ACS Leadership Institute Division Track

advertisement
Table of Contents
• Introduction: Slides 7 - 11
• DAC Support for Divisions: Slide 12 - 23
• Member Communities: Slides 24 - 25
• Division Sources of Funding: Slides 26 - 34
• Get Involved, Stay Involved: Slides 37 - 46
• Division Best Practices: Slides 71 - 77
• POD Shorts: Slides 78 - 87
• Recruitment and Retention: 88 - 93
American Chemical Society
1
Ice breaker Questions
1. What is your leadership role in your Division in 2015?
1. RED – Chair or Chair-Elect
2. GREEN – Councilor
3. YELLOW – Secretary or Treasurer
4. BLUE – some other role
2. To which size class does your Division belong?
1. RED – Class I
2. GREEN – Class II
3. YELLOW – Class III
4. BLUE – don’t know
American Chemical Society
2
More Questions
3. When was your Division’s Strategic Plan updated?
1. RED – within the last 3 years
2. GREEN – between 3 and 5 years
3. YELLOW – more than 5 years
4. BLUE – don’t know
4. Has your Division received an IPG?
1. RED – YES
2. GREEN – NO
3. BLUE – don’t know
American Chemical Society
3
Final Questions
5. Does your Division have an MPPG representative?
1. RED – YES
2. GREEN – NO
3. BLUE – don’t know
6. How many technical Divisions are there?
1. RED – 10 – 20
2. GREEN – 20 – 30
3. YELLOW – 30 – 40
4. BLUE – 40 – 50
American Chemical Society
4
American Chemical Society
Welcome to the ACS
Leadership Institute Division
Track
Julie Smist, Meetings Sub-committeeChair,
Committee on Divisional Activities
American Chemical Society
DAC and Technical Divisions
Mike Morello
Chair, Committee on Divisional Activities
American Chemical Society
ACS Committees
• Joint Board-Council Committees (12)
• Society Committees (2)
• Board Committees (13)
• Council Committees (6)
• Divisional Activities*
• Economic and Professional Affairs
• Local Section Activities
• Meetings and Expositions*
• Membership Activities
• Constitution and Bylaws
• What do they do? Much of the tactical governance
work of the Society.
American Chemical Society
7
Divisions and ACS
• 32 technical divisions
• Autonomous 501(c)(3) organizations, each with its own
set of bylaws
• Division membership – approximately 37% of ACS
members choose to belong to one or more divisions
(59,162/158,401). From 2014 year-end data.
American Chemical Society
8
Why do Divisions exist?
• Provide division members and others with access to
the information and the people they need to succeed
professionally.
– I want access to my discipline’s technical/professional
information
– I want to connect and communicate with like-minded chemists.
• Provide recognition through awards,
grants/scholarships, fellowships, and other means.
American Chemical Society
9
Divisions and DAC
• Divisional Activities Committee (DAC)
– Chair: Mike Morello, 2015
– Comprised of up to 25 Division and Local Section
Councilors (lots of division representation, but we
don’t have reps from every division)
– Meets at each national meeting
American Chemical Society
10
DAC Charter
Bylaw III, 3d(1)(c)
 Study and make recommendations concerning Society
policy affecting interests of divisions
 Assist divisions in coordinating their efforts with Society
and Local Section activities
 Promote interdivisional cooperation and communication
 Cooperate with the Committee on Meetings and
Expositions….
