Freemium--A Plan for ISA Resurgence
Freemium--A Plan for ISA Resurgence
Regular paid membership will increase significantly as free members transfer to full membership through clear value offerings. The regular dialog and conversion results will provide feedback on membership value, and allow development of new member offerings. As more and more people recognize the value of membership, the conversion rates (from free to reduced-dues and then full membership) will climb to an estimated 5 percent to 15 percent, or 25,000 to 75,000 new members. This approaches the number I previously promoted as a goal and still maintain as a viable objective.
With a significantly higher number of constituents, ISA would not be wanting for leaders, editorial content and advertising revenue. Indeed, higher readership of online and printed content guarantees increased advertising rates. Many other current shortfalls will quickly disappear.
Social networking
Today, social networks strengthen and spread discussions and relationships among individuals and organizations with mutual interests. ISA must put high emphasis on the development and stimulation of an automation online community. Members must have a variety of means to stay in touch with ISA activities in their preferred areas of interest and locale, through RSS (Really Simple Syndication), e-mail, blogs and groups. Volunteer-coordinated automation interest groups and subgroups should proliferate on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Plaxo and others.
With ISA members acting as facilitators, news, information and ideas must be shared easily and effectively among members. Every section, division and committee must have its own shared workspace for effective collaboration. This is already being done through free Web sites; volunteers can simply consolidate and cooperate at first, before making ISA the primary channel.
To leverage widespread membership and audience, members must have a platform to publish their content easily, with the ability to generate immediate and effective feedback. Blogs are like traditional user forums, but also allow complex content and multimedia (images, videos and presentations) and they are easier to monitor. Too, they are more easily indexed by search engines, which raises awareness and drives more traffic to the ISA Web site.
It’s clear that ISA must re-invent itself. Before any meaningful improvements can be accomplished, governance needs to change dramatically, to avoid analysis-paralysis. The conundrum must first be solved: How to get volunteers to relinquish volunteer control?
Acknowledgement: The ideas in this article were developed with the involvement of Jon diPietro, Eoin O’Riain and Nick Sands.
Jim Pinto is an industry analyst and commentator, writer, technology futurist and angel investor. You can e-mail him at: jim@jimpinto.com. Or review his prognostications and predictions on his Web site: www.jimpinto.com.
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