Toastmasters poker run

While doing a little Googling looking for something else, I stumbled upon a pretty interesting contest that D18 (Iowa) is running, it’s called a “Toastmasters Poker Run”. In short, you can collect cards from a special deck that’s been created and distributed, form a good poker hand, and win prizes. The smaller clubs get higher cards and larger clubs get lower clubs, encouraging people to visit the smaller clubs.

Area events (like contests) get the queens, division events get the kings, and aces are available at district events. Sounds like a great idea! More details on the district home page at http://www.district19.us. (Don’t forget to ask permisson from world headquarters if the Toastmaster name or logo is on the cards!)

Mid-year board meeting, Rancho Santa Margarita, California

I’ve never been too fond of the Chicago winters — I’d be quite happy to never see snow again! So I figured that a trip to sunny southern California for the mid-year board of directors briefing would be a nice way to thaw out. (Photo at right in front of World Headquarters today.)

There were about 70-80 people present, besides the board itself. I think the biggest news is that they won’t try to bring up any of the proposed changes for approval at the August 2008 business meeting in Calgary. It’s a huge package of changes, all intricately related, and with over 100 policies and procedures affected, it’s just not going to be ready in time. So that’s reduced the pressure a bit, the plan is to have it all ready for a vote in August 2009.

Other highlights from my notes:

  • There’s a strong partnership with Caterpillar, where the Toastmasters program is being fully integrated into their corporate learning curriculum. This will be a great prototype to follow with other companies.
  • Membership for the first six months is up almost 5% compared to a year ago, new members are up 8%, but new clubs are down 10%.
  • Provisional districts 81P (Caribbean), 82P (India and Sri Lanka), and 85P (China) are being promoted to full district status effective July 1, 2008.
  • A comprehensive evaluation program is being developed for district and region leaders (Regional Advisors, RAs) to provide feedback and promote improvement.
  • No changes to the DCP for now, though they’re exploring how they might encourage new clubs and low-membership clubs to follow it better.
  • The new District Governor-elect position will probably be responsible for the DCP for the clubs in the district (not just a pure understudy role to the District Governor).
  • Aspiring district leaders will likely have a specialized “advanced leader” manual to follow, including the setting of personal development goals.
  • The Distinguished District Program (DDP) will likely change to more closely integrate with the Distinguished Club Program (DCP). There’s also talk of eliminating the caps limiting President’s and Select Distinguished districts to six each.
  • The plan for 15 regions has been reduced to 14, 10 in North America, and four overseas. Region V would probably be the same as it is today, except D62 (Michigan and western Ontario) will be added to it, making it truly international.
  • The regional conferences will continue, primarily for the purposes of district officer training (though apparently these may be combined, two regions at a time, 14 seem to be too many), and speech contests. There won’t be any business meeting or elections held at the region level in the new plan.
  • Jana Barnhill’s International President theme for 2008-09 will be “The Courage to Conquer”, and she gave a stirring speech about why this was important to her, and to Toastmasters.
  • International President Chris Ford presented Immediate Past President Johnny Uy with several photo albums to remember his year by.

Full details from TI are here.

Afterwards, there was a time for socializing with light refreshments, and tours of World Headquarters. I had visited as LGET back in November, 2005, to meet some of the people I’ve been talking to for so long. That’s how I met Judy Chapman in Member Services, who has been invaluable so many times while I was serving District 30.

Planning spring conference visits

Haven’t had much to write in the last few months; the campaign trail is pretty quiet between the last fall district conference, and the first spring conference. I’ve been attending my own club meetings, including the club I coach (South Loop Speak Freaks), home district DEC meetings (I am still the Immediate Past District Governor too), and helping out with club officer mid-year training. Also helping to get a couple of clubs started as well, serving as Toastmaster for demo meetings.

Looks like the districts in Region V are starting to publish spring conference details and registration forms. Four of them are on the same weekend, D22, D30, D43, and D63 are all on April 25-26! So I guess I’ll only get to one of those, and it’ll be D43, since I visited the other three last fall. I’ll make it to five of the eight total, though.

The first is D54 in Bloomington, IL on April 11-12, I can drive to that one, as well as D11 in Nashville, IN, on April 18-19. But I’ll fly to D43 on April 25-26. Joan is going to pick me up in Memphis, which is right on her way from Little Rock to Tupelo (it’s her home district), which is very nice of her.

The Region V registration is out too, so I’ve registered for that and booked my airfare to Kansas City.

District 8 conference, Decatur, Illinois

My trip to Decatur began inauspiciously; my car’s navigation system took me to the east side of Decatur, even though the address I had put in was clearly on the west side. So I got to see downtown Decatur, and Lake Decatur (which is quite impressive).

Friday night opened with a buffet dinner and an entrancing keynote from Col. Jill Morgenthaler about her experience facing down Saddam Hussein, and how to tailor the speaking style for the audience, choosing the right story and living it out on stage (in keeping with the conference theme of “Living the Story”).