 Perform duties incident to the creation of new
divisions……
 Acting for the Council….in approving the affiliation of
divisions with other technical organizations
American Chemical Society
11
How DAC is Structured to Serve
Divisions
• Divisional Activities Committee (DAC)
– Subcommittees
• Annual Reports
• Constitution and Bylaws
• Divisional Enhancement
• Meetings
• (Division Status)
• Multidisciplinary Program Planning Group (MPPG)
American Chemical Society
12
Annual Reports Subcommittee
• Chair: Robert Tilton
• Reviews all Division and Secretariat annual reports
• All DAC members are part of AR and review reports
American Chemical Society
13
Annual Reports
• Written by Division members to record what the
Division has accomplished in the past year
• Offer highlights of division activities
• Give ideas for other divisions to use
• Provide data for DAC to present to Council Policy
Committee
• Serve as historical documents
American Chemical Society
14
Completed Annual Reports
• Consists of Administration and Financial Form, as well
as event summaries
• Submit to DAC Support by February 15
– To be eligible for ChemLuminary Award
– Must be received before a division can receive
its annual allotment
American Chemical Society
15
Divisional Enhancement
Subcommittee
• Co-chairs: Jeannette Van Emon and Silvia Ronco
• Assists divisions with meeting their objectives
– Provides financial support
– Recognizes excellent division initiatives [through the
ChemLuminary Division Awards]
– Encourages collaboration among divisions, between
divisions and local sections, and/or society
committees, and/or external groups
American Chemical Society
16
Divisional Enhancement
Subcommittee
• Provides financial support
 Innovative Projects Fund
o 10% of annual division allotment
o Proposals and guidelines available on web, due February 1st or July 1st
• Recognizes excellent divisional initiatives
 Outstanding Division ChemLuminary Award
 Must submit annual report, self-nominate by Feb. 15
• Encourages Collaboration
 Division/Local Section ChemLuminary award co-sponsored by DAC &
Committee on Local Section Activities
American Chemical Society
17
Constitution and Bylaws
Subcommittee
• Chair: Roger Egolf
• Keeps DAC committee apprised of petitions
• Recommends an official position for the full DAC
committee to consider for distribution to the Committee
on Constitution and Bylaws and the Council
American Chemical Society
18
Meetings Subcommittee
• Co-chairs: Julianne Smist and Rodney Bennett
• Develops policy for division programming at national
meetings
• Promotes multidisciplinary programming
• Deals with meeting related topics
• Serves as liaison between DAC and Meetings and
Expositions Committee
• ACS Presentations on Demand (formerly known as
EDMC)
American Chemical Society
19
MPPG
• Chair: Luke Achenie
• Representatives from all divisions
• Responsible for planning society thematic,
multidisciplinary programming
• Operating for now as DAC subcommittee
• Will work with divisions on broader enhancements of
national meeting programming
American Chemical Society
20
DAC Activities
• Initiated thematic programming concept starting with
the 2006 fall national meeting
• Worked with M&E, ComSci to create the
Multidisciplinary Program Planning Group to oversee
continuing thematic programming
• Reviewed division allocation formula for Council: Dallas
2014
• Sponsors annual Leaders’ Track at ACS Leadership
Institute for division chairs
• Provides support to divisions
American Chemical Society
21
Divisional Officers Caucus (DOC)
• Current chair: Rodney Bennett
• Meets on Tuesday from 4-6 pm during each national
meeting
• Gathers past and present Division officers
• Unofficial forum for informal discussion of mutual
concerns
American Chemical Society
22
How to Interact with DAC?
• Meets Sundays from 8-noon at each national meeting;
guests welcome except for brief closed sessions,
subcommittees meet various times Saturday prior to
committee meeting
• At annual ACS Leadership Institute
• Website: www.acs.org/getinvolved
• E-mail: mike.morello@pepsico.com
American Chemical Society
23
ACS Office of Member
Communities
• Helps division leaders complete their volunteer duties
• Provides logistical support to divisions with respect to
division dues, officer lists, cosponsorships
• Maintains a website that supports division needs
especially those of division officers and division
volunteers
• Administers division dues and allocation payments
American Chemical Society
24
Member Communities
• Supports divisions’ efforts in the area of social media
• Supports Committee on Divisional Activities (DAC)
