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Changing our chapter or council Seven Dysfunctions and how to change them AND “You Make The Call”

Changing our chapter or council

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Changing our chapter or council. Seven Dysfunctions and how to change them AND “You Make The Call”. The key issue is…. Culture . “What we do when we don’t think about it…the unwritten bylaws…it’s what we are as opposed to what we could or might be ” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Changing our chapter or council

Changing our chapter or council

Seven Dysfunctions and how to change them AND

“You Make The Call”

Page 2: Changing our chapter or council

The key issue is…Culture. “What we do when we

don’t think about it…the unwritten bylaws…it’s what we are as opposed to what we could or might be”

What is the culture of your chapter or council?

Page 3: Changing our chapter or council

To understand that cultureIs a powerful force.

Can be changed.

Is a product in part of the members.

But you have to ask questions and challenge the way that things are done.

Page 4: Changing our chapter or council

1)The elected leader is…DictatorialPassiveIneffectiveCan’t/Won’t delegateCommittees are dysfunctionalIs an amplification device for the

organization.

Page 5: Changing our chapter or council

Some officers…

Page 6: Changing our chapter or council

2) No strategic plan

We fear organization.We focus upon the trivial because

it is easy. We avoid the challenging, difficult,

tough issues.We don’t have time to do it right

but we always have time to do it over.

Page 7: Changing our chapter or council

3) Meetings are a mess.Start late.Food, beverages, smoking, phones.Repetitious. Boring. No agenda or

a “kind of” agenda.No development of the

organization. This is your 1 opportunity that week. Make it count.

Page 8: Changing our chapter or council

4) The few, the loud, the idiots.

We allow the loud to dominate the organization.

We bystand while the idiots define our organization.

We use terms such as “Brotherly” to justify our inaction.

We don’t challenge or push back.

Page 9: Changing our chapter or council
Page 10: Changing our chapter or council

5) At the council level…We elect or appoint the youngest and least effective members to governing council representative positions. We neither inspire nor encourage members to move us forward.

Page 11: Changing our chapter or council

6) The elephants go unchallenged.

It’s always “Next semester”

It’s always, “We can’t change quickly”

It’s always, “Lowest common denominator”

Page 12: Changing our chapter or council

Don’t allow the elephant in the room to stand there. Push it over.

Page 13: Changing our chapter or council

We need to push the elephants over

Page 14: Changing our chapter or council

7) We are fearful of change.

“Change is inevitable. Progress is optional”

“Everyone loves progress. No one likes change”

Page 15: Changing our chapter or council
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The Struggle Bus

Page 18: Changing our chapter or council

Get macro.Get micro.

Define it.

Page 19: Changing our chapter or council

Define it: Make it a sentence or twoSome members of the chapter are engaged in

hazing.

We have a % of members who see ABG as “Beer and men/women”

Some members are using drugs.

Most members are distant and apart from the institution and the national organization.

Page 20: Changing our chapter or council

What are the issues?Eliminate the euphemisms: Kinda,

sorta, maybe, like, technically and the generalities…”Nationals university, the campus paper, our alumnae/alumni…”

Culture hides in non-specific terms.

Page 21: Changing our chapter or council

YMTC: The NIU visit…“Dave, what do you think our major problem is?”

Page 22: Changing our chapter or council

Easy. One word.

Selfish.

Page 23: Changing our chapter or council

Having “That” meeting

New Board Member syndrome: “I’m going to go there and straighten them out”

Really. Really?

We can do better than that.

Page 24: Changing our chapter or council

Things to considerHome or Away gameTimingSeatingVoluntary or MandatoryAV, HandoutsInput Elephants

Page 25: Changing our chapter or council

Button questionsWe’re going to reduce NME to six

weeks

We’re going to eliminate ‘senior standards’

We’re going to change how we operate.

Page 26: Changing our chapter or council

Make it an away gameGet a room on campus.

Page 27: Changing our chapter or council

This?

Page 28: Changing our chapter or council

Or this?

Page 29: Changing our chapter or council

Voluntary or Mandatory?

“If you care, you’re there”

Or, “We want all sophomores and freshmen there—optional for others”

Page 30: Changing our chapter or council

The Venturi President

Page 31: Changing our chapter or council

“Why are we here?”The windshield wiper effect

P

Page 32: Changing our chapter or council

YMTC: At the University of New Hampshire

Wynn Smiley, your CEO, will make a recommendation to your High Council:

“Maintain the charter or withdraw or revoke it”

Schedule: President @ 2:00; EC @ 3:00; chapter meeting @ 4:00 p.m.

Page 33: Changing our chapter or council

Meeting @ 2 p.m. Younger Older

EC

Younger

Page 34: Changing our chapter or council

About 30+ present of 60+Relatively even distribution among classes on roster.

Estimated 15 sophomores, 8-10 juniors, 4-5 seniors present.

Whazzup?

Page 35: Changing our chapter or council

YMTC: Meeting at Ball StateUnderperforming.Average 23 on a campus with (at that time) ACS of 60+.

Alumni are enablers.

Page 36: Changing our chapter or council

Me

Page 37: Changing our chapter or council

Change requires:Define the challenges, issues or

“opportunities”Gather those who believeLeadRemember that status quo is

tough. Motivation comes at different times to different people.

Page 38: Changing our chapter or council

And your Ritual is your gps.