, Hanoi Hilton, Chappaquiddick,
Kent State, sit ins, Love ins, Laugh In, and
Woodstock
©RCE Industries 2004
Gen X’rs
Bill
Clinton, Bill Gates, Monica,
Ayatollah
Beavis and Butthead and OJ
MTV
Not Many Heroes
©RCE Industries 2004
Millenials
Prince
William, Chelsea Clinton, Tinky
Winky, Ricky Martin, Leonardo
DeCaprio, Kurt Cobain, Barney and the
Back Street Boys
Dawson’s Creek, Oklahoma City, Outer
space to Cyberspace, 9/11
©RCE Industries 2004
Entertainment Changed.
From Paper, to Radio, to Television.
87% of Adults get their information from
Television.
Movies make less than 20% in the theaters.
DVD’s, MP3 files, digital music and movies
downloaded from the internet will continue to
evolve, and change the entire industry,
whether the industry likes it or not.
©RCE Industries 2004
Education changed.
Today
89% of graduating seniors will go
on to a four year college.
Emphasis in Grade school on problem
solving.
Teach more, at a younger age. Schools
must be accountable.
50% of students graduating 8th grade
cannot read at a 3rd grade level.
The US is making progress with grade
school students.
©RCE Industries 2004
Education continues to
change.
The fastest growing age segment obtaining
an advanced degree or just going back to
school are senior citizens.
The concept of Life Long Learning is
becoming more predominant among all age
groups.
Groups that provide education will be able to
take advantage of these developments.
©RCE Industries 2004
Attitudes and Ideas Changed.
Diversity
will continue to expand
Children outside of Marriage is
considered normal. (by some)
Elitist organizations get a bad rap
People want to make a difference
Their organizations must be relevant
Value is expected
©RCE Industries 2004
Diversity
Projected population in the United States in
2050 will be 420 Million
By 2030 20% of Americans will be over 65.
Up from 12% in 2000
White Americans will see their percentage
drop from 69% in 2000 to 50% in 2050. In
1950 the share was 90%
We will continue to grow faster than Europe
©RCE Industries 2004
We never changed.
We
still do things exactly as we did.
We still expect society to regard us well,
without giving them reasons to.
We didn’t move when people did.
We didn’t grow when people did.
Our rituals, presentations, etc., have not
made any change since the invention of
the light bulb.
©RCE Industries 2004
What do we mean by
Relevant?
Relevant, with it, valuable, the
premier place to be.
Some Irrelevant Organizations
The
Knights of Pythias
Pan Am
Montgomery Wards
Warren Featherbone Co.
Freemasonry?
©RCE Industries 2004
Some Relevant Organizations
The
Girl Scouts
AARP
NRA
Marine corps
Jet Blue and Midwest Airlines
Lowe's & Home Depot
©RCE Industries 2004
Are We Relevant?
©RCE Industries 2004
What can be done?
Change
focus of “us” to “them”
Learn that Membership is the only
reason for our existence.
Focus on important things, not
extemporaneous things.
Give them what they want.
©RCE Industries 2004
Our Biggest Enemy (us)
5000
Recently suspended members
were polled as to their reasons for
leaving
85% Responded they left because of
one reason
They were:
IGNORED
©RCE Industries 2004
Give them what they want!
Fellowship
Friendship
Role
with the Family
Role with the Community
Chance to be the Leader
©RCE Industries 2004
Fellowship, the most
important!
Do
we provide good fellowship?
Does the leadership understand the
importance of fellowship?
What can you do to improve the
fellowship in your Lodges?
©RCE Industries 2004
It all can be called enrollment.
An
enrolled member stays.
An non-enrolled member doesn’t.
We lose more than 50% percent of our
newest members within 5 years.
What does that tell us?
Do we provide value?
©RCE Industries 2004
Enrollment?
First
impressions are lasting
Good impressions last a while, bad
impressions last longer.
Does the lodge give the member
satisfaction?
Does the experience instill pride, and
enrollment?
©RCE Industries 2004
Try This
Develop
a Checklist/of enrolling factors
Assess the current status of these
factors
Develop an action plan to minimize the
negatives
Measure your success
Visit an organization that knows how to
enroll
©RCE Industries 2004
Some positive Enrolling Steps
Talk
to the new member
Listen to the new member
No man stands alone
What does he enjoy, does he have
children, etc.
What are his skills, work, church, etc.
Uniforms, programs, communications
etc.
©RCE Industries 2004
Some More
Certificates
A small gift
Gift Certificate, Rest.
Verbal Recognition
Thank you Party
Name in Lodge
Paper
Name and Photo on
Bulletin Board
Personal note from
the Grand Master
Asked for input on
important decisions
Dinner
Thank you note from
Master
others you can think
of
©RCE Industries 2004
Negatives to Enrollment
Don’t
surprise them
Let them know what will happen to them
Don’t make them “undress” in front of a
couple of old men
Don’t ignore them
Don’t take them for granted
If your doing ritual, do it well, and
explain it
©RCE Industries 2004
Remember what they said
they wanted?
Fellowship
Friendship
Role
with the Family
Role with the Community
An opportunity to Lead and make a
difference.
©RCE Industries 2004
What does it take?
It takes Leadership!
The
effective leader of an organization
gets elected by those in his organization
based upon his ability to enroll them as
followers.
©RCE Industries 2004
The Knowing Doing Gap
The Knowing Doing Gap
Knowing
Knowledge
GAP
Doing
Time/Tasks Accomplished
©RCE Industries 2004
What causes the Gap?
Knowing
what to do is not enough.
When talk substitutes for action.
When memory is a substitute for thinking
When Fear prevents acting on knowledge
When measurement obstructs good
judgment.
©RCE Industries 2004
How do we close the gap?
Why
before How.
Knowing comes from doing and
teaching others how
Action counts more than elegant plans
and concepts
There is no doing without mistakes, how
does the leadership deal with them?
©RCE Industries 2004
Closing the gap, continued
Fear
fosters Knowing Doing Gaps, so
drive out fear.
Fight the competition, not each other.
Measure what matters, and what can
help. Turn knowledge into action.
What leaders do, how they spend their
time and allocate their resources,
matters.
©RCE Industries 2004
Something to Remember
Generation
Differences Matter
What was True might not be so now
Different Generations look at their world
differently
What are some of those different
viewpoints
How do they affect us
©RCE Industries 2004
We Need to Provide Value?
©RCE Industries 2004
Do I get my _______ Worth?
Is
it worth my time?
Is it worth my money?
Am I getting better at life, fatherhood,
husbandry, etc?
Will this help my career?
How are you going to reward me?
Others that you can think of.
©RCE Industries 2004
How did we do?
©RCE Industries 2004
Have a great day!
Go out and make a difference, the
craft needs you right now!