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August 2010
- 23 participants
- 90 discussions

24 Aug '10
I thank and agree with those who have weighed in with concerns about the telemarketing program. Although this one is, I believe, aimed at lapsed members, the audience remains one that may be vocal in a variety of forums frequented by current members.
My other observation is that non-hams are usually not effective talking to hams about Amateur Radio matters. No matter how goodl a script they are given, they don't really "speak the language" and are totally unaware of past issues that might impact a contacts's point of view or concerns. Thus, they are unlikely to persuade someone who left the League over policy matters. If failure to renew was due to economic reasons, no amount of sales talk will fix that. I just don't see a lot of up-side to this program.
73,
Marty N6VI
1
0

24 Aug '10
It seems to me the system is working and Board policies are being
followed.
A. Staff followed up on the decision to try telemarketing as a
membership recruitment/retention tool. Building on a trial run that
wasnt as successful as hoped, staff made revisions in preparation for a
more extensive effort.
B. After Chris was made aware of the vendor proposed agreement it
was sent to him for review. He identified shortcomings in the proposal
and is addressing them with the proposed vendor and staff.(i.e., either
they get fixed or we dont enter the agreement)
C. There is a clear chain of operational responsibility in this
activity. Bob Inderbitzen has day to day responsibility, presumably he
reports to Harold as COO and the ultimate responsibility is Daves as
CEO.
D. Board members have clearly indicated a concern that care, common
sense and caution is necessary in any direct member telemarketing
effort.
E. As noted by Grant, Chris has considerable experience in
reviewing and negotiating agreements on behalf of ARRL. To put it
another way, he knows what he is doing and didnt just fall off the
turnip truck.
Staff and Chris understand the concerns of the Board and know how to
proceed. We ought to let them do just that.
73,
Jay, KØQB
-----Original Message-----
From: Grant Hopper [mailto:ghopper@eskimo.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 11:36 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19315] Re:RE: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment
Telemarketing
Chris' comment about the agreement's initial nature gives me far more
than a little pause. I review (and draft) lots of these sorts of
agreements. Probably not nearly as many as Chris, but plenty to have
developed a sort of sense about these things.
Every party that offered an agreement that over-reached or was so
one-sided against my client's interests, even when they were willing to
negotiate to what seemed a more balanced and neutral position (and so
many were), went on to abuse my client's trust and take advantage. The
contract never stopped them. For the most part they realized that the
cost of going after them would render them Teflon coated as it didn't
make economic sense to go after them based on the size of the
recoverable loss (versus the actual harm to the client's
situation/reputation.) Worse yet, even if we decided to bring an action,
their lack of ability to pay a meaningful money judgment rendered them
judgment proof.
The conclusion I have reached about these things is that the nature of
what you see first is what's in the other party's mind and no amount of
negotiation and redrafting will change the character of someone (company
or individual) who is looking to make a (dis)honest buck or take
advantage. I think this is true of even the most well intentioned
people who end up in industries where 'cheating' (what ever that
constitutes) is the only way to compete with the other businesses. Real
Estate, Car Sales, and telemarketing all come to mind. Those one-sided
agreements don't just 'happen'. The were drafted that way for a reason.
The reason doesn't go away when the words change.
I had an experience years ago where I was telemarketed by a fellow who
claimed he represented the very law enforcement fraternal organization I
was a member of. I didn't let on that I was a member and asked a lot of
questions before I was finally forced to hang up on him. Not only did
the guy have the gall to lie about facts that were easily checkable, but
implied that I didn't care about my community (and therefore I was a
criminal) if I wasn't willing to donate. Not the sort of message that
cops want to be sending out to the communities they serve in. I called
a board member I knew and he was surprised by what I related.
The short of the long story was that 1) the board had not told the
membership because they thought we would object (and we would have) but
2) as to the company, not only had the company exceeded the scope of the
telemarketing agreement (it was chocked up to a 'well intentioned'
effort by the company to bring in more money for the organization (of
course they got a percentage of the additional money too)) but the
employee had far exceeded the scope of the script, and his instructions.
He did so because he would get better ratings when he had more success,
and because (as we later found out) he would not be disciplined for
doing what he did. The company was supposedly a highly ethical
organization and had "good ratings" from whomever keeps tabs on such
things. That is why the board had selected this firm.
Obviously the board's plan worked out badly. The entire operation was
out of their control from the moment the papers were signed and things
didn't go so well either from a monetary or a PR standpoint.
