Executive Search and Transition Management for Associations and Non-Profit Organizations
Few events in the life of an organization will raise stakes –
and stress levels – as high as a transition in senior
leadership. Finding the right fit and successfully integrating
that person into the institutional fabric poses complex and
significant challenges. Its consequences are long lasting – and
difficult to reverse.
That is why at Association Strategies, Inc. we pioneered a
systematic, collaborative approach to defining the realities of
the position and the unique environment in which it operates,
allowing us to identify ideal candidates. Our three-step
methodology includes an organizational assessment, a
comprehensive search, and transition planning. At every step, we
engage staff leaders and stakeholders, drawing on their
expertise and institutional knowledge. We plumb our extensive
networks as well as the broader fabric of the U.S. and
international workforce to recruit the right talent to move the
organization forward. Because we focus on executive search for
associations and non-profit organizations we appreciate the importance of
your unique culture, our focus is on personal attributes and
behaviors as well as skills.
Once you select your new executive, we engage you in a
conversation that identifies parameters for success and
strategies for effective onboarding of the new executive into
the organization. As former association executives, we
understand that search is an evolutionary process, not a single
event or transaction, and over the last two decades, we have
applied this philosophy to the most critical search situations:
FOUNDING EXECUTIVE SEARCH
Replacing a beloved founder can be emotionally charged and often
brings an organization to a crossroads. Our sensitive and
competency-based approach harmonizes concerns about legacy with
strategies to carry the institution into a new era.
Case Study: Executive Search for National
Organization for Rare Disorders
Association Strategies, Inc. leveraged the stature and culture
created by the founder of this multi-million organization to
identify an appropriate 21st century successor.
NORD’s founder guided the organization from infancy to national
prominence, making it the go-to source for non-governmental
information on rare disorders. Her successor would have to
preserve and build on those victories. Using our comprehensive,
personalized approach, ASI, Inc., identified an individual who
not only valued NORD’s existing culture, but who used its past
success to invigorate the board of directors and create the
collaborative, member-oriented profile demanded of today’s
non-profits.
CRISIS DEPARTURE
The sudden loss of an executive can throw an organization into
turmoil. Our systematic approach ensures that best practices –
and not urgency – will drive your selection. Our
experience makes us uniquely qualified to find the best
executive for your non-profit or association.
Case Study: Crisis Departure for American
Association of University Women
AAUW faced the untimed departure of its executive director not
once but twice. And twice it turned to Association Strategies,
Inc.
A host of unforeseen circumstances can befall an organization’s
top executive. Each time AAUW faced the delicate task of finding
a replacement, ASI, Inc. applied its methodical, OD-based
techniques to identify an executive who would not only avert
crisis, but overcome daunting challenges. Today, with the leader
identified by ASI, Inc., multi-million, 100,000-member
organization is strengthening membership, increasing visibility
and confidently implementing a new business model.
TRANSITION MANAGEMENT AFTER A SUCCESSFUL RUN
It may seem as if no one can fill the shoes of your long-term,
highly successful executive. Our ability to identify talent
based on tried and tested research methods produces a slate of
candidates who combine fresh perspective and new directions with
respect and sensitivity for the history and legacy of the
departing CEO.
Case Study: Transition Management for American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Successful executives are a tough act to follow – and many
replacements last just a few months. When ASHA’s beloved
two-decade leader stepped down, it called ASI, Inc. to help it
beat the odds. That was three years ago.
Respected within the organization, the association world, and the community of speech-language-hearing professionals that he came from, ASHA’s longtime executive director walked on water. The 130,000-member organization representing speech-language pathologists, audiologists, and speech, language, and hearing scientists didn’t want someone who could merely swim. ASI, Inc. delivered a roster of highly competent candidates that allowed the board to select a leader tailor made for the challenges facing the organization – and its expectations.
Case Study: Transition
Management for American College of Emergency Physicians
Association Strategies, Inc. doesn’t just present a list of
candidates. We help your organization bridge internal
differences to discover what it really wants – and needs – in a
new leader.
Strongly grounded in tradition, many individuals at ACEP
believed the new executive director should be a physician.
Except those who didn’t. ASI, Inc. presented a number of
physician and non-physician candidates then helped the board and
senior executives move past preconceptions to consider core
issues of leadership. With ASI, Inc.’s guidance, organization
leaders moved harmoniously to an unexpected conclusion: that
what they really wanted was a highly successful, well-regarded
non-profit executive. Under that individual’s leadership, the
$$$-million, 22,000-member organization is moving steadily
toward its goals.
Association Strategies Services, Inc.:
Executive Search and Transition Management
Organizational Development Services
About Us
Current Searches
Burning Questions

In the first of its original quarterly surveys,
called “Burning Questions,” Association Strategies, Inc.,
discovered that regardless of mission, membership, size or
geographic location associations are feeling challenged by the
same issues.