• Along with Web Strategies and Operations (WSO),
administers the ACS Network
American Chemical Society
25
Sources of Funding
• Division Allocations
• Semi-Annual Division Dues
• Semi-Annual Innovative Project Grants
• Thematic Program
• Division Initiatives
American Chemical Society
26
Division Dues
•
•
Division Dues
–
Division dues collected by ACS (Member & Subscriber Services)
(except RUBB)
–
Revenues distributed semi-annually to Divisions
Average Distributions January – June, 2013
– Class I: $4K
less than 2000 members
– Class II: $11K
2000-3499 members
– Class III: $31K 3500 members and larger
Division Types
–
Type I:
AGRO, BMGT, CARB, CATL, CELL, CHAL, CHAS, CINF, FLUO,
GEOC, HIST, NUCL, PROF, RUBB, SCHB, TOXI
–
Type II:
AGFD, BIOT, COLL, COMP, ENFL
–
Type III:
ANYL, BIOL, CHED, ENVR, I&EC, INOR, MEDI, ORGN, PHYS, PMSE,
POLY
American Chemical Society
27
Division Allocation
•
Average Allocations in 2013
– Class I: $14K
– Class II: $40K
– Class III: $75K
Division Types
–
Type I:
AGRO, BMGT, CARB, CATL, CELL, CHAL, CHAS, CINF, FLUO,
GEOC, HIST, NUCL, PROF, RUBB, SCHB, TOXI
–
Type II:
AGFD, BIOT, COLL, COMP, ENFL
–
Type III:
ANYL, BIOL, CHED, ENVR, I&EC, INOR, MEDI, ORGN, PHYS, PMSE,
POLY
American Chemical Society
28
Division Allocation Formula
Allotment Category
2014
2015
Base:
12.5%
15%
Per Member:
12.5%
12.5%
Innovative Projects:
10%
10%
Total Programming:
65%
62.5%
Changed designed to provide more funding to small
divisions and is anticipated to enable programming of 1 2 additional sessions per year
American Chemical Society
29
Innovative Project Grants
• Innovative Project Grants
– Innovative Project Grants Pool: 10% total division allocation
($140,050 funding available in 2013)
– Grant applications are reviewed at national meetings by the
Divisional Enhancement Subcommittee of DAC
• New Orleans, LA Distribution: $47,500
– AGFD, ANYL, CHAL, ENFL, ENVR & AGRO, IE, ORGN
• Indianapolis, IN Distribution: $87,960
– AGFD, AGRO, ANYL, BMGT, CHAS, CINF, HIST,
MEDI, ORGN, PROF, SCHB, TOXI.
American Chemical Society
30
Thematic Program
• Thematic Program Participation at each National
Meeting
– $30K provided by DAC
– Administered by ACS
– Invited speaker registrations and travel
• No honoraria
• Documented expenses reimbursed
• Division registration site, which permits divisions to invite
some speakers at a special daily rate.
American Chemical Society
31
Donations to ACS Divisions
•
Ensure that donations are sent directly to the Division
•
Designate the correct EIN or TIN number for your division. Do not use
the ACS EIN. Contact the ACS Tax Office for your Division’s EIN
•
•
Bequests should be directed to:
–
Treasurer, (Name of) Division, c/o ACS National Office
–
Bequest language found at www.acs.org/legacy
Divisions are responsible for sending all acknowledgements to donors
American Chemical Society
32
Donations to ACS from Divisions
•
Be sure to include letter with donation or write directly on check memo
designation or purpose for gift such as ACS National Awards, ACS
Scholars Program, Project SEED or Advancing Chemistry Teaching
•
Send to:
American Chemical Society
Development Office
1155 16th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
American Chemical Society
33
ACS Development
For additional information, please contact:
Kathy Fleming
Director of Development
K_fleming@acs.org
202-872-6132
Mary Bet Dobson
Assistant Director, Development
M_dobson@acs.org
202-872-4094
Or visit:
www.acs.org/donate
www.acs.org/legacy
American Chemical Society
34
Strategic planning
• Pre-planning
– Trend data (membership counts, financial data, etc.), Member
needs assessment data, and other relevant information
considered is given to the strategic planning participants in
advance of the planning session.
– Arrangements or assistance with the logistics (location, timing,
identification of stakeholders, etc.) is provided by staff.
• For more information: Contact Mark O’Brien (m_obrien@acs.org)
American Chemical Society
35
Break-out 1: What are your key
challenges?
What is your role?
• Setting vision?
• Ensuring task completion?
What are the unique benefits of being a
member of your division?
• How do you communicate those
benefits?
How does your division interact with/
engage members?
• Within the division
• ACS members not in your division
• International chemists
Get Involved, Stay Involved
(GISI)
• This online resource is where you’ll find tips, tools and news to
efficiently execute your volunteer duties.
• Online resource for veteran volunteers and new volunteers with
essential links of volunteer procedures and resources
specifically geared towards Divisions.