We can't guard against these sorts of problems with a company and staff
we can't supervise. We all know how one bad event can (and will)
blossom into something of epic proportions once a group of hams gets a
hold of it. They won't call HQ (if at all) before they tell every one
they know, somebody from amateur radio news line, CQ magazine and maybe
even Wayne Green.
We're in a rough spot right now from a PR standpoint with the web site.
Regardless of what any statistics say, people are still pretty angry (or
at least upset) about how difficult it is to find stuff on the new web
site. I got an earful from a walk-up ham this weekend when I was
operating at an International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend site. He
was reasonable, articulate and clear, and I had to agree with him that
this far along things should be much better than they are. He was
younger and more computer literate than me (and I'm 44 and have
experience in web and content management systems.)
When we do something that represents a significant change from how we
were doing business and it doesn't go well, we use up credibility and
good-will. When we make another change (that they didn't ask for),
people start wondering what else are we changing that they didn't know
about and they start looking for some place else that isn't changing so
much. I don't want to loose more members.
Telemarketing has a bad reputation. Even when it is done well, it still
has negative connotations. When we associate ourselves with something
like that, we take a big risk. A risk that we don't NEED to take, at a
time when we need to be careful how much good-will we have left.
Taking this project in house under the label of 'polling member opinion
and attitude' may yield a far greater bounty and certainly will be far
less objectionable (especially since we can point to the fact that we
are soliciting member opinion.) I would strongly encourage exploration
of an idea like this rather than take what seems to me like a large risk
for not so large a gain.
Hopefully that wasn't too much of a rant.
73,
Grant
Grant Hopper, KB7WSD
ARRL Northwestern Division, Vice Director
-----Original Message-----
From: G.P. Widin [mailto:gpwidin@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:18 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19312] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
At the risk of being pedantic, I note that we do have a privacy policy.
I have attached it so no one needs to go hunting for it (fortunately it
is easy to find).
>From my reading of some of the attached correspondence, it appears to me
that aspects of the "trial run" may pay less than full attention to our
stated policy.
It takes years to build trust, only a second and a single incident to
break it down. So, let's be "squeeky clean" on this kind of stuff, even
if it's only a trial.
Where does the responsibility for ensuring this lie? is it with Harold?
Dave? Of course the Board has responsibility too, but clearly this is
delegated on a day to day basis.
--
73,
Greg, KØGW
Director, Dakota Division
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Imlay" <w3kd(a)aol.com>
To: "arrl-odv" <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 3:44:55 PM
Subject: [arrl-odv:19311] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment
Telemarketing
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement
that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company
other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to
Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I
think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign
as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it
was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over,
that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want
to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member
Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement
offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the
member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes
me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have
expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal
sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's
in their contracts without having the need for this called to their
attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric
question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: Chris Imlay [ <mailto:w3kd@aol.com?> mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member
Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this
telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in
acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the
process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version
looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance,
appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling
credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for
processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy
obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting
as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so
some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
<mailto:W3KD@ARRL.ORG> W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B < <mailto:wj1b@arrl.org> wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv < <mailto:arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org>
arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: <mailto:arrl-odv@arrl.org> arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment
Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of
your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed
members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in
Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would
hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have
not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it
we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable
regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [ <mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org?> mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder
if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes
existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few
telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on
the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to
me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the
illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I
don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a
telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to
know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: <mailto:dick@pobox.com> dick(a)pobox.com [ <mailto:dick@pobox.com?>
mailto:dick@pobox.com]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates
poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving
the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first
telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general
assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be
counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our
affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are
intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt
organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts
would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't
want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra
cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have
permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
========================================================================
==
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was
conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing
firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership
Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample
group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and
to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results
will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings
during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL
Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto
insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - <http://www.avg.com/> www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10
02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - <http://www.avg.com/> www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10
14:35:00
1
0

24 Aug '10
I would like to see the cost of the first trial and the return on investment. What is the cost of this trial and the projected ROI?
73,
Dwayne, WY7FD
From: Grant Hopper [mailto:ghopper@eskimo.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:36 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19315] Re:RE: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Chris' comment about the agreement's initial nature gives me far more than a little pause. I review (and draft) lots of these sorts of agreements. Probably not nearly as many as Chris, but plenty to have developed a sort of sense about these things.