This was followed by a frenzied and enthusiastic performance by a drumline, 9 youths with drums and cymbals to get everyone excited and ready for a great conference. The table topics contest was next, where I was able to assist as a sergeant at arms.

Saturday morning’s business meeting was swift and efficient, there was a low turnout due to bad weather. I gave what I thought was my best version yet of the two-minute “table topic” on my candidacy. Lunch was followed by a short address by Dietmar about upcoming organizational changes, and the afternoon was filled with educational sessions.

The evening began with dinner and awards, followed by the traditional “DTM line”, recognition of new DTMs in the district. One really nice touch was that, while the new DTM was walking down the line shaking hands and exchanging hugs, the District Governor told us about their High Performance Leadership project, the club they sponsored, mentored, or coached, how Toastmasters had changed their lives, etc. It did a great job of avoiding the problem of either awkward silence, or very extended applause.

Last was the humorous speech contest, where we were treated to five awesome speeches, though the best, the winner, was a great one about his birthday … talking about how he resisted being born, hanging on to the umbilical cord for 27 hours. It was really quite good.

So that wraps up the fall round of conferences! I can take some time off, get re-involved with my home clubs (including one I’m coaching), attend DEC meetings, and prepare for the spring conferences in April and May.

District 54 conference, Moline, Illinois

The conference began with a Friday night fun night, with open dancing and a dancing demonstration; the emcee did a great job of tying in how dancing skills related to speaking skills. It was a great time to catch up with several old friends from a neighboring district.

The district council business meeting kicked off Saturday, where I discovered that D54 elects the Area Governors in the area councils (no nominations required district council approval). I always knew it was an option, but didn’t know of anyone that did that. This was followed by the opening ceremonies and a keynote from Ed Hearn (2006 world champion of public speaking from D30).

The Saturday luncheon started with the table topics contest (“What was your most inspirational moment in Toastmasters?”). Another thing that D54 does things differently is they alternate table topics (odd years) and tall tales (even years) for the fall season, along with the humorous contest every fall as well.

The afternoon had several educational sessions, including one from International Director Michael Smith, where he updated everyone on the latest planned organizational changes in TI.

The evening began with the humorous speech contest, featuring five very funny speeches. After dinner, the C&L award was presented to Don Wooten for his work as a radio and television celebrity, a state senator, and part-time journalist.

The Hall of Fame awards included some unique ones I’ve not seen before; D54 names a club president of the year and Toastmaster of the year in every area, and in every division (not just at the district level), and also an area governor of the year within each division (as well as district). They also have several other individual district awards for those showing the most commitment and dedication, parallels to the Toastmaster of the year award. All the winners were listed in a souvenir Hall of Fame booklet that was distributed right after the last award.

District 30 conference, Lombard, Illinois

Imagine a brand new hotel — opened less than three months ago! Gorgeous lobby, flawless meeting rooms, all the highest technology. District 30 hosted its biggest conference ever, and while I may be a bit biased, I loved it. It kicked off with a keynote from Dietmar Wagenknecht and the evaluaton contest. In District 30, there’s a neat tradition that the winner from the previous year’s contest gets to be the next contest master (introducing speakers and doing interviews).

Saturday morning had an achiever’s breakfast (anyone who had earned an educational award in the previous six months) and the opening ceremonies. That included the club banner parade, where each banner holder announced their club and made a 15-second speech about it, which was judged by the audience. We also presented awards to every club that was distinguished last year, ranging from laminated certificates (Distinguished clubs) up to engraved gavel sets for President’s Distinguished clubs that earned 10 points (some for as many as seven years in a row!). The district business meeting finished off the morning, where I was formally nominated for International Director.

After the luncheon, the LGET handed out purple “Magnificent Seven” banner ribbons to recognize clubs that had all seven officers trained this summer. Ed Hearn, the 2006 World Champion of Public Speaking (and who is from District 30!) gave an amazing keynote to a full house of 180 people, based on the conference theme of “Empower Yourself”. Afterwards, Ed was presented with a letter recognizing his accomplishments from the President of the United States, George Bush.

Saturday evening started with dinner and the C&L award to William Mueller, the president of Lombard, the city we were meeting in, which also developed and owns the conference hotel. Afterwards was the DTM ceremony for five new recipients, and the humorous speech contest, with a record audience of 285 people!

Before the winners of the contest were announced, as Immediate Past District Governor I presented awards to the five Key Area Governors and the one Area Governor of the Year from that select group, the Division Governor of the Year, and the Toastmaster of the Year. (Photo is of myself handing out an award.) The evening closed with dancing to a live three-piece band.

The district 35 conference is in Neenah, Wisconsin, this same weekend, but I won’t be able to attend both.

