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Published byAnnis Scott Modified over 9 years ago
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Division IV Director Report
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Why is IEEE different from other technical societies? The breadth of activities!
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Membership 350,000 members 210,000 also belong to societies That means that 140,000 members belong to to IEEE for reasons other than society participation!
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IEEE Technical Activities –Societies Regional Activities –Chapters –Sections (Some) Educational Activities IEEE- USA Standards HQ - The folks who run it (Green = income other than IEEE dues)
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IEEE Funding Source History Annually From IEEE Budget Member Dues Inv. Income Conferences Non-member Pubs Packaged Products IEEE dues All Income Sources Society Dues Conference Income Non-member Pubs IEEE dues Investment Income Packaged Products
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IEEE Reserves - History
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Where IEEE money comes from ~$250M revenues per year $25-35M from IEEE dues $3M from Standards The rest are split between conference income and pubs sales Plus a smattering of other sources (society dues, regional confs, Proc of the IEEE, regional events, etc
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IEEE Finances ($M) EntityRevenueExpense Spectrum13 (Dues)13 EAB3 (Dues)3 RAB8 (Dues)8 Geog. Units1 (Dues)1 IEEE Other23 (Dues)24 Publications4 (Dues)4 (Pubs distributes IEL income to S/Cs= 21) Standards1111 TAB/Soc.154153 IEEE-USA66
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Infrastructure Current infrastructure costs are like 20-30% of NPS expenses
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IEEE Conferences Included Services –Use of Logo –IEEE Advertising –Budget Review/Approval/Audit Services –Forward Funding (Advance Loan) –Fiscal Insurance –IEEE Publication of Conf Record, Journal, Transactions –Publication Sales by IEEE (ASPP, IEL, …)
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IEEE Conferences Available Services Audit Contract Negotiation Conf Planning Registration Travel
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Current Issues Should governance structure change? Should publications income be dependent on usage? Should TAB expand w/o bounds or should there be a S/C life cycle? There will be Division Director-Elect positions in all Divisions
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Current Issues (con’t) Reserve funds are ~ $77M. "Non-Reserve" funds are $47M (invested in minimum risk vehicles) Reserves “should” be built to 50% of annual expenses (10 year process?) Affiliate fees to 50% of IEEE dues No business class travel for 2003 and 2004 (except health reasons or IEEE President(s))
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History Prior to mid-1960’s: All income goes to the General Fund: All entities funded annually by IEEE
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Brief IEEE Financial History 1967 - Investment fund initiated 1969 - Investment committee established 1970 - Societies requested financial assistance 1971 - Society surplus concept established 1973 - Additional Society revenue streams requested; Board gave credit for “short term” interest on surplus balance 1974 - Societies allowed to keep non-member single-sales revenue 1974 - Long-term investment pool created allowing Societies to share in investment gains
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Brief IEEE Financial History (Cont.) 198? - Additional society revenue requested 198? - ASPP revenue distributed to Societies 198? - Book broker revenue to TAB 1993 - RAB reserve fund established 1994 - EAB reserve fund established 1996 - Practice of raising dues to only add money to reserves ended 1996 - Standards reserve fund established 1996 - Book broker revenue to Societies 1996 - Current financial model identified by volunteers & staff as a major issue
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Brief IEEE Financial History (Cont.) 1996 - Practice of spending from prior years surplus began at 9% of investments level 1996 - Allocation study undertaken 1996 - Allocations frozen expecting “infrastructure charge” to begin shortly (did not happen) 1998 - “New” financial model proposed 1999 - Proposal withdrawn 2000 - Russell committee established 2000 - Corporate reserves went to 0, investment market declined, resulting in OU reserves being taxed
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Brief IEEE Financial History (Cont.) 2001 - Findlay committee established; Allocation process implemented in 2002 budget; TAB allocation process implemented 2002 - Adler committee established (LRBPC); Process for overhead recovery evolved; TAB committee refined allocation model for Societies/Councils 2002 - Financial model implemented 2002 – IEEE BoD mandates balanced operations budgets
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2001 Budget Long practice of building 9% return on investments into budget continued Additional $10 Million of Initiatives Overall 2001 actuals –($29.3 Million) –Mainly due to stock market decline 2001 operations actuals –Positive to budget by over $11.0 Million –Expenses still greater than income –IEEE began responding to slowing economy
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2002 Budget Practice of investment spending paying for operations eliminated IEEE BoD mandated net zero or positive operations budget 2002 IEEE operations net improved by over $23 Million relative to 2001 budget BoD passed a net positive operations budget Continued reacting well to slowing economy
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2003 Budget Practice of not using investment spending to pay for operations continued IEEE 2003 operations budget –$0.8 million net operations surplus Continuing to react well to the economy
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