Ray’s BTA Question Leads to Another Question: Why Now?
Celeste Dame 🚀🧠 | greg report 2027
A Seat at the BTA Table
Ray recently reviewed the Business Technology Association’s Form 990 and raised concerns about the amount of money the association holds in reserve.
The figures may be accurate. The argument built around them belongs to Ray.
My first reaction was simpler: Why now?
Become a member. Attend the meetings. Submit a proposal. Work with the committees. Convince other members that a different direction is needed.
The BTA is celebrating its 100th anniversary. The organization has more attention around it than usual, and Ray has found a public filing that gives him a timely subject for the big Sharp board.
The BTA did not accumulate these assets last Tuesday. Its tax filings have been publicly available. If its financial strategy presents such a serious problem for dealers, why did it suddenly become urgent during the centennial?
Ray believes the BTA should use more of its reserves for marketing, education, events, certifications, and membership growth. Those subjects deserve discussion. Every association should regularly examine where its money goes and what members receive in return.
Spending more money, however, does not automatically create progress.
Before reaching into reserves accumulated across decades, someone needs to present a specific plan. Which dealer problem would it solve? What would it cost? Who would run it? How would the board judge the results?
Ray does not provide those details. He sees a large pool of money and concludes that the BTA should put more of it into the field. That makes for a lively video. The people responsible for the association must still live with whatever happens after the applause fades.
Ray also says the BTA needs new thinking and stronger action. There is a direct route available to him.
Join the BTA.
Become a member. Attend the meetings. Submit a proposal. Work with the committees. Convince other members that a different direction is needed. If the organization needs someone willing to shake the furniture, Ray already appears qualified.
Reviewing a public tax filing can begin a useful conversation. Changing a 100-year-old association requires participation and responsibility for what follows.
The BTA should answer reasonable questions from its members. Ray should decide whether he wants to report on the association or help change it from inside.
If he chooses the second role, I suspect the BTA can find him an application.
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