Every party that offered an agreement that over-reached or was so one-sided against my client's interests, even when they were willing to negotiate to what seemed a more balanced and neutral position (and so many were), went on to abuse my client's trust and take advantage. The contract never stopped them. For the most part they realized that the cost of going after them would render them Teflon coated as it didn't make economic sense to go after them based on the size of the recoverable loss (versus the actual harm to the client's situation/reputation.) Worse yet, even if we decided to bring an action, their lack of ability to pay a meaningful money judgment rendered them judgment proof.
The conclusion I have reached about these things is that the nature of what you see first is what's in the other party's mind and no amount of negotiation and redrafting will change the character of someone (company or individual) who is looking to make a (dis)honest buck or take advantage. I think this is true of even the most well intentioned people who end up in industries where 'cheating' (what ever that constitutes) is the only way to compete with the other businesses. Real Estate, Car Sales, and telemarketing all come to mind. Those one-sided agreements don't just 'happen'. The were drafted that way for a reason. The reason doesn't go away when the words change.
I had an experience years ago where I was telemarketed by a fellow who claimed he represented the very law enforcement fraternal organization I was a member of. I didn't let on that I was a member and asked a lot of questions before I was finally forced to hang up on him. Not only did the guy have the gall to lie about facts that were easily checkable, but implied that I didn't care about my community (and therefore I was a criminal) if I wasn't willing to donate. Not the sort of message that cops want to be sending out to the communities they serve in. I called a board member I knew and he was surprised by what I related.
The short of the long story was that 1) the board had not told the membership because they thought we would object (and we would have) but 2) as to the company, not only had the company exceeded the scope of the telemarketing agreement (it was chocked up to a 'well intentioned' effort by the company to bring in more money for the organization (of course they got a percentage of the additional money too)) but the employee had far exceeded the scope of the script, and his instructions. He did so because he would get better ratings when he had more success, and because (as we later found out) he would not be disciplined for doing what he did. The company was supposedly a highly ethical organization and had "good ratings" from whomever keeps tabs on such things. That is why the board had selected this firm.
Obviously the board's plan worked out badly. The entire operation was out of their control from the moment the papers were signed and things didn't go so well either from a monetary or a PR standpoint.
We can't guard against these sorts of problems with a company and staff we can't supervise. We all know how one bad event can (and will) blossom into something of epic proportions once a group of hams gets a hold of it. They won't call HQ (if at all) before they tell every one they know, somebody from amateur radio news line, CQ magazine and maybe even Wayne Green.
We're in a rough spot right now from a PR standpoint with the web site. Regardless of what any statistics say, people are still pretty angry (or at least upset) about how difficult it is to find stuff on the new web site. I got an earful from a walk-up ham this weekend when I was operating at an International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend site. He was reasonable, articulate and clear, and I had to agree with him that this far along things should be much better than they are. He was younger and more computer literate than me (and I'm 44 and have experience in web and content management systems.)
When we do something that represents a significant change from how we were doing business and it doesn't go well, we use up credibility and good-will. When we make another change (that they didn't ask for), people start wondering what else are we changing that they didn't know about and they start looking for some place else that isn't changing so much. I don't want to loose more members.
Telemarketing has a bad reputation. Even when it is done well, it still has negative connotations. When we associate ourselves with something like that, we take a big risk. A risk that we don't NEED to take, at a time when we need to be careful how much good-will we have left.
Taking this project in house under the label of 'polling member opinion and attitude' may yield a far greater bounty and certainly will be far less objectionable (especially since we can point to the fact that we are soliciting member opinion.) I would strongly encourage exploration of an idea like this rather than take what seems to me like a large risk for not so large a gain.
Hopefully that wasn't too much of a rant.
73,
Grant
Grant Hopper, KB7WSD
ARRL Northwestern Division, Vice Director
-----Original Message-----
From: G.P. Widin [mailto:gpwidin@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:18 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19312] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
At the risk of being pedantic, I note that we do have a privacy policy. I have attached it so no one needs to go hunting for it (fortunately it is easy to find).
>From my reading of some of the attached correspondence, it appears to me that aspects of the "trial run" may pay less than full attention to our stated policy.
It takes years to build trust, only a second and a single incident to break it down. So, let's be "squeeky clean" on this kind of stuff, even if it's only a trial.
Where does the responsibility for ensuring this lie? is it with Harold? Dave? Of course the Board has responsibility too, but clearly this is delegated on a day to day basis.
