SNAP! Era Closes

What an evening!

NFPW just finished celebrating its 2011 communications contest winners and swearing in a new board. Congratulations to Lori, Teri, Marsha, Ellen and Marianne! This also means my two-year term as president has drawn to a close.

It’s been an incredible two years.  My campaign was SNAP! I chose to focus on Sustainability, Networking And Professional development. The term ended with NFPW solidly in the black with respect to finances. We’ve identified conference locations for the next few years. We’ve sustained membership (and now it’s time to grow it). A leadership manual was created. A blog started. Posts to Facebook and LinkedIn were used to connect us between conferences. Agenda was chock full of member profiles and career advice. And we’re pursuing an online communications contest.

To do all of that required a time commitment on the part of each board member. Thank you for your commitment and service.

For me, it was a time to stretch and lead. To drive new initiatives and to shake-up the status quo. It was exhilarating, rewarding and, yes, at times, exhausting. So why do it? For years NFPW has provided me with networking and professional development opportunities. At conferences, I discovered others had the same issues and concerns I had, and we’d brainstorm solutions. Others
shared their successes and I learned from them. Throughout the years, members (really, they are friends) have encouraged me, commiserated with me and laughed with me. NFPW had given me so much; it was time for me to give back.

I sought out new members for my board. I knew that if they, too, could be involved with NFPW, they would develop an even stronger bond to the organization.

During my tenure I strived to share management and coaching ideas with the board. We all shared and grew. The most rewarding comment came from Linda Koehler, our Agenda editor. I knew I was asking her to stretch, and
I promised to sprinkle fairy dust to help her along the way.

Here’s what she told me: “I am grateful to you for so many things: like giving me the opportunity to grow, professionally and personally; to step outside my box; to have the opportunity to visit new places; and to meet some extremely wonderful people….

“So, thank you, Fairy Godmother, for the confidence you showed in me, where I saw none. This Cinderella enjoyed the ball.”

I enjoyed the ball, too. Thank you for inviting me.

Snapshots from 2011 NFPW Conference

The 2011 NFPW Conference is in full swing. Yesterday (Friday) was a busy day. We heard from not one, but two mayors. We learned about PolitiFact, heard from an expert on Afghanist and learned the basics of social media and getting our book published. We celebrated with beautiful music by the Hedgehog Fund and celebrated our COA, Beth Miller of Delaware Press Association.

Here are a few snapshots from the day:

Mayors of Council Bluffs, OmahaThe Honorable Jim Suttle, Mayor of Omaho, and the Honorable Tom Hanafan, Mayor of Council Bluffs welcomed NFPW members to the 2011 conference. The two towns are separated by the Missouri River.

No matter where NFPW members travel, they want to know the news. At this year’s conference, weahter has been a hot topic. Eva Marie Pearson of Arkansas, took a break from the seminars to catch up on the day’s news. Reading the newspaper

The Hedgehog FundThe Hedgehog Fund provided musical entertainment Friday before our COA banquet. The Hedgehog Fund is comprised of the husband and daughters of Nebraska Press Women member Stephanie Geery-Zink. They feature cover songs in the acoustic American genre.

Beth Miller is the 2011 COA.Beth Miller of Delaware Press Association was named  COA for 2011. She is a rporter for The News Journal Co., which publishes Delaware’s only statewide daily newspaper. Her work has included assignments to Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Haiti and the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina. She is a past president of the Delaware Press Association.

NFPW Code of Ethics

During the opening meeting of the 2011 NFPW conference, the Council Bluffs Suffrage Society marched on the meeting to gain support for the women’s right to vote and own property.

Council Bluffs Suffrage Society march on the NFPW general membership meeting.

Although audience members were surprised by the interruption, the presentation reminded members of the rights that women had to fight for and why NFPW came to exist.

The interruption came only moments after members recited the NFPW Code of Ethics, which reaffirms freedom of the press and our responsibilities as communicators.

The NFPW Code of Ethics:

“As a professional communicator, I recognize my responsibility to the public which has placed its trust and confidence in my work, and will endeavor to do nothing to abuse this obligation.

With truth as my ultimate goal, I will adhere to the highest standards of professional communication, never consciously misleading reader, viewer, or listener; and will avoid any compromise of my objectivity or fairness.

