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- From: jfurr@acpub.duke.edu (Joel Furr DTM)
- Newsgroups: alt.org.toastmasters,misc.education,rec.misc,alt.answers,misc.answers,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Toastmasters International FAQ part 4 of 5
- Followup-To: alt.org.toastmasters
- Date: 10 Apr 1994 19:54:24 GMT
- Organization: 'They' Investigation Committee
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- Archive-name: toastmasters-faq/part4
- Alt-org-toastmasters-archive-name: faq/part4
-
- alt.org.toastmasters Frequently Asked Questions part 4 of 5:
- Leadership and Organization
-
-
- 1. What leadership opportunities within the club are open to me as
- a member of Toastmasters?
-
- All clubs have a staff of club officers. These are elected
- once or twice a year, depending on whether the club meets
- weekly or every other week (or monthly, etc.). Clubs that
- meet weekly usually elect for six month terms. Elections
- usually take place in May for the term July 1 to June 30 and,
- where applicable, in May for the term July 1 to December 30
- and in November for the term January 1 to June 30.
-
- Club offices (and their rank within the club) are as follows:
-
- * President - chairs meetings and supervises all other
- officers
- * Vice President Education - schedules meeting assign-
- ments and works with members to see that their
- needs are met
- * Vice President Membership - runs club membership drive
- and also works to keep members satisfied and happy
- * Vice President Public Relations - makes sure club
- meeting listings appear in the media, puts posters
- up, etc.
- * Secretary - sends correspondence on behalf of the
- club, keeps club records and minutes
- * Treasurer - handles financial affairs, such as dues
- and purchases
- * Sergeant of Arms - sets meeting room up, puts stuff
- away, greets guests, etc.
-
- Club offices are open to ANY member. There is no reason why
- a new member cannot run for President without serving in any
- other club office.
-
- 2. What leadership opportunities are open to me OUTSIDE the club?
-
- You can serve as Area Governor, Division Governor, District
- Secretary, District Treasurer, District Public Relations
- Officer, District Lieutenant Governor Marketing, District
- Lieutenant Governor Education and Training, District Governor,
- International Director, International Vice-President, or
- International President. To explain what all these mean, you
- need to know more about each level.
-
- 3. What is an Area?
-
- Clubs are grouped into Areas of three to eight Clubs. Each
- Area has its own Area Governor, a member of one of the clubs
- appointed by the District Governor to serve the Area.
-
- Areas have Area Speech Contests several times a year, with
- winners from the Club levels going on to the Area Contest.
- The winner of the Area Contest goes on to the Division.
-
- Areas also share Area goals, determined by formulas set at
- World Headquarters, such as "x number of clubs at 20 members
- in strength" and "x number of CTM's in the various clubs." If
- an Area meets or exceeds all its goals, its Area Governor is
- recognized for hard work motivating the clubs.
-
- 4. What is a Division?
-
- Areas are grouped into Divisions. Divisions may be as small
- as one Area in size (rarely) or as have five, six, or more
- Areas. Each Division has its own Division Governor. Division
- Governors must be members of clubs within their Division and
- are elected once a year at the applicable District Spring
- Conference. The Division Governor works with his Area
- Governors to motivate the clubs to high membership and to have
- good, effective educational programs.
-
- Divisions have Division Speech Contests several times a year,
- with winners from the Areas coming together to compete. The
- Division winners go on to the District level.
-
- Divisions have Division goals, just as Areas do. A good
- Division Governor will work with his clubs and Areas to
- increase membership and educational effort.
-
- 5. What is a District?
-
- Districts in some cases are equivalent to "states" and in
- other cases are smaller or larger. If you think of a District
- as "the state organization" you won't be too far off.
- Districts are comprised of several Divisions. Districts are
- the main level of organization outside the Club; Areas and
- Divisions are _sub-units_ of the District.
-
- California has several Districts because there are so many
- clubs there. North Carolina, on the other hand, is a single
- District. England and Scotland and Ireland are one District
- all together, and Australia and New Zealand comprise several
- Districts. Smaller countries with only a few clubs each are
- Unincorporated clubs which report directly to World Headquar-
- ters instead of to Districts.
-
- Each District has its own set of officers, most of whom are
- elected at the District Spring Conference (or Fall Conference
- in the Southern Hemisphere). The officers include: District
- Secretary, District Treasurer, District Public Relations
- Officer, District Lieutenant Governor Marketing, District
- Lieutenant Governor Education and Training, and District
- Governor. The last three are always elected and the first
- three are elected or appointed depending on local preference.
- If they are appointed in your District, it's the newly elected
- District Governor who does the appointing.
-
- And yes, Districts have their own District-wide goals. The
- various District officers work with the clubs, Areas, and
- Divisions to build membership, start new clubs, promote the
- earning of CTM's and ATM's, and so forth.
