Why I write

Why I write

Thirty years ago, I started a new job as director of membership for a small trade association. It was my first real membership position, having worked in marketing and communications for four years prior at another trade association.

While I knew how associations worked, I had no real idea how to recruit, manage, and retain membership. Luckily, my office was located just a couple of blocks from ASAE's offices. ASAE's offices contained a library of books all about association management. (Remember, this was effectively before the internet existed.)

And so I spent hours every week at that library or with books I had purchased from ASAE, learning everything I could about how to be a membership manager in an association. And, in part thanks to those books, I was successful at doing something I had never done before.

Most of the authors of those books and articles were volunteers. They were unpaid. But they took the time to share their wisdom with others, and I've been forever grateful for that.

And so, that is why I write. I write because I believe I have experiences and knowledge (dare I say wisdom) that might be helpful to someone else attempting to go down a path I've already been down.

And maybe someday they will share their knowledge with someone else.

Wes's Wednesday Wisdom Archives

Dashboards for Data Integrity

February 3, 2021

Dashboards for Data Integrity I’ve written a bunch on data integrity reports. (Click here for […]

Next-to-Nothing Goals

January 27, 2021

Next-to-Nothing Goals I saw a Ted Talk by Christine Carter recently discussing the concept of […]

Just because you can…

January 20, 2021

Just because you can… In response to a recent Wednesday Wisdom on averages hiding the […]

Always ask “Why?”

January 13, 2021

Always ask “Why?” Little kids ask “Why?” all the time, because they are sponges for […]

Averages hide the extremes

January 6, 2021

Averages hide the extremes I can’t remember where I first heard it, but “averages hide […]

Look up PARTIAL names!

December 24, 2020

Look up PARTIAL names! Train your staff to do look ups on partial names, not full […]

Not Just Technology

December 16, 2020

Not Just Technology There was recently a discussion on the ASAE online community about project management […]

Consider quitting

December 4, 2020

Consider quitting Patient: “Doctor, it hurts when I do this.” Doctor: “Then stop doing that.” […]

There is nothing so permanent as business rules

November 25, 2020

There is nothing so permanent as business rules Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman said, “There’s nothing […]

Budget for feature discovery and adoption

November 18, 2020

Budget for feature discovery and adoption When developing a budget for implementation of a new […]

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top