• Links are organized according to topic areas: Logistics,
National Meetings, Engaging Members, Event & Meeting
Planning, Leadership Skills, Division Information.
• The most time sensitive items and communications are listed to
the right in the “What’s Important Now!” area.
• www.acs.org/getinvolved
American Chemical Society
37
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
•
Resources for
–
–
–
–
Technical Divisions
Local Sections
Outreach Coordinators
Quick Volunteer
Opportunities
– Silver Circle
– ACS on Campus
• It’s your one-stop
shop for resources
technical division
leaders need to be
successful.
American Chemical Society
38
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
American Chemical Society
39
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
Resources are grouped into these
six sections for Division Leaders
•
Operations
•
National Meetings
•
Engaging Members
•
Event & Meeting Planning
•
Leadership Skills
•
Division Information
American Chemical Society
40
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
Operations
The tools you need to help you
run your division.
– Annual report resources
– Financials (dues, taxes, etc.)
– Election/Bylaw information
American Chemical Society
41
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
National Meetings
– MAPS information
– Program Chair resources
American Chemical Society
42
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
Engaging Members
Tools for member communication,
recruitment, and recognition.
– ACS Network
– Best Practices
– eRosters
– Grants & Awards
American Chemical Society
43
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
Event & Meeting Planning
Resources for events outside of
ACS National Meetings.
– Local Section Events
– Regional Meetings
– Science Cafés
American Chemical Society
44
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
Leadership Skills
All things related to the ACS
Leadership Development System.
Note: Slides and other information from the 2015 ACS Leadership Institute
will be posted in this section following the event.
American Chemical Society
45
Get Involved, Stay Involved
www.acs.org/getinvolved
Division Information
Demographic info about divisions,
ACS staff and DAC resources, as
well as answers to the most
frequently asked questions
about divisions.
American Chemical Society
46
Annual Reports—FORMS
• FORMS (Forms Online Reporting Management
System) is the web-based tool for division annual
reporting.
• Two parts: administration and financial.
– Each form has mandatory fields.
– Information helps DAC to evaluate the activity level as
well as the
• Events are optional but they do drive the
ChemLuminary nomination process
• 2014 Reports are due February 15th, 2015.
• www.acs.org/FORMS
American Chemical Society
47
Annual Reports—FORMS
•
www.acs.org/FORMS
American Chemical Society
48
Administration Form
American Chemical Society
49
FORMS Features
• Financial Form Excel Template
– Financial form can be completed offline and
uploaded into FORMS
• Return Forms
– Chairs can return a submitted Administration or
Financial form to the Secretary or Treasurer
• Copying Events
– Events can be copied to speed up the event creation
process
• Best Practices Tab
American Chemical Society
50
American Chemical Society
ACS Fellows &
National Awards
ACS Leadership Institute
January 23, 2015
Ms. Martha K. Lester, Staff Liaison
ACS Board Committee on Grants & Awards
ACS Fellows Program
Mission:
To recognize and honor members who have
made significant contributions that have a lasting
impact in the chemical sciences and who also
have provided exceptional volunteer service in
the ACS community.
American Chemical Society
52
ACS Fellows Program
• One large group of ACS members are
significantly under-represented in the pool of
nominees:
– Industry
American Chemical Society
53
2014 ACS Fellows Data
Nominees
Male
Female
Academia
Industry
Government
77%
23%
74%
12%
8%
Recipients ACS Membership*
67%
33%
62%
18%
10%
71%
29%
36%
54%
8%
*Data Source: 2013 ACS Membership Survey
American Chemical Society
54
Your Help Is Needed
Technical Divisions can be key players by:
Increasing the number of outstanding individuals
nominated for the Fellows Program, especially
those from industry
– Identifying individuals from your division who will
be responsible for identifying good nominees
– Encouraging your members to submit
nominations (call for nominations opens Feb. 1,
closes April 1)
American Chemical Society
55
National Awards Program
Mission:
• To promote and deliver a high-quality
recognition program that highlights the
contributions of members of the chemistry
enterprise by actively engaging chemical
practitioners worldwide.