District 22 conference, Wichita, Kansas

What a beautiful hotel! It’s the Broadview hotel, near the river, dating back to 1921 or so. My room is huge! Friday night is a Halloween-themed mixer with a costume contest. I brought a simple feathered face mask to wear. This is Michael Smith’s first official International Director visit to a district. There’s an interesting contest, which is based on bingo, but each square on the card is filled in by finding someone who meets a specific requirement (like past DG, member for more than 10 years, has presented “Parliamentary Procedure”, etc.). There’s a variety of prizes for the winners to claim.

Saturday morning’s opening ceremonies are brief, and includes a good number of club banners. Clubs represented in the audience but without banners were also called up to join the line. A local Cub Scout pack presented a little skit that got everyone laughing. Then Michael Smith presented an educational session on “Be Good to Yourself: Serve Others”.

Lunch is deli sandwiches, and the presentation of the C&L award to Larry Hatteberg, a renowned storyteller about unique people in Kansas. This is followed by the district Hall of Fame awards, which included recognition for club sponsors, mentors, and coaches (great idea!), and the evaluation contest.

Mid-afternoon is my turn, as I presented “The Value of a Club Coach” (one of my favorite topics), to everyone at the conference. I received many favorable comments afterwards, and I hope the district gets lots of volunteers as a result. I realized afterwards that I didn’t close with a “call to action” — I should have had a half-page form asking for people to fill in their details, so they could be contacted about being a coach.

The business meeting came next, followed by the dinner banquet, which includes a delicious prime rib. Michael Smith presented his keynote address “Shaping Ourselves: Shaping Our World”, followed by the humorous speech contest.

One of the best ideas I’ve heard is the current D22 “Gold Star” charter membership challenge — every club that ends the Toastmasters year with a net increase of five members will receive a gold star for their banner, and if they end with a net increase of 10 members, they get a second gold star and a Toastmasters gift certificate.

District 63 conference, Nashville, Tennessee

Welcome to Opryland! Friday night’s highlight is a roast of the Immediate Past District Governor — I think that’s an awesome idea, and I’m going to suggest it in my home district — next year! Silvana Clark delivered a very funny and yet educational keynote on making club meetings more fun. The theme is “Change is A-OK!”, and includes fun ideas like beach ball bingo table topics (questions written on a beach ball, throw it around, and the catcher responds to the question closest to their right thumb), vacation photos, true newspaper headlines, and untraditional holidays.

There’s a great hospitality suite in one of the hotel rooms, with soda, small sandwiches and an endless supply of little snack cakes, cases and cases of them! In fact, these were a good number of the raffle prizes! They also have a silent auction with dozens of things to bid on, ranging from gently-used books to enormous gift baskets of coffee, tea, and chocolate!

Saturday starts off with an invitation-only breakfast, for those who reached specific goals. One neat idea is that anyone who has ever won the TI award for signing up 15 members within a single Toastmasters year (earning a scarf or tie) gets to attend these conference breakfasts for life — so I was eligible!

Lunch is followed by a short address by Dietmar Wagenknecht, the hall of fame awards and the evaluation contest. Mid-afternoon is the business meeting, and dinner is followed by the humorous speech contest.

Unfortunately, the district 43 conference is this same weekend in Memphis, but my campaign manager, Joan Diehl covered that since it’s her home district.

District 11 conference, Louisville, Kentucky

My first district conference away from home! I decide to drive down, since it’s under five hours each way (I’ll fly later to Nashville and Wichita). District 11 is being honored with a presidential visit from Chris Ford, and Friday night starts off with a full sit-down dinner.

Next is a very funny game called Gudentakken. Each table forms a team and is given a different made-up word and continent of origin, gets five minutes to create a convincing definition and selects someone to present it to the rest of the room. A panel of judges scored each, and we went through three rounds of words across the six tables. Much hilarity ensued! Between rounds, there’s a bonus trivia question. Somehow, Chris Ford’s table wins the game!

Lunch includes the hall of fame ceremony and the C&L award to Pat Byron for her work supporting rights for crime victims. This is followed by a great general session with Chris Ford on Leadershape. The mid-afternoon business meeting goes smoothly with my first two-minute campaign speech — the same length as a table topic!

While discussing my candidacy with someone and handing her my brochure, I realized that I had left my web site off of it! OK, well, good thing I only printed 100 of them!

The evening starts off with dinner, followed by the humorous speech contest (all seven speeches were great!). It also includes another brief address from Chris Ford, and finally, the contest results! The evening ends with a governor’s reception for Chris Ford. A wonderful start to my campaign, and I drive home on Sunday in a great mood all the way.

Porting the district reports to the web service

Now that I have a web service, I want to port my district reports over. Up until now, they ran on an old spare laptop at home, but it was unreliable, the computer had to be on and the Internet connection up and working, and even then, sometimes the e-mail got rejected by the server. This was another reason I wanted a web hosting service. The basics ported over pretty easily, but I had to change it to post the reports on the web site, since the ID candidate rules don’t allow these to be sent out by direct e-mail to anyone outside my home district.