--
73,
Greg, KØGW
Director, Dakota Division
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Imlay" <w3kd(a)aol.com>
To: "arrl-odv" <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 3:44:55 PM
Subject: [arrl-odv:19311] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over, that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: Chris Imlay [ <mailto:w3kd@aol.com?> mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
<mailto:W3KD@ARRL.ORG> W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B < <mailto:wj1b@arrl.org> wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv < <mailto:arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org> arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: <mailto:arrl-odv@arrl.org> arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [ <mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org?> mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: <mailto:dick@pobox.com> dick(a)pobox.com [ <mailto:dick@pobox.com?> mailto:dick@pobox.com]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 – ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - <http://www.avg.com/> www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - <http://www.avg.com/> www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10 14:35:00
1
0
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over, that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
From: Chris Imlay [mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B <wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
From: dick(a)pobox.com [mailto:dick@pobox.com]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 – ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10 14:35:00
2
1

24 Aug '10
Chris' comment about the agreement's initial nature gives me far more than a little pause. I review (and draft) lots of these sorts of agreements. Probably not nearly as many as Chris, but plenty to have developed a sort of sense about these things.
Every party that offered an agreement that over-reached or was so one-sided against my client's interests, even when they were willing to negotiate to what seemed a more balanced and neutral position (and so many were), went on to abuse my client's trust and take advantage. The contract never stopped them. For the most part they realized that the cost of going after them would render them Teflon coated as it didn't make economic sense to go after them based on the size of the recoverable loss (versus the actual harm to the client's situation/reputation.) Worse yet, even if we decided to bring an action, their lack of ability to pay a meaningful money judgment rendered them judgment proof.
The conclusion I have reached about these things is that the nature of what you see first is what's in the other party's mind and no amount of negotiation and redrafting will change the character of someone (company or individual) who is looking to make a (dis)honest buck or take advantage. I think this is true of even the most well intentioned people who end up in industries where 'cheating' (what ever that constitutes) is the only way to compete with the other businesses. Real Estate, Car Sales, and telemarketing all come to mind. Those one-sided agreements don't just 'happen'. The were drafted that way for a reason. The reason doesn't go away when the words change.
I had an experience years ago where I was telemarketed by a fellow who claimed he represented the very law enforcement fraternal organization I was a member of. I didn't let on that I was a member and asked a lot of questions before I was finally forced to hang up on him. Not only did the guy have the gall to lie about facts that were easily checkable, but implied that I didn't care about my community (and therefore I was a criminal) if I wasn't willing to donate. Not the sort of message that cops want to be sending out to the communities they serve in. I called a board member I knew and he was surprised by what I related.
The short of the long story was that 1) the board had not told the membership because they thought we would object (and we would have) but 2) as to the company, not only had the company exceeded the scope of the telemarketing agreement (it was chocked up to a 'well intentioned' effort by the company to bring in more money for the organization (of course they got a percentage of the additional money too)) but the employee had far exceeded the scope of the script, and his instructions. He did so because he would get better ratings when he had more success, and because (as we later found out) he would not be disciplined for doing what he did. The company was supposedly a highly ethical organization and had "good ratings" from whomever keeps tabs on such things. That is why the board had selected this firm.
Obviously the board's plan worked out badly. The entire operation was out of their control from the moment the papers were signed and things didn't go so well either from a monetary or a PR standpoint.
We can't guard against these sorts of problems with a company and staff we can't supervise. We all know how one bad event can (and will) blossom into something of epic proportions once a group of hams gets a hold of it. They won't call HQ (if at all) before they tell every one they know, somebody from amateur radio news line, CQ magazine and maybe even Wayne Green.
We're in a rough spot right now from a PR standpoint with the web site. Regardless of what any statistics say, people are still pretty angry (or at least upset) about how difficult it is to find stuff on the new web site. I got an earful from a walk-up ham this weekend when I was operating at an International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend site. He was reasonable, articulate and clear, and I had to agree with him that this far along things should be much better than they are. He was younger and more computer literate than me (and I'm 44 and have experience in web and content management systems.)
When we do something that represents a significant change from how we were doing business and it doesn't go well, we use up credibility and good-will. When we make another change (that they didn't ask for), people start wondering what else are we changing that they didn't know about and they start looking for some place else that isn't changing so much. I don't want to loose more members.
Telemarketing has a bad reputation. Even when it is done well, it still has negative connotations. When we associate ourselves with something like that, we take a big risk. A risk that we don't NEED to take, at a time when we need to be careful how much good-will we have left.
