At the end of the year, many bloggers present their
trends for the year. I am not going to
be so bold, but I will share some observations of what I have seen and discussed
with dozens of membership professionals over the past 12 months.
Let me combine these thoughts into five observations.
1. Growth of Online Marketing:
More and more marketing dollars are moving toward various forms of online
advertising. The money is clearly coming out of print advertising and other
channels. Membership organizations are
using Google Search and Content, Facebook and LinkedIn ads, Google Remarketing,
and web ads to initiate a dialogue with a prospective member by gaining an
email opt-in request to start and relationship with the organization. These digital marketing methods are being adopted
because they are track able, scalable, measurable and global.
2. Squeezed Marketing Budgets: During
this past year, I have seen some rather large associations cut budgets for
membership recruitment. At the same
time, I have interacted with a number of moderate to small organizations who
report surprisingly inadequate budgets to accomplish their membership goals. Money
for marketing appears to be scarcer, so cost justification and marketing
smarter are understandably more important than ever.
3. Growth of Data Analytics:
Perhaps out of a need to market smarter, data analytics has taken a much more
prominent position in membership marketing.
Good analytics can tell you who the best candidates are to recruit, who are
most likely to renew, and what strategy will produce the best membership
ROI. The ability to track and analyze is
more important than ever.
4. Senior Association Staff Transitions: Over the past year, I have spoken with more
senior association staff members that are either out of work or looking for new
career opportunities. Perhaps it is
because of the tight budgets noted earlier or because they were remaining in a
position until the economy began to improve.
Whatever the reason, there are some very talented association staff that
are looking to move into new positions.
5. Average to Above Average Growth in
Membership Counts: The combination of innovative new strategies
like online marketing and data analytics and budget cuts has resulted in most
organizations experiencing only average to above average outcomes in membership
marketing. The groups with above average
growth have often also used aggressive pricing strategies to bring in new
members. But most organizations it
appears have seen single digit growth or slight declines in their membership
numbers this past year.
As I write this, I realize that in many ways, membership
organizations reflect the economy as a whole with slow growth, a move to web
and digital communications, and a sluggish job market. In
January, we will be launching our next Membership Marketing Benchmarking
Survey. So it will be interesting to see
if my small sampling of observations from this past year is accurate across a
much broader audience.
What have you observed in your 2013 membership marketing
experiences? Please feel free to share
your thoughts.
1 comment:
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