Because I believe that professional communicators must be obligated only to the people’s  right to know, I affirm that freedom of the press is to be guarded as an inalienable right of the citizens of a free society.

I pledge to use this freedom wisely and to uphold the right of communicators to express unpopular opinions as well as the right to agree with the majority.”

The Business of NFPW

It starts with a conversation.

The “it” is growing NFPW membership and keeping members involved. NFPW is fortunate that our membership has stabilized, which was a goal of my presidency. We know that the economy and job layoffs have made membership difficult for some members. We also know the value of membership.

This year at conference we held a POWER Networking session where members could quickly get to know each other and make powerful connections throughout the country.  We’re making sure our first-timers are recognized and welcomed.

And we’re finding new ways of doing business. We’re firming plans around an online communciations contest. We won’t have it in place for the upcoming contest, but we expect that by 2013, we’ll be online, saving on postage, making it easier to enter and generally streamlining the process. A committee is reviewing proposals from two firms and working out the details. We’ll communicate often and will provide training.

We also identified conference locations for the next few years. For 2012 we are in Arizona (note that the Sept. 20-22 date is later to avoid the heat). In 2013 we’ll be in Utah, where we’ll have a strong focus on using our member expertise for presentations. We’re still securing a venue for 2014, and in 2015 we’ll be in Alaska. Keep your bags packed!

We also elected a new slate of officers. I’ll turn the gavel over Saturday night. Incoming president is Lori Potter; Teri Ehresman is first vice president; Marsha Hoffman second vice president; Ellen Crawford, treasurer; and Marianne Wolfe-Astrauskas, secretary.

Now that the business is handled, we’ll be spend the next two days engaged in professional development and networking.

SNAP!

Tours Fulfill Journalists’ Curiousity

Curiosity may have killed the cat, but for journalists it’s their lifeblood.

For those being interviewed by a journalist, it may seem like the curiosity, aka questions, never ends. Now put that person on a bus filled with journalists and imagine the learning that takes place. That’s exactly what happened throughout Labor Day weekend as a group of NFPW members toured Nebraska learning about the state’s agriculture, historical sites and other curiosities.

Tour bus in corn field.

The NFPW tour bus pulls up into a corn field so members can learn more about Nebraska agriculture.

Did you know that farmers plant sunflowers around their fields to protect the corn from the wind?

Did you know that the Sandhill crane has a 20-year life span and mates for life (although it’s been known to stray a time or two)?

Did you know that Nebraska is faring fairly well off in these difficult economic times because there is a worldwide shortage of grain so it’s a boom time for Nebraska farmers?

Did you know that when the pioneers came west there were no trees on the prairies and that every tree seen today was planted?

Did you know that a farmer often carries a golf club? He uses it to help with irrigation by opening the gates on the irrigation pipes so he doesn’t have to keep bending over.

Although the NFPW conference is a great time for professional learning, some of the best knowledge is gained during the pre-tours and post-tours. Why? Because the people organizing the tours are from the state and know the best sources to go to.

So when we learned about the Pawnee and the efforts to bring back their native corn, we heard directly from Ronnie O’Brien, director of cultural education for the Great Platte River Road Archway.

And when we learned about the crops of Nebraska and irrigation, we heard directly from Don and Barb Batie of Lexington, NE, who not only shared their knowledge, but allowed a bunch of press women to climb around on their combines and tractors and offered them coffee in the cornfields.

Then there was Sallie and Al Atkins, who operate a ranch near Halsey, who not only gave us the scoop on cattle, but also served a delicious supper of Angus steaks and berry and peach cobblers prepared by Rustic Tavern.

Calf with mother

The farm that NFPW members toured has about 600 mother cows.

Along the journey I learned about Willa Cather and how she came to appreciate the beauty of the prairie. I learned about a canteen that served six million troops during World War II. And I discovered the reasons behind the opulence of the capitol in Lincoln.

Artwork in Nebraska's capitol.

Artwork in the Lincoln capitol captures the story of Nebraskans, including this piece, which focuses on labors of the heart.

If you missed this year’s tour, it’s not too early to start thinking about next year’s conference, which will be in Arizona.

Who knows what adventure we’ll embark on, but the other good thing about journalists is they seem to have many lives!