Taking this project in house under the label of 'polling member opinion and attitude' may yield a far greater bounty and certainly will be far less objectionable (especially since we can point to the fact that we are soliciting member opinion.) I would strongly encourage exploration of an idea like this rather than take what seems to me like a large risk for not so large a gain.
Hopefully that wasn't too much of a rant.
73,
Grant
Grant Hopper, KB7WSD
ARRL Northwestern Division, Vice Director
-----Original Message-----
From: G.P. Widin [mailto:gpwidin@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:18 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19312] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
At the risk of being pedantic, I note that we do have a privacy policy. I have attached it so no one needs to go hunting for it (fortunately it is easy to find).
From my reading of some of the attached correspondence, it appears to me that aspects of the "trial run" may pay less than full attention to our stated policy.
It takes years to build trust, only a second and a single incident to break it down. So, let's be "squeeky clean" on this kind of stuff, even if it's only a trial.
Where does the responsibility for ensuring this lie? is it with Harold? Dave? Of course the Board has responsibility too, but clearly this is delegated on a day to day basis.
--
73,
Greg, KØGW
Director, Dakota Division
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Imlay" <w3kd(a)aol.com>
To: "arrl-odv" <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 3:44:55 PM
Subject: [arrl-odv:19311] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over, that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Chris Imlay [mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B <wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: dick(a)pobox.com [mailto:dick@pobox.com]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 – ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10 14:35:00
1
0
To add to the concerns-
My office manager worked for a telemarketer in her younger years. She was required to press forward to sell her product, even if the customer refused twice. If she was found to quit after the first refusal, she was “written up” for disciplinary action and possible termination.
She said the best thing a customer could do was “hang up” without an explanation or refusal.
I am concerned that the ARRL would be associated with a Telemarketing service, even with the best of intentions. They (in general) do not represent quality organizations.
Perhaps this endeavor should not be left to outside contractors. In this economy, there should not be difficulty in finding part-timers who can be trained internally and have immediate ARRL staff backup for questions.
'73 de JIM N2ZZ
ARRL Vice Director
Roanoke Division
ARRL, the national association for Amateur Radio™
From: G.P. Widin [mailto:gpwidin@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 7:18 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19312] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
At the risk of being pedantic, I note that we do have a privacy policy. I have attached it so no one needs to go hunting for it (fortunately it is easy to find).
>From my reading of some of the attached correspondence, it appears to me that aspects of the "trial run" may pay less than full attention to our stated policy.
It takes years to build trust, only a second and a single incident to break it down. So, let's be "squeeky clean" on this kind of stuff, even if it's only a trial.
Where does the responsibility for ensuring this lie? is it with Harold? Dave? Of course the Board has responsibility too, but clearly this is delegated on a day to day basis.
--
73,
Greg, KØGW
Director, Dakota Division
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Imlay" <w3kd(a)aol.com>
To: "arrl-odv" <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 3:44:55 PM
Subject: [arrl-odv:19311] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over, that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: Chris Imlay [ <mailto:w3kd@aol.com?> mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
<mailto:W3KD@ARRL.ORG> W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B < <mailto:wj1b@arrl.org> wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv < <mailto:arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org> arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: <mailto:arrl-odv@arrl.org> arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [ <mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org?> mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: <mailto:dick@pobox.com> dick(a)pobox.com [ <mailto:dick@pobox.com?> mailto:dick@pobox.com]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 – ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - <http://www.avg.com/> www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - <http://www.avg.com/> www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10 14:35:00
1
0

23 Aug '10
Greg, ultimately the responsibility is mine. Day to day it's in Bob Inderbitzen's department.
Dave
________________________________
From: G.P. Widin [mailto:gpwidin@comcast.net]
Sent: Tue 8/24/2010 12:17 AM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:19312] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
At the risk of being pedantic, I note that we do have a privacy policy. I have attached it so no one needs to go hunting for it (fortunately it is easy to find).
>From my reading of some of the attached correspondence, it appears to me that aspects of the "trial run" may pay less than full attention to our stated policy.
It takes years to build trust, only a second and a single incident to break it down. So, let's be "squeeky clean" on this kind of stuff, even if it's only a trial.
Where does the responsibility for ensuring this lie? is it with Harold? Dave? Of course the Board has responsibility too, but clearly this is delegated on a day to day basis.