American Chemical Society
56
National Awards Program
• 65 National Awards
– 46 technical
– 19 non-technical
• More than 800 nominations received annually;
987 received for 2016 cycle
• Call for nominations opens July 1, closes Nov. 1
American Chemical Society
57
National Awards Program
• Two large groups of ACS members are
significantly under-represented in the pool of
nominees, especially for the technical awards:
– Women
– Industry
American Chemical Society
58
ACS National Awards
2015 Nominee Demographic Data
(65 awards)
Male
Female
Academia
Industry
Government
ACS
Nominees Recipients* Membership**
83%
82%
71%
17%
18%
29%
91%
78%
36%
5%
17%
54%
3%
5%
8%
*Data Source: Chemical and Engineering News, annual announcement of National Award recipients
**Data Source: 2013 ACS Membership Survey
American Chemical Society
59
2015 ACS National Awards
(46 technical awards)
ACS
Division
Nominees Recipients* Membership** Membership***
Female
Industry
10%
4%
10%
4%
29%
54%
~29%
~35%
*Data Source: Chemical and Engineering News, annual announcement of National Award recipients
**Data Source: 2013 ACS Membership Survey
***Data Source: Combination of 2013 Membership Survey results and member record information
American Chemical Society
60
Division Sponsors
• I&EC: ACS Award in Industrial Chemistry
• CHED: George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical
Education (Cengage Learning, co-sponsor)
• COMP: ACS Award for Computers in Chemical and
Pharmaceutical Research
• ENVR: ACS Award for Creative Advances in
Environmental Science and Technology (ACS Pubs, cosponsor)
• NUCL: Glenn T. Seaborg Award for Nuclear Chemistry
• PHYS: E. Bright Wilson Award in Spectroscopy
• PHYS: Irving Langmuir Award in Chemical Physics (GE
Global Research, co-sponsor)
American Chemical Society
61
Benefits of Sponsorship
• Highlighted several times in C&EN
• Featured on recipients’ certificate/award
• Featured at the annual ACS Awards Banquet
• Recognized on the ACS awards website and in
all printed materials about the Awards
• Highlighted in press releases sent to award
recipients’ local publications
American Chemical Society
62
Current Cost of Division
Sponsorship (annual)
$5,000
Cash Award
$ 500
Certificate
$1,350
Admin fee
$2500
Travel
$9,350
American Chemical Society
63
Current Cost for a Division to
Endow an Award
$300,000
American Chemical Society
64
Awards without Sponsors
• ACS Award for Achievement for the Teaching
and Learning of Chemistry
• James Bryant Conant Award in High School
Chemistry
• ACS Award in Theoretical Chemistry
American Chemical Society
65
Your Help Is Needed
Technical Divisions can be key players by:
1. Increasing the number of outstanding
individuals nominated for ACS National Awards,
especially women and individuals from industry
– Identifying individuals from your division who will
be responsible for identifying good nominees
– Encouraging your members to submit
nominations
American Chemical Society
66
Your Help Is Needed
2. Recommending technical experts for
appointment to Canvassing and Selection
Committees.
3. Providing the Awards Office with contact
information of potential sponsors for unsupported
awards in your field of expertise.
4. Sponsoring/endowing a national award.
American Chemical Society
67
New: Division Primer
• Written for Division Executive
Committee/Awards Committee Chair
• Provides overview of the ACS National Awards
Program
• Includes details regarding canvassing,
nominating & selection processes
• Provides financial information on sponsoring an
award
American Chemical Society
68
Conclusion
• More individuals from industry need to be
nominated for the Fellows Program
• More women and individuals from industry need
to be nominated for National Awards
• More outstanding women need to be nominated
for technical awards
• Your assistance is crucial to solving these
problems.
69
American Chemical Society
Questions?
