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The path to professional development.


From the beginning, the founders of IABC IABC International Association of Business Communicators
IABC Indo-Americans for Better Community
 attempted to create an organization that would grow organically and adapt to whatever the future would hold for the field of professional communication.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the three most significant guiding factors of IABC: to produce and provide knowledge; to develop and build credibility; and to welcome and embrace all communication professionals under the umbrella of opportunity.

Knowledge

Recognizing that the field once known as industrial editing was fast giving way to a more complex, valued profession, the IABC founders looked upon professional development as a core value and a differentiating factor for the organization.

From its simple beginnings, IABC has evolved into a dynamic provider of professional development that today includes best practices (through the IABC Gold Quill quill: see pen.  program); an international conference augmented by regional, district and chapter conferences; an award-winning member magazine; teleseminars and web seminars; a Knowledge Centre; a speakers bureau; and the IABC Research Foundation.

Credibility

Our founders also hoped that the fledgling field of industrial editing would someday encompass broader responsibilities and different skill sets. Because there was no licensing for any area of communication, the idea of self-assessment and peer validation led them to establish an accreditation program in order to provide measured credibility with ability.

Unlike other accreditation programs that relied on a single skill set or specified texts, the IABC program was based on a candidate's ability to respond to real-life problems. The examinations, written and oral, would focus on a candidate's knowledge of the profession's skills and practices, philosophy of the field, and ethics. As the communication field changed, so would the program and materials. Today, IABC boasts the only truly global accreditation program, with exams offered in multiple languages and, in some cases, recast to reflect language and cultural differences.

Another initiative effected to help individual members achieve credibility was the creation of a code of ethics Code of Ethics can refer to:
  • Ethical code, a code of professional responsibility, noting what behaviors are "ethical".
  • Code of Ethics (band), a 90's Christian New Wave/Pop band
. The IABC Code has been continually rewritten and refined to reflect the evolving world of IABC's members and their employers.

Opportunity

Perhaps most extraordinary in our history is the criteria upon which IABC membership is based.

There are none.

The IABC founders chose not to limit membership to people practicing only one type of communication or only in a defined geographical space. No references were needed, and people could join right out of college.

There wasn't even a secret handshake A secret handshake is a series of hand gestures that indicate loyalty to a club, clique, or subculture. The purpose of the secret handshake is to identify exclusive group members, and consequently to prevent inclusion of outsiders. .

This open-door policy Noun 1. open-door policy - the policy of granting equal trade opportunities to all countries
open door

national trading policy, trade policy - a government's policy controlling foreign trade
 demonstrates the finest of all the decisions made 35 years ago. Anyone practicing in any area of communication, anywhere in the world, speaking any language and with any degree of experience, could become a member of the International Association of Business Communicators The International Association of Business Communicators (IABC) is a leading association for public relations professionals. IABC has about 14,000 members in more than 100 chapters in 70 countries.

Its headquarters are located in San Francisco, California, United States.
.

What the future holds

As IABC continues to mature, it will continue to change and adapt as envisioned by the people to whom we owe so much, who worked so hard to get us this far.

Wilma Mathews is the director of constituent relations for Arizona State University Arizona State University, at Tempe; coeducational; opened 1886 as a normal school, became 1925 Tempe State Teachers College, renamed 1945 Arizona State College at Tempe. Its present name was adopted in 1958.  in Tempe, Arizona Tempe (pronounced /tɛm.'piː/) is a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, USA, with a population of 169,712 according to 2006 Census Bureau estimates. , USA, and is a past chairman of IABC's Accreditation Council Accreditation Council may refer to:
  • Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the body responsible for the accreditation of medical doctors in the United States
.
COPYRIGHT 2005 International Association of Business Communicators
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:COMMUNICATION WORLD'S VOICES: Past, Present and Future: The Evolution of IABC; International Association of Business Communicators
Author:Mathews, Wilma
Publication:Communication World
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2005
Words:504
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