| Dear PFLAG Supporter, An important aspect of chapter leadership is being sure to listen to and incorporate feedback into leadership practices. It’s not just about hearing folks complain, though, it’s about being sure to honor and center their contributions, too! Have you taken a moment to acknowledge the great work and support your chapter and community leaders are providing? If not, this is me reminding you to! There is a lot going on in the PFLAG universe and our communities, you are doing a great job. Thank you for everything you do, always. Along the same lines, as we continue our branding rollout, we heard your feedback about wanting more templates. We’re excited to share that Powerpoint Templates are now available! They are located on the Chapter Leader Web Portal on our website. Additional canva templates are being added regularly, too! Be sure to keep an eye out for these easy to use resources to support your chapter. |
| | One Hour A Week to Branding Success In last week’s issue of Leadership Matters we continued the One Hour A Week to Branding Success series; this seven-week strategy to do low-lift branding tasks that will take no more than an hour of your time. Last week’s task focused on updating your chapter name everywhere it’s listed! Week 7: Verify & Update Your Chapter’s Mission & Vision Statements All PFLAG chapters and PFLAG National follow the same organizational mission and vision statements, which were updated last year. - Refer to your spreadsheet or list from week 1.
- Visit each platform that’s maintained by your chapter and verify, change, or update your chapter’s mission and vision statements to reflect the newest version of our mission and vision statements.
- Don’t forget to save your changes and updates so they reflect the work you’re putting into this project!
- Reach out to the organizations, entities, or people who maintain places where your chapter’s mission and vision are listed but not under your control and request that they update these statements to reflect our newest mission and vision statements.
Did you complete this task? SUCCESS! You’re done for the week! Extra credit: Check for Language and phrasing consistencies in written materials You’ve been doing great work so far, if you’ve got some extra time please take a moment to wrap it all up! In addition to checking the chapter brand guide section from pages 9 - 13 on “Talking About PFLAG,” and messaging topics to ensure you’re using the most up to date PFLAG language, it’s a good time to ensure that you’re only using the word PFLAG to describe our organization, so we can ensure we’re welcoming and inclusive of all. As a reminder, PFLAG’s membership voted to change our name in 2014 to simply be PFLAG to foster greater inclusion and awareness for all of the communities that we support as an organization. |
| | Regional Roundup This safety plan from PFLAG Jersey Shore is a great example of the types of considerations chapters should be making as they’re having conversations about safety within their own chapter. One of the things that I really appreciated, and is often overlooked in safety planning, is the inclusion of immediate response and communication between the board and expectations post incident response plans. In the same way that having a fire drill plan helps keep people safe, being prepared to have those difficult conversations after any kind of chapter meeting or event disruption ensures the board is going to be as prepared as possible for what comes next. What types of situations do you want to be prepared for responding to with your safety plan? |
| Stay safe, Shaun Connors (he/they) |
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| | Shaun Connors | Chapter Engagement Coordinator Eastern Region (CT, DC, DE, MA, MD, ME, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VA, VT, WV) Pronouns: he/they PFLAG National | P: (202) 558-3839 | pflag.org | straightforequality.org |
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