American Chemical Society
70
Division Best Practices
Situation Analysis
Background Information
• What was investigated
• Top level result overview
Proposed next steps: DAC & Divisions
Request
• Value of proposal
• Critique on action plans
• Support to share with ExComs
Best Practices Situation Analysis
Common
Challenges
Similar
Programs
Limited
Collaboration
American Chemical Society
Assumptions:
Divisions are resource constrained
Divisions have created innovative
programs
One program doesn’t work for all
divisions
Easier – faster to adapt than
create programs
Best Practice: Technique or
methodology that, through
experience and research, has
proven to reliably lead to desired
results
72
Input from Divisions
•
Common Challenges:
– Funding to deliver meeting content, Member engagement, Volunteer
recruitment and engagement, Communication with members
•
Division Annual Report Best Practice Input: 9 categories, 32 divisions =
288 responses
– Develop volunteers, Recruit volunteers, Provide meeting content, Member
benefits, Benefits to members not attending National Meetings, Information to
members, activities for younger chemists, Division Awards
•
IPGs 2012 – 2014: 69 total
Web Information/ service: 9
Member outreach/ recruiting: 16
Web collaboration: 2
Marketing: 2
Young chemist/ student support: 17
Diversity: 1
Regional Meeting support: 3
Division Enhancement: 3
International outreach: 12
American Chemical Society
73
Examples of Divisional
International Outreach
AGFD
ANYL
CHAS
CHAL
joint symposium in Thailand on April 3-4, 2014.
working with the RSC on joint programming ideas.: FACSS meeting in the
US.
scientist from Iraq attended a National ACS meeting.
Working with a pharma/biotech forum in China. European attorneys
present on EU law at the ACS national meetings.
HIST
translation and publication of research document on "false elements”
ORGN
Travel grants to exchange graduate students to and from Europe to
attend conferences overseas.
POLY
PMSE
PMSE
See answer to previous question.
2 joint symposia: one in China in 2012 and the other in the US in 2013.
sponsored a session with the Chinese Chemical Society -- Polymer
Division in 2012
American Chemical Society
74
ACS INTERNATIONAL MEMBERS
18.8%
www.acs.org/international
American Chemical Society
75
Next steps: Best Practice Sharing
•
DAC
– Shares Best Practices overview with division ExComs
– Creates electronic sharing site for Best Practices
– Makes POD short technology available for division promotions
– Shares data on division membership by local section
– Host bi-monthly conference call for division leaders
– Engages MAC to assist with recruitment/ engagement
•
Divisions
– Collect Best Practices on a separate “FORM”
– IPG report becomes a poster
– Division creates and a “who we are” Poster
– Division displays IPG and information posters at SciMix, etc.
American Chemical Society
76
Discussion
• Would developing tools to help share Best Practices be
valued by your division?
• Would your division participate in sharing – adapting
Best Practices?
• Feedback – comments on next steps/ action plans:
• Would you add steps
• Would you eliminate steps
• What would you like done first
• Would you help sell this to your ExComs?
American Chemical Society
77
POD Shorts
John C. Katz
Director, Member Communities
Staff Liaison, Committee on Divisional Activities
American Chemical Society
Big Idea
ACS is in a global competition to obtain and
disseminate high-quality scientific information.
To further that goal, we want to make it as easy
as possible for people to contribute – and
consume – content that will help them advance.
American Chemical Society
79
Presentations on Demand
Since the 2009 Salt Lake City meeting, ACS has
been capturing and posting selected, full-length
presentations delivered at national meetings.
Content includes audio-synced slides and audio.
American Chemical Society
80
Cost/Benefit of POD
Benefit: Selected speakers at national meetings receive
greater exposure for their work.
Benefit: More ACS members can access content
delivered at national meetings, whether or not they
attended the meeting.
Cost: Expensive to capture due to labor and equipment
costs in hotels and convention centers.
American Chemical Society
81
Challenge: How to Capture/Share
Content at a Lower Cost
POD Shorts Concept:
Participating presenters use 3-5 minutes of video
time to share – with or without slides - what they
think their fellow scientists most need to know
about their presentation.
American Chemical Society
82
POD Shorts Advantages
• Potential appeal to a wider range of NM presenters
• Shorter pieces of content may be more inviting to consume for
time-challenged audiences
• Presenters may record and review their presentation, doing
several “takes” in our ‘studio’
• Presenter can talk, present in a regular format with slides, a
combination of both, or even conduct a question and answer with
a colleague.
• ACS staff can capture and disseminate POD Shorts at a fraction of
the cost of full-length POD
American Chemical Society
83
POD Shorts in Denver
Run an experiment to find out:
1. Are speakers interested in participating in this
concept?
2. Are audiences interested in consuming this
content?
