Remove 2005 Remove millennials Remove Social Media Remove Technology
article thumbnail

“The Beach Was too Sandy”—Happy Members Are a Nonnegotiable

.orgCommunity

Technology is driving the most visible disruption. Millennials are especially comfortable with this type of interaction. Social media. Social media is an opportunity for members to engage with you on different service levels. I’ve been thinking, writing and talking a lot about Association 4.0.

article thumbnail

What Smart Associations Do Differently

Association Adviser

Also look at learning preferences, technology adoption and topic interests. Technology is not synonymous for innovation; some associations are having breakthroughs by going back to old tech. A new study from Iris Mobile and The Center for Media Research found that 75 percent of millennials (Gen Y) access the Internet via their phones.

Texas 60
article thumbnail

The Hourglass Blog: Learning Innovation from the Mayo Clinic

The Hourglass Blog

In fact, the CFI itself owes its existence to some very unofficial activity: LaRusso recalls that the idea first arose in 2005 at a happy hour with colleagues. Developing Millennial Leaders. Millennials. Social Media. Giving employees the freedom to explore is definitely a culturual issue for any organization.