--
73,
Greg, KØGW
Director, Dakota Division
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Imlay" <w3kd(a)aol.com>
To: "arrl-odv" <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 3:44:55 PM
Subject: [arrl-odv:19311] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over, that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
________________________________
From: Chris Imlay [mailto:w3kd@aol.com <mailto:w3kd@aol.com?> ]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B <wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org <mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org?> ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
________________________________
From: dick(a)pobox.com [mailto:dick@pobox.com <mailto:dick@pobox.com?> ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 - ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com <http://www.avg.com/>
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com <http://www.avg.com/>
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10 14:35:00
1
0
At the risk of being pedantic, I note that we do have a privacy policy. I have attached it so no one needs to go hunting for it (fortunately it is easy to find).
>From my reading of some of the attached correspondence, it appears to me that aspects of the "trial run" may pay less than full attention to our stated policy.
It takes years to build trust, only a second and a single incident to break it down. So, let's be "squeeky clean" on this kind of stuff, even if it's only a trial.
Where does the responsibility for ensuring this lie? is it with Harold? Dave? Of course the Board has responsibility too, but clearly this is delegated on a day to day basis.
--
73,
Greg, KØGW
Director, Dakota Division
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Imlay" <w3kd(a)aol.com>
To: "arrl-odv" <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 3:44:55 PM
Subject: [arrl-odv:19311] Re: RE: ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Right, Jim, I share your concern based on the rather one-sided agreement that they initially sent over. I don't know anything about this company other than what showed up in that draft contract, and will leave that to Bob I. and Harold K. to address. Looking only to the contract issue, I think we can get it into a form that will be safe enough for us to sign as a "trial run" agreement. We could see how the experience goes. But it was not a confidence-inspiring draft agreement they initially sent over, that is sure. Harold and I are fixing it up now, unless you folks want to go a different way.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Weaver K8JE <K8JE(a)ARRL.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Mon, Aug 23, 2010 4:04 pm
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
From: Chris Imlay [ mailto:w3kd@aol.com ]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B < wj1b(a)arrl.org >
To: arrl-odv < arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org >
Cc: arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [ mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
From: dick(a)pobox.com [ mailto:dick@pobox.com ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 – ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results )involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10 14:35:00
1
0

RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
by Jim Weaver K8JE 23 Aug '10
by Jim Weaver K8JE 23 Aug '10
23 Aug '10
I appreciate Chris' comment about the legal quality of the agreement offered
ARRL by the telemarketing firm we appear to plan to use in the member
recruitment test. Knowing how Chris viewed this document makes me feel
quite uneasy over the quality of the firm, itself. I would have expected
that a well-established, high-quality firm would have the legal sense to
have dotted the proverbial i's and crossed the proverbial t's in their
contracts without having the need for this called to their attention by a
potential customer.
Are we certain we want to employ this organization? (Rhetoric question.)
73,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: Chris Imlay [mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment
Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing
firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when
first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of
(re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The
issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately
mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card
numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their
methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but
that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are
liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B <wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment
Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your
questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association
Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope
that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not
signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will
make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and
our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org <mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org?> ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if
we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing
No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I
have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I
estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful
violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently
crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a
similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know
what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
_____
From: dick(a)pobox.com [mailto:dick@pobox.com <mailto:dick@pobox.com?> ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing
trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this
trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it
will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our
affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt
organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts
would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't
want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost)
it's potential member market because this would mean we would have
permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 - ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted
last year with mixed/poor results)-involving a telemarketing firm that has
experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits
Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The
survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another
sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed
and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during
the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance
Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com <http://www.avg.com/>
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10
02:35:00
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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3088 - Release Date: 08/22/10
14:35:00
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[arrl-odv:19309] RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
by Kramer, Harold, WJ1B 23 Aug '10
by Kramer, Harold, WJ1B 23 Aug '10
23 Aug '10
Bill,
We will check their references before the agreement is finalized.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Bill Edgar [mailto:n3llr@earthlink.net]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:38 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
With regard to item #3 in Harold’s reply, “…I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations… “, we have an obligation to our members to make sure this firm DOES comply with all applicable regulations.
Have we checked with any other clients they’ve worked for?
