Audience Response Interactive Case Study - Church of
God
Background
The
Church of God enlisted the help of IML’s audience response system
to facilitate the voting for their biennial International General
Assembly. The event brought approximately 3,500 Ordained Bishops to
San Antonio to take action in electing new leadership and passing
resolutions that would determine the direction for the future of
the church.
Challenge
The
challenge was to provide a fast and accurate audience voting system
that was capable of dealing with several thousand voting members
from a list of over 10,000; each voting member needed to verify
their voting eligibility before each election and motion. This
information would then need to be instantly reported and displayed
to the entire assembly.
Solution
The 2008
International General Assembly utilized IML Election, a unique
piece of software developed in-house, to record votes and elections
at member meetings. All of the eligible voting members present at
the meeting were assigned a Smartcard that was linked to a database
within the IML Servers containing their name and unique Ministerial
ID number. This card was used to instantly verify their credentials
before each election and motion, and was necessary to take part in
a vote. This ensured that the only votes received came from the
eligible parties.
The General Assembly used IML Election not only for single seat
position, but also multi-seat committees. The multi-seat elections
required up to 18 nominations from each eligible member. This
equated to nearly 90,000 votes being calculated instantly by IML.
Even with this vast number of votes received, the IML Election
software was able to report: how many votes each individual had
received, how many invalid votes were cast, how many people
received the required number of votes, and how many votes were
required to be elected. This report was printed off, first for the
Tellers Committee to scrutinize, and then the results were read to
the assembly with the name of each nominated party appearing on
screen as they were read out. This list ran into the thousands.
The advanced electronic voting software also permitted the
assembly to vote on motions with the same transparent and
definitive results as the seated elections. The IML service was
agile enough to react to the live debate and facilitate spontaneous
motions regarding any issues called from the floor. Motion results
were produced instantly, again allowing for prompt and concise
reporting to the body of the assembly.
IML Election introduced exceptional efficiency into the business
portion of the General Assembly. IML provided a fast, reliable, and
user-friendly method for gathering voting data and immediately
generating succinct and transparent reporting.
Testimonial
“With
IML’s involvement in the voting at the assembly, there came more
than just consistency and reliability. IML provided quick, accurate
results with less work or concern about the procedure or the
technology, and ultimately provided a peace of mind throughout
delegation."
Scot Carter, Church of God