Login

Face2face is a blog about planning face-to-face meetings, conferences, conventions, and trade shows, plus business travel and hospitality news.

Sue Pelletier MeetingsNet Web editor, mad blogger, and editor of Association Meetings magazine...more

What’s the best practice on best practices?

Seriously. I hear requests all the time on the MIMlist listserv for templates, forms, etc., that people can use as a base to develop their own versions–sort of like best practices starter kits. But then, this morning, I read this post on Jeff De Cagna’s Association Innovation Blog about what’s bad about best practices, and it got me thinking (always scary!). Here’s a snip:

    Great organizations do not create value for members, customers and stakeholders by copying the work of others. They understand that in today’s marketplace, creativity and originality are the primary drivers of value.

Whether it’s a sample hotel contract clause or a blueprint for making some big organizational shift, what’s a “best practice” for someone else might be a “worst practice” for your organization. Then again, why reinvent the wheel for the more boilerplate kinds of things and save your energy and creativity for the important stuff? My heart agrees with Jeff, but my head wants a little of one (finding out what others are doing and analyzing how something similar might work for you) and a lot of the other (really digging in to see what you can come up with that’s truly unique to your organization).

Then Kevin Holland blew me away with this comment:

    But I’m also wondering: Just as important as understanding that there’s a limit to what best practices can teach us, isn’t there also a limit to what customers/members can tell us? The most interesting and innovative companies/organizations come up with products or services that their customers never even realized they needed and could never have pointed to in a survey. Organizations that slavishly devote themselves to fulfilling wish checklists based solely on focus groups and market surveys don’t leave themselves much room for innovation.

I hate to say it, but so many businesses and associations are still trying to figure out how to talk with their customers/members to figure out what they think they need. It would be a quantum leap for them to know their customers/members so well that they could come up with a must-have that their customers/members themselves don’t even know they want. Then again, it has been done. What would it take for you to get there, to create what Seth Godin calls a Purple Cow?

I’d like to think I’ve walked enough miles in your shoes to come up with something remarkable, something that has yet to be done for you all, but I have to admit that I’m not even close. It’s easy to say, “embrace the challenge of innovation,” but when it gets to the sweaty work, it’s easier said than done.

But getting back to best practices (or not), Jamie Notter kind of summed up my feelings in a comment on Jeff’s post:

    Seeing something out there that inspires you to do your thing better is fine. But “best practices” is more than that. It is a mindset. Best practices are answers. When you go looking for best practices, you are looking for answers, and you are likely not spending enough time thinking about your questions…I think if you are clearer about your questions, then the issue of “fit” and “context” with the best practices that you come across will be more immediately apparent. Then what other people are doing CAN inspire your own innovation.

Digg Syndication Del.icio.us Syndication Google Syndication MyYahoo Syndication Reddit Syndication

Related Topics: Business stuff, In my opinion

2 Comments to “What’s the best practice on best practices?”

Leave a Comment

authimage
Enter the word as it is shown in the box above.
If you can't see the word, refresh the page.

Subscribe to Face2Face

To receive a daily e-mail digest of face2face posts:

Enter your e-mail



Powered by FeedBlitz

Subscribe to RSS Feed

Subscribe to MyYahoo News Feed

Subscribe to Bloglines

Google Syndication

Contact Sue

Calendar

June 2005
M T W T F S S
« May   Jul »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Archives

Your Account

Meeting Planner Survival Guide

NEW & IMPROVED! Whether you're a novice planner or a vetran, this compilation of must-read articles is your meeting planning resource.

Pharmaceutical Meeting Planner Forums

Medical Meetings and the Center for Business Intelligence present the fourth annual Pharmaceutical Meeting Planners Forum in Baltimore. March 17-19.

Suppliers/
Facilities/CVBs

MeetingsNet makes it easy to find the CVB, tourist boards, and facilities you need for your next meeting.

Deals &
Discounts

Special group hotel offers brought to you by MeetingsNet.

Find A Job

Targeted to all aspects of the hospitality and special events industry.

Education
Central

Upcoming Events, Live and Online