-
- Districts have speech contests several times a year, as the
- Division winners come together at the District Conferences to
- compete for the District crowns.
-
- 6. Whoa! That sounds complicated!
-
- It is, but that's the price you pay for:
- * having enough offices to fill that a lot of people get
- the opportunity to serve, and
- * having enough officers on the spot to help out clubs
- that have problems (e.g. low membership).
-
- Let's look at a made-up example to illustrate the organiza-
- tion:
-
- Joe belongs to the Wide Valley Toastmasters Club (club 9521).
- The Wide Valley Toastmasters club belongs to Area 4, Central
- Division, District 95. Area 4 is the city of Wide Valley with
- four clubs. The Central Division is Areas 4, 5, and 6,
- comprising the mid-state area. District 95 is the eastern
- half of the state. Area 4 has an Area Governor who works with
- the Wide Valley club and the other three clubs in the Area.
- The Central Division has a Division Governor who works with
- all 12 clubs in his Division and with the three Area Governors
- under her. District 95 has five Divisions and its own set of
- officers. Joe goes to various speech contests in his Area,
- Division, and District and once a year represents his club at
- the Spring Conference to elect new officers and vote on other
- District policy matters.
-
- 7. How do I get to be a District officer?
-
- If you want to be an Area Governor, show up at a lot of events
- outside your club and get to know the people around your
- District. Work hard within your club. Eventually, you'll be
- considered for appointment as an Area Governor. It doesn't
- hurt to ask the people who are running for District Governor
- to consider appointing you. If you want to be a Division
- Governor or other District Officer, you've usually got to run
- for the office. Each club in a District gets two votes and
- the clubs that have representatives at the Spring Conference
- vote and decide who'll serve for the next year. Terms always
- run July 1 to June 30, by the way, so elections are usually
- held in April or May.
-
- Another good way to get to be a District officer is to
- volunteer to help a District committee. You don't get DTM
- credit for helping a committee or serving as a District
- committee chair, but you get *known* and that's usually all it
- takes to get asked to serve the next time around.
-
-
-
- 8. What levels are beyond the District?
-
- Technically, none -- just Toastmasters International. The
- Districts *do* get together for *Regional* Conferences in June
- of each year, but the Regions are not formally constituted
- bodies. They're just groupings of eight or so Districts.
- Each Region is entitled to representation on the Board of
- Directors of Toastmasters International in the form of two
- International Directors who serve two-year terms, with one
- being elected each year, but it is the world body that elects
- these officers, not the Regions themselves. The main require-
- ment for representing a Region is that you have residency and
- membership in a club in that Region. Once you are elected,
- however, you serve the world, not just the clubs of your
- Region.
-
- At the Regional Conferences, you also find speech contests,
- with the various District winners squaring off. Only one
- contestant goes on to the World level; the humorous speaking
- and evaluation contests stop at the Regional level, leaving
- the International Speech Contest contestants to decide the
- World Championship of Public Speaking each August at the World
- Convention.
-
- Regions do not have regional goals. They're not organized
- bodies.
-
- 9. What's the World Convention?
-
- The World Convention takes place each August in a North
- American city. The main feature of the Conference, other that
- presentation of awards for effort during the preceding year,
- is the Annual Business Meeting, at which International
- officers are elected and policies are made and changed.
-
- The clubs have the voting strength at the world level, with
- two votes each. Districts often wind up voting the proxies
- for clubs which don't make it to the Annual Business Meeting
- each August.
-
- There are a dozen elections to be held each August: eight (or
- nine, if it's the year to elect the director from Overseas)
- International Directors, three Vice Presidents, and one
- President. As there are eight Regions (with two Directors
- each) and one amalgamated Overseas area (with one Director)
- sending Directors to the world board, necessarily there are
- seventeen Directors, serving two-year terms each. There is an
- International President and three International Vice-Presi-
- dents who serve over the whole kit and kaboodle. They serve
- one year each.
-
- 10. So the Board of Directors and the President and Vice Presidents
- make all the decisions about dues and so forth?
-
- Yes and no. Any proposals they wish to see adopted that
- constitute actual changes to the constitution and bylaws of
- the organization require a vote by the assembled clubs, with
- each club having two votes. As above, the District officers
- gather proxies from any clubs that aren't going to be at the
- annual business meeting in August.
-
- 11. What do I get for serving as an officer?
-
- If you serve as a club officer, you earn credit toward an ATM.
- If you serve as a District officer, you earn credit toward a
- DTM. Service on the International level doesn't earn you
- anything in particular because you've usually already earned
- everything there is to earn by that point.
-
- But, more importantly, you get tremendous leadership experi-
- ence. With everyone a volunteer and no club HAVING to do what
- its District officers suggest, you have to develop powerful
- persuasive abilities to guide the clubs and members in the
- right direction.
-
- There's a lot of opportunity to grow in Toastmasters. Check it
- out!
-
-
-