 “Can you believe it?” one of my dinner companions asked, awe in her voice. “I mean, we've been coming to national meetings for all these years, usually looking for something to take back with us—some idea or trend or event which would justify our attendance. This convention, we are right in the middle of a whirlwind of real excitement.” She was speaking of the annual convention of the National Association of Realtors, held recently in San Diego, and her statement clearly articulated the mood of the meeting. For once the excitement was real, not generated by banners and balloons and hype. It was tangible and intoxicating. Meetings were filled to capacity, hallway talk was animated, and twitters were piling up at #NAR09 and several less official channels. I couldn't avoid remembering the countless times I'd been a part of planning committees for member meetings and conventions, and how desperately we'd tried to think of ways to generate this kind of excitement and participation. We'd held countless 50's Mixers, free food and drink in the Expo area, honorary celebrations for Realtor-of-the-year, discount registrations, door prizes and gift basket raffles. And still, even in our finest moments, only a miniscule percentage of members attended and those were usually yawning behind their hands and departing before the final event. What made the difference this time? It was this: the National Association of Realtors was embracing innovation—significant, risky, breath-taking change. NAR was saying to members, “Hey! Listen up! We're not trying to stuff the change genie back in the bottle any more. The transformation of the real estate business is a reality, and we're ON it!” The most obvious change NAR announced was a multi-million dollar commitment to Realtor Property Resource, a national property database for members. Of course there were grumbles, finger-pointings, and peekers-under-the-bed. But the pure fact of the matter was that this tool was long overdue, and is happily embraced by the average member (whose only vested interest is in his or her own professional success). Better yet, the commitment had been made: there would be no 6-hour box-lunch directors meetings with 800+ uninformed directors trying to make a business decision of a 12 million dollar magnitude: this was a done deal. “Just work out the details of implementation—RPR is a necessary step and we've taken it.” Be that as it may. I must add, as a 30-year veteran of Realtor association management, NAR's most significant change effort was in the announcement of the “Game Changers” winners. The background is this: in August, NAR announced to its more than 800 associations and specialty divisions that it wanted propositions for 'game changing ideas', ideas which would significantly transform the profile of the association and which could be utilized by all members as a resource. In return, NAR would fund and assist in the implementation of these ideas. Once again there were folks who were on their knees, lifting the dust ruffle and peeking under the bed for boogeymen. But there were over 200 entries, twelve winners, and 20 runners-up. The announcements of the winners included an astonishing display of new ideas, many of which clearly challenged existing traditions in governance and policy. The winners included everything from the development of member communications and virtual fund-raising to public relations programs and consumer membership categories. And not only did NAR fund the implementation of winning ideas, it also hired consultants to work with each of the winners to make sure each idea had a good chance of success. The goal is to produce a working guide for each program, a blueprint for success that others may adopt in their own operations. This is association change which originates at the grassroots level, not from the top down. And the unspoken result will be the opportunity to watch some counterproductive association policies, practices and assumptions wither and disappear in the face of fresh new programs. Watch my lips: can you say 'member benefit'? I think NAR said just that at its November Convention, and we all came away with renewed optimism and belief in the real estate industry. Sure beats the heck out of poodle skirts and a sock-hop mixer. |