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RE: [registrars] RE: [RC Voting] Dues of $750 with "forgiveness" for those who choose to pay $250.
- To: Lau <richard@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: RE: [registrars] RE: [RC Voting] Dues of $750 with "forgiveness" for those who choose to pay $250.
- From: Tim Ruiz <tim@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 30 Jul 2007 07:03:08 -0700
- Cc: "'Registrars Constituency'" <registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'RC Voting Members'" <votingmembers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Reply-to: Tim Ruiz <tim@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Sender: owner-registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- User-agent: Web-Based Email 4.10.9
Thanks Richard. Points well taken, and interesting idea that I think has
some merit.
Regarding: "They frequently make written endorsements of issues being
discussed by ICANN, signing in the name of their non member
accreditations."
We shouldn't forget that each registrar within a group pays an annual
accreditation fee and the quarterly fixed portion of the variable fee to
ICANN. The latter because very few of them, if any, qualify for
foregiveness. So each registrar in a group is paying close to $6,000
annually to ICANN - plus transaction fees on top of that.
As a result, I personally don't have a problem with these non-member
registrars signing on to open letters to ICANN since they are not
official positions of the RC.
Tim
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [registrars] RE: [RC Voting] Dues of $750 with "forgiveness"
for those who choose to pay $250.
From: "Lau" <richard@xxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, July 30, 2007 3:33 am
To: "'Registrars Constituency'" <registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'RC
Voting Members'" <votingmembers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi Bob,
I think there are two conflicting issues here:
1) "Some registrars who have multiple accreditations benefit
substantially from their memberships -- but they pay only dues for one
of them. They frequently make written endorsements of issues being
discussed by ICANN, signing in the name of their non member
accreditations."
==è Why does the RC allow use of its member list to solicit endorsements
by non-member entities? If Letters are being organized on the RC list,
those letters should only contain the names of RC member companies. No
membership should equal: no vote, no seat at the RC table at ICANN
Meetings, and no signing on submitted group letters. I say this as a
paid member for a single shell registrar who could be signing for 10+
other non-member shell registrars (but I refrain from doing so).
2) "Some registrars who have multiple accreditations benefit
substantially from their memberships -- but they pay only dues for one
of them."
=è I think "substantially" should be replaced with "microscopically".
Allow me to rephrase your statement to a flip side: "Some large
registrars who have large, very profitable customer bases benefit
substantially from their single memberships far above other smaller
registrar with small, almost non-profitable customer bases." When a
letter is sent in, it is more than reasonable for the recipient to take
note of and recognize the top registrars, and to ignore the others
listed. Who really cares if DomainClip or multiple "! #1"-Registrars are
listed? Small, unrecognized registrars only add value to these
submitted letters by adding bulk to the long list of registrars. The
difference between having all of the top 10 Registrars listed on a
letter, and having 300 shell registrars listed is minor. In fact, having
a long list of registrars on a letter where the top 10 Registrars are
mixed in (read: lost) may have the unintended effect of diluting the
message. Any group signed letter should be listed in descending order by
the size of the domains under management.
I understand that you, being a Republican, would likely be against the
RC membership being based on an "annual revenue" tiered pricing, or on
the number of domains managed. I am not here to suggest an exact tiered
pricing structure. Merely to point out that someone with 10, 50 or 100
shell registrars does not receive 10x, 50x or 100x the benefit of
membership by trotting out their additional names onto a letter.
This article from "Association Management" discusses some alternatives
to "annual revenue" membership dues:
http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/summary_0198-222446_ITM
"more organizations are exploring a tiered membership structure in which
membership and subsequently dues are based on membership levels or
benefits packages rather than on categories determined by specific
demographic criteria. "Embracing one of the fastest growing trends
nationwide, more associations are turning to a tiered membership
structure to replace outdated dues structures that do not communicate
value to members," says Moliterno, who has worked with several
organizations in their transition from a fair-share model to a tiered
membership structure. She outlines these primary reasons for the switch:
To give members control and choices. A tiered structure accommodates
companies regardless of size (or individuals regardless of professional
specialty) and ensures appropriate investment for the resulting delivery
of services and products. Participants customize their memberships by
selecting their levels of involvement and investment.
To realign business purposes to match customer needs. A tiered
membership structure allows associations to easily adapt to rapid change
and significant competitive challenges because they can adjust their
benefits to address new trends while adding value to their memberships
at specific levels. They can also demonstrate a return on investment for
members, since the tiers are segmented to match specific products and
services to member needs and desires.
To create one clear and concise message. Often, members say that they
don't know what they receive for their dues. When shown the tiered
concept, however, members appreciate the compartmentalized areas of
information that they can easily digest.
Thinking out loud here.. a tiered RC membership structure could
differentiate along levels (Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum) such as:
- Ability to submit to RC mailing list
- Right to add name to RC letters (listed by level)
- Seat at RC table at ICANN Meetings
- microphone/right to speak at RC table
- use of RC logo on website according to level
- ?
- ?
- ?. These are just ideas to add to the discussion of a tiered
pricing structure.
I think raising the membership to $750 will cause the drop off of many
small registrars. While you may view this as them "soaking the rich",
it's just an economic decision. Is there $750 in value for a small
registrar? Honestly, probably not. Everyone has different reasons for
being a member. For me, the $250 is worth it just to have a seat for
the day at the (long) RC meetings I (infrequently) attend. For $500
more, I'll just sit on the floor. ;^ )
Thx for listening,
Richard Lau
DomainClip.com
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