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2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006 16 September 2006

2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

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Page 1: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

2006 GOLD CongressAffinity Group Basics

Lori HoganLori HoganRegion 7 GOLD CoordinatorRegion 7 GOLD Coordinator

IEEE Canada GOLD CongressIEEE Canada GOLD Congress16 September 200616 September 2006

Page 2: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

- Local unit of an IEEE entity or standing committee established by petition to parent entity (GOLD, Consultants Network, Women in Engineering, Life members)

- Formation petition requires signatures of 6 GSM-grade or higher members in good standing

- Activities/meetings reported to both Section and parent entity (remember CCs on electronic L31 form!!)

What is an AG?

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 3: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

R7 GOLD AGs and Chairs

• Canadian Atlantic (recent): Charles Cooke • Hamilton: ??• Kitchener/Waterloo: Scott Hafeman • Montréal: Jean-Claude Latortue • Newfoundland-Labrador (recent): Jon Anderson and Lori Hogan• Northern Canada: Shyam Chadha• Northern Saskatchewan: Dan Coode• Ottawa: Mark Van Delst• Southern Alberta: Ahsan Upal• South Saskatchewan: Tonia Batten• St. Maurice: Alexis Bilodeau• Toronto: Aleksandra Jeremic• Vancouver: Jin Ng• Victoria: Subhasis Nandi• Winnipeg: Justin Olivier

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 4: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

What’s the least an AG can do?

• Two meetings a year reported to Section and GOLD Committee

• Have a Chair to oversee the group and liaison with the Section and Regional GOLD Committee

• Communicate with Section executive (and your members) on a regular basis

• After three years of no reporting, GOLD AG officially dissolved by RAB after trying to contact group

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 5: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

Having and Reporting Meetings

• Can be administrative, technical, social, professional– A good idea is to mix it up!– Can be joint with Student Branch, Section,

WIE/Society Chapter, etc.– GOLD events can be for everyone, not just

GOLD members or even IEEE members

• Reporting done through L-31 form; if doing electronically, make sure to forward to Section secretary and Region GOLD Coordinator!

• http://ewh.ieee.org/cgi-bin/l31/ReportForm.pl

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 6: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

What does a GOLD Chair do?

• GOLD members’ representative in the Section

• Connect GOLD members with the Section• Lead and motivate other GOLD volunteers

in running IEEE events• Coordinate activities for GOLD members • Take the opportunity to understand IEEE

as an organization and consider volunteering in other areas

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 7: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

What shouldn’t a GOLD Chair do?

• Be directly responsible for recruiting new members to IEEE– Focus on good events and services and get the word

out!• Run after members who don’t come to events

– Evaluate why attendance is poor, how that can be changed

• Doing everything himself/herself– More volunteers means more things can get done,

transition in leadership when it’s time to move on– If there isn’t anyone volunteering, important to figure

out WHY NOT

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 8: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

How to get money for events?

• Rebate to Section for GOLD Activities– US$200 providing reporting requirement has

been met!

• Quick-Start Incentive Fund - $200US– Also includes funds matching up to an extra

$300 US – Can only be received ONCE per Affinity

Group

• Funds from local industry? Section? Region? Explore the possibilities!

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 9: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

Notes on Leadership…

• Main Challenge:– Inspire recent graduates and general GOLD

members to become active• Success Criteria:

– More young professionals participate in IEEE activities (not just GOLD activities)

– More recent graduate volunteers • No ‘one size for all’ solution • Try to organize a variety of events, not just

social events, or events with students

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 10: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

Leadership – Small Section

• Concerns:– Too few GOLD members in the Section to form a

critical mass– Section executives worry that GOLD would fight

Section resources with other Section activities

• Suggestions:– Organize activities intended for all members, but

perhaps is of particular interest to GOLD members– Organize activities that may be of interest to

members’ family to increase participation rate

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 11: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

Leadership – Small Section

• Suggestions:

– GOLD Chair works directly for the Section– If Section plans 10 events in a given year, instead of

asking the Section to have 11 or 12 events per year, keep 10. Just volunteer yourself to organize 1 or 2 of those 10.

– The difference is, those 1 or 2 activities now involve GOLD and are interesting to GOLD members!

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 12: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

Leadership – Large Section

• Concerns:– Too many GOLD members

• Difficult to identify common interests• Difficult to contact GOLD members with a personal

touch (Email and Web are less effective than Phone or Personal Meetings)

• Difficult to assess participation rate or plan for event size

– Section is too occupied to realize potential benefits provided by GOLD

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 13: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

Leadership – Large Section

• Suggestions:

– Recruit a few GOLD members to form a GOLD committee (like a Student Branch)

– Organize activities targeted to a small group (like 10 – 20 people) such as company tours, workshops

– Organize activities that the number of participants is unimportant such as hiking, cycling, ski trip, science museum visit

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 14: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

How to plan an event…

• Determine what kind of event, who the target attendees are, potential dates and locations the event can be held

• Estimate attendance numbers, contact speaker (if appropriate), confirm time and place and costs, determine attendance fee

• Publicize!!!!– Wise to get RSVPs or indication of attendance

• Arrange refreshments, equipment

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 15: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

… and host an event …

• Take some form of attendance to gauge who is coming (number needed for report)

• Greet everyone, make available information/short presentation on GOLD and IEEE if event open to non-members

• Introduce speaker(s)• Include time for discussion and questions

and refreshments • Thank speaker (with gift/certificate) and

those who came• Announce upcoming event!!

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON

Page 16: 2006 GOLD Congress Affinity Group Basics Lori Hogan Region 7 GOLD Coordinator IEEE Canada GOLD Congress 16 September 2006

… and “close off” the event

• Clean up, gather all materials for future use

• Submit L31 report, update finances– Better to do it while still fresh on mind!

• Write up event for Section newsletter, Aurum, future GOLD volunteers– Successes and suggestions for similar event

in future

IEEE Canada 2006 GOLD Congress, Toronto ON