3. Country Number of
Clubs
Number of
Members
MALAWI 5 188
MOZAMBIQUE 3 67
ZAMBIA 23 442
ZIMBABWE 31 703
MEMBERSHIP UPDATE – WHERE ARE WE NOW?
4. "The future of Rotary depends on a thriving and dynamic
membership.”
“Increased membership will mean greater effectiveness and
increased impact on the communities we serve”
MEMBERSHIP
5. DISTRICT 9210 STRATEGY
“To rapidly grow quality
membership throughout the
District in order to multiply the
District and at the same time
support the Zone 20A goal of
membership growth so as to
qualify for own Zone and RI
Director for Sub Sahara Africa.”
6. SUPPORT AND STRENGTHEN CLUBS
Increased Rotary Training
Improve Retention – keep who we have
Promote Core Values: Service, Fellowship, Diversity,
Integrity, Leadership
Increase and give more support to 2 Countries, Malawi and
Mozambique, to fast improve number of Clubs
7. We want our Clubs in the District to:
Be Relevant
Be Accessible
Be Professional
Be Engaging
WHAT WE WANT
9. OUR FOCUS
We will focus on four strategic priorities
(1) Implement
Responsive CLP
(2) Membership
Retention
(3) Increase
membership diversity
(4) Enhance Rotary
Education
• Improve communication
between Club leaders,
members and District
Leaders
• Restructure BOD to be
responsive to needs of
the clubs
• Ensure leaders attend
District training meetings
• Provide for continuity in
leadership
• Involve leadership team
in goal setting process
• Develop Mentoring
programs
• Enhance Fellowship
• Getting members
involved
• Educate , educate,
educate
• New member orientation
• Develop clubs which
reflect the local
community needs
• Identify opportunities to
increase diversity within
clubs
• Conduct regular
classification surveys
• Promote inter-club
support within the
District
• Recruit prospects with
Rotary DNA
• Develop effective training
teams at District and club
level
• Encourage participation
in events and programs
which enhance Rotary
awareness
• Develop and support
new members training
programmes
• Enhance Rotary
information sharing
within clubs and the
district
10. INCREASING MEMBERSHIP
Benefits of increasing membership:
Greater credibility within the community
Broader perspectives, ideas, talents, and skills
Expanded volunteer resources
Endless opportunity for leadership at the club, district, and
zone levels
Enhanced fundraising potential
Less frequent program and club responsibilities
11. We CAN Do It!!
We MUST Do It!!
We SHALL Do It!!
SUMMARY
Hinweis der Redaktion
1
2
As a result, in 2011, the Board proposed a new initiative– Regional Membership Plans. The initiative empowered Rotarians around the world to develop membership strategies that work best in their region.
The Directors lead regional teams, including an appointed project leads, Rotary Coordinators, and Rotarians of all levels to create plans with strategies and measurable tactics to increase membership recruitment and retention.
The Board allocated 3 million dollars over 3 years to fund these regional activities.
Regional Membership teams were encouraged to develop strategies to attract new members, engage current members, and increase diversity in clubs.
Unfortunately as a whole… our gains are NOT offsetting our losses. Based on member numbers for 1 July 2013, we have 1.185 million members. This is 23,000 fewer from the 30 June 2013 number of 1.208 million members and 17,000 fewer from 1 July 2012 of 1.202
As a result, in 2011, the Board proposed a new initiative– Regional Membership Plans. The initiative empowered Rotarians around the world to develop membership strategies that work best in their region.
The Directors lead regional teams, including an appointed project leads, Rotary Coordinators, and Rotarians of all levels to create plans with strategies and measurable tactics to increase membership recruitment and retention.
The Board allocated 3 million dollars over 3 years to fund these regional activities.
Regional Membership teams were encouraged to develop strategies to attract new members, engage current members, and increase diversity in clubs.
As a result, in 2011, the Board proposed a new initiative– Regional Membership Plans. The initiative empowered Rotarians around the world to develop membership strategies that work best in their region.
The Directors lead regional teams, including an appointed project leads, Rotary Coordinators, and Rotarians of all levels to create plans with strategies and measurable tactics to increase membership recruitment and retention.
The Board allocated 3 million dollars over 3 years to fund these regional activities.
Regional Membership teams were encouraged to develop strategies to attract new members, engage current members, and increase diversity in clubs.
Unfortunately as a whole… our gains are NOT offsetting our losses. Based on member numbers for 1 July 2013, we have 1.185 million members. This is 23,000 fewer from the 30 June 2013 number of 1.208 million members and 17,000 fewer from 1 July 2012 of 1.202
As a result, in 2011, the Board proposed a new initiative– Regional Membership Plans. The initiative empowered Rotarians around the world to develop membership strategies that work best in their region.
The Directors lead regional teams, including an appointed project leads, Rotary Coordinators, and Rotarians of all levels to create plans with strategies and measurable tactics to increase membership recruitment and retention.
The Board allocated 3 million dollars over 3 years to fund these regional activities.
Regional Membership teams were encouraged to develop strategies to attract new members, engage current members, and increase diversity in clubs.
As a result, in 2011, the Board proposed a new initiative– Regional Membership Plans. The initiative empowered Rotarians around the world to develop membership strategies that work best in their region.
The Directors lead regional teams, including an appointed project leads, Rotary Coordinators, and Rotarians of all levels to create plans with strategies and measurable tactics to increase membership recruitment and retention.
The Board allocated 3 million dollars over 3 years to fund these regional activities.
Regional Membership teams were encouraged to develop strategies to attract new members, engage current members, and increase diversity in clubs.