From: Chris Imlay [mailto:w3kd@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 12:21 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
I am constrained to note that the draft agreement that this telemarketing firm provided to ARRL initially was clearly not in acceptable form when first delivered to us, but it is apparently in the process of (re)negotiation now, so we will see what an edited version looks like. The issues include not only the Do Not Call List compliance, appropriately mentioned by Jim Weaver, but also their plans for handling credit card numbers in the course of relaying them to ARRL for processing, and their methods of compliance with our privacy obligations. There is no doubt but that the telemarketing firm is acting as our agent, and therefore we are liable for any of their foibles, so some care is called for here.
73, Chris W3KD
Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD(a)ARRL.ORG
-----Original Message-----
From: Kramer, Harold, WJ1B <wj1b(a)arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv(a)reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv(a)arrl.org
Sent: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 2:40 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19300] RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob Inderbitzen is on vacation starting today. But to answer some of your questions here is what I know:
1. This is a limited test to between 1800 and 2000 lapsed members.
2. The company that we will contract with specializes in Association Telemarketing and is sensitive to member association issues.
3. As an organization that does strictly telemarketing, I would hope that they comply with all applicable regulations However, we have not signed the agreement yet. Chris Imlay and I have been discussing it we will make sure that it is correct and complies with applicable regulations and our internal policies.
Harold
Harold Kramer, WJ1B
Chief Operating Officer
ARRL -the national association for Amateur Radio
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
(860) 594 -0220
From: Jim Weaver K8JE [mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org <mailto:K8JE@ARRL.org?> ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 2:19 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
Bob,
Inasmuch as Dick expressed concerns over telemarketing by ARRL, I wonder if we take adequate steps to ensure any telemarketer we use observes existing No Call legislation? Based upon the relatively few telemarketing calls I have received after putting my phone numbers on the federal No Call list I estimate that over 50% of the calls made to me appear to be in willful violation of the these laws. Most of the illegal callers are sufficiently crafty as to avoid identification. I don't believe ARRL should be put in a similar position by a telemarketer.
I suspect you've taken care of such possibilities, but would like to know what is done.
Tnx,
Jim
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for Amateur Radio
________________________________
From: dick(a)pobox.com <mailto:dick@pobox.com> [mailto:dick@pobox.com <mailto:dick@pobox.com?> ]
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:50 PM
To: arrl-odv
Cc: Bob Inderbitzen NQ1R
Subject: [arrl-odv:19297] ARRL Member Recruitment Telemarketing
20 AUG 2010 - 1249 CDT
I support proactive ARRL member recruitment except when it generates poor
results and potentially angers some amateur radio licensees receiving the
phone call. I do not know the detailed results of our first telemarketing trial (see IN-Newsletter excerpt below), but the general assessment of this trial leads me to believe that telemarketing will be counter-productive; it will not be worth the expense.
I receive a small, but continuing, number of negative comments about our affinity partners' marketing activities. I know of nobody who welcomes
junk U.S. mail, but at least we are not forced to read it. However,
virtually everybody hates telephone sales calls because they are intrusive
and disrupt the recipient's activities.
I support four non-amateur radio charitable (501-3c) tax-exempt organizations and I have "trained" them to not call me. Two tax-exempts would not put me
on a no-call list. They no longer receive any support from me. I don't want the ARRL to be put in the position of having to filter (at extra cost) it's potential member market because this would mean we would have permanently
lost a percentage of this market.
- Dick Isely, W9GIG
==========================================================================
IN-Newsletter
Vol. 33, No. 33
August 18, 2010 -- Covers the period August 8-14.
Upcoming Meetings and Events
United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI)
September 27-October 1 – ARRL HQ
Executive Committee Meeting
October 23 @ 9:00am in St. Louis, MO
Ballot Counting for Director/Vice Director Elections
November 19 in Newington, CT
<SNIP>
Sales and Marketing
Reported by Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R
A large membership campaign is being prepared for mailing in September.
Diane Petrilli is exploring a second telemarketing trial (one was conducted last year with mixed/poor results)involving a telemarketing firm that has experience making outbound
calls for membership organizations.
We are pleased with the high response rate to an on-line Membership Benefits Survey. The survey invitation was sent by email to a sample group. The survey was also mailed to members that did not respond, and to another sample of members without known email addresses. Results will be analyzed and reported in late September.
Our affinity benefit partners are all gearing-up for program mailings during the next 2 months: ARRL Visa credit card (US Bank), ARRL Equipment Insurance Program (Marsh), and group-rate home and auto insurance (MetLife).
<SNIP>
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com <http://www.avg.com/>
Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3082 - Release Date: 08/20/10 02:35:00
1
0