3. Can staff readily schedule, capture, and post
40-50 POD Shorts?
American Chemical Society
84
Process for Denver
January 27: Message sent to division chairs alerting them
to POD Shorts process
February 4: To save divisions time/effort, staff will contact
all Denver oral presenters inviting them to participate
(first-come/first serve)
March 4: Deadline for presenter response
March 11: Staff confirm day/time appointments to the 4050 POD Short participants
American Chemical Society
85
Post-Denver
• POD Shorts to be posted with POD content
approx. 4 weeks after meeting
• Assess Denver POD Shorts experiment with
DAC in Boston
• If results support, possibly capture 90-100 POD
Shorts in Boston
American Chemical Society
86
Summary
• POD Shorts is an effort to expand opportunities for
people to contribute and consume content.
• Leverages the value of information delivered at national
meetings.
• Provides greater exposure for presenters.
• Provides for economical capture and distribution of
content.
Big Question: Will presenters and audience respond
favorably?
American Chemical Society
87
Recruiting, Retaining,
Engaging ACS Division
Members
American Chemical Society
• Does your division have a strategy?
• How does your division let others know who
you are?
• How does your division communicate to
– Members?
– ACS members not in your division?
– Students?
– International chemists?
• How does your division ask for volunteers?
• How does your division leverage lies to journals?
American Chemical Society
89
Free Division Membership Data
24,113 new members joined ACS in 2013. Of that number, 9,184 joined a
division at no cost.
During 2014, 33% of those who joined a division at no cost in 2013 paid to
extend their division membership, or purchase another division membership.
Put another way:
•
38% of those eligible for a free division membership in 2013 availed
themselves of the offer.
•
Of those who tried a division for free in 2013, 33% saw sufficient value to
renew with that division, or pay for a different division membership.
American Chemical Society
90
What divisions are doing
• Webinar Program to Enhance the AGRO Membership Experience
• PHYS Undergraduate and Young Faculty Mentoring at ACS
National Meetings
• Inaugural ACS-PMSE/Chinese Chemical Society-Polymer Division
(CCS-PD) Joint Symposium on Polymers, Chengdu, China.
• Involve existing POLY/PMSE student chapters in assisting
students and faculty at other colleges and universities in
establishing new chapters.
• Attract leading scientists, regulators, and pest control practitioners
to interactive discussion sessions on how best to increase the
development and use of biopesticides
• Teach chemistry students how to translate the scientific
discoveries into commercial products or services.
American Chemical Society
91
What divisions are doing
•
Encourages student members to develop their science communication
and teamwork skills in a creative environment while concurrently learning
about chemistry through the lens of Cajun cuisine.
•
Teach chemistry students how to translate the scientific discoveries into
commercial products or services.
•
Develop and implement an online laboratory safety training course and
certification program designed to document proficiency to potential
employers in industry and academia.
•
Bring archaeologists, conservators, and other scientists together who use
chemical methods of analysis.
•
Offer the first multi-day medicinal chemistry course in India, serving as the
basis for additional scientific exchanges in the future.
•
rain Division members in an interactive, entrepreneurial workshop, to
translate their research into innovation and job creation.
American Chemical Society
92
Resources: What Will You Tap,
and When?
•
Committee on Divisional Activities (DAC)
•
ACS Staff, particularly Member Communities
•
Get Involved Stay Involved (GISI Website)
•
Funding Sources (Annual Allocation/Twice Yearly Dues/IPG/MPPG
•
Leadership Advisory Board Strategic Planning Retreats
•
Development Office Staff (if you expect donations to your division)
•
Recruiting/Retaining Members
•
Division Best Practices (if you don’t want to reinvent the wheel)
•
Becoming More Active Internationally
•
Leveraging Content Delivered at National Meetings
American Chemical Society
93
Break-out 3
American Chemical Society
Division Leaders
Track
Sunday, January 25th
Leadership Courses
• What did you learn?
• What will you apply?
• What else would you like?
Final discussion: What is
your job?
How does your divisional operating
structure fit with what you have learned?
Are you responsible for decisions (CEO)?
Are you responsible for execution (COO)?
What do you need to do?
What can you delegate?
When do you need to do it?
Who can you turn to for help:
In your division?
At ACS?
Download