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The British Computer Society - adapting for the new Millennium Mike Stranks. THE NEED FOR CHANGE. THE BACKGROUND. Pollard report 1988 Scope of membership to be widened Separate Sections for engineering, management and education Clear progression path to professional grades
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The British Computer Society -adapting for the new MillenniumMike Stranks
THE BACKGROUND • Pollard report 1988 • Scope of membership to be widened • Separate Sections for engineering, management and education • Clear progression path to professional grades • Experience requirement to AMBCS to be reduced - possibly to 1 year • Requirement for experience route to be reduced • Recognition for wider range of academic and vocational qualifications
WHY CHANGE? • BCS now very successful • Income 1994/5 £4,319,000 • Income 1999/2000 £7,127,000 • But • Professional membership static • Overseas membership growing • BCS not attractive to young professionals
WHY CHANGE? • BCS membership seen as irrelevant by too many • Lack of visible leadership • Boards & Committees focussed on debate rather than delivery • BCS strong on structure, process & product; weak on communication, people & member service • Members not engaged with the Society, locally or nationally • Poor exploitation of resources, including member experience • Branches and Specialist Groups feel remote & poorly serviced
Sample UK Members - 2349 Overseas members - 606 Non-members - 443 Plus Individual interviews Focus groups Branding study WHO SAYS?
WHY CHANGE? Desired ‘Brand Values’ • Enabling • Relevant • Progressive • Responsive • Authoritative • Ethical
BRANDING STUDY • Actual Brand Values (per CHM): • Bureaucratic • Old fashioned • Not relevant • Reactive - not leading • Slow • Boring • Academic
BRANDING STUDY • CHM report specific frustrations as: • No cohesive, consistent BCS message • Committee structure - too slow and bureaucratic • Lack of media visibility and a media spokesperson • Ageing membership • Need for younger society participants • Time taken to gain professional membership
OPPORTUNITY OR PROBLEM? Opportunity! • We recognise the problem • We know what we have to do • We are committed to doing it • We have a record of success • points-based admission • strong financial position
THE AIM • To make BCS Attractive • To you • and to those who should be members
3 YEAR STRATEGIC PLAN • 5 main strategic objectives • make the Society relevant, visible & influential • Establish effective engagement with the IS communities • Establish a positive track record for quality and value • significantly enhance professional programmes • Sustain the foundation of Society finances
3 YEAR STRATEGIC PLAN • 3 key Enablers • New BCS Brand Strategy • Enhancement to BCS Web service and capability • New organisational structure
PUBLIC FACE OF BCS • Spokesman in public debates • Branding
NEW BCS BRAND STRATEGY • To be launched in June 2001 • New ‘masterbrand’ to replace all existing BCS branding devices • Logo to be available for use by professional members • New ‘kitemark’ for accredited organisations
BCS WEB STRATEGY • New web service to be introduced in stages • 1st stage targeted at September • Web to be at the heart of the modernisation of the BCS • Approx £500,000 to be spent this year
NEW ORGANISATION • New organisation to be launched November 2001 • 4 New Boards replacing existing 7 • 3 New ‘Forums’ • Each Board and Forum to be led by a Vice-President.
NEW ORGANISATION • Boards • Membership Services • Includes responsibility for Branches and SIGs • Qualifications and Standards • includes the functions of existing PFB and MemCom • Knowledge Services • External Relations
THE NEW ORGANISATION • Boards • Smaller • Focused on action rather than debate • Clear work programmes • Monitored by Council
NEW ORGANISATION • Forums • Engineering and Technology • Education and Training • Management • “Reach down and engage a wide spread of members. • Members entitled to join any, or all, Forum(s)”
Membership requirements • Points system as indicator of target for application • 100 for MBCS • 70 for AMBCS • Wider set of academic qualifications • Much wider constituency not previously eligible under “old” rules • CEng and IEng now considered equivalent but different • CEng more prescriptive • on education needs • requires demonstrative “innovation”
Application process • Full application with sponsor etc reports • EngC registration mandates PRI interview • For those who do not seek EngC • 3 assessors decide whether PRI needed (~50% have no need, and by-pass that stage) • PRI, normally by 3 experienced members • total file to 3 assessors in a different region, chaired by MemCom member • 5/6 of assessors agree decision ratified • else discuss in MemCom
Branches and Sections • 15% of membership lives outside UK - about 6200 members • Branch = Section, except for some areas of work and legal factors • Currently 4 active Sections • Brussels • Hong Kong • Malta • Sri Lanka • about 2400 members
Representation • Branches delegate to Branches Board (Branches congress of MemServices under new regime) • Sections currently have no representation below 5 Sections, when Council appoints someone • Web-based services throw the need for representation into doubt?
WHAT IT MEANS FOR YOU • Better (not just faster) • BCS.org.uk • Better services • BCS which is more relevant
Discussion and Thank you • Thanks for hearing me • Contact me at • Mike.Stranks@BCS.Org.UK • or, for more general or admin help try: KAllen@HQ.BCS.Org.UK