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Tag: funeral service future

The March Of Dimes & Funeral Service

The March of Dimes was founded in 1938 by Franklin D. Roosevelt to eradicate Infantile Paralysis (Polio).

With the advent of Jonas Salk’s vaccine in the early 1950’s the disease was largely eradicated in the Western World.  In 1994 the United States was the first nation to be certified “Polio Free.”

What does this have to do with Funeral Service?

Metaphorically, the history of The March of Dimes is instructive to the history of Funeral Service.

By 1976 Polio was so rare in the U.S. that most people thought the battle was won.  But by then, the March of Dimes had become an institution. It had local chapters, it had employees, it had facilities, it even had a budget.  It had successfully raised millions of dollars.

The stakeholders were faced with a dilemma.  “What do you do when what you do loses its relevance?”

Fortunately, they had some smart people who were able to step outside of themselves and think about what’s next.  In my imagination I can hear them saying:

“Let’s see…we have a dedicated and successful staff, we have a globally recognized brand, we have a system and a network, we have competency in operating a charitable organization, we are well – connected.  and so on.”

History would suggest that they realized that they had more going for them than not.  They just needed to reimagine (not reinvent) their purpose in a way that their strengths would carry them forward.  Today, they are still globally recognized as an important resource in the fight against birth defects.

Funeral Service has reimagined itself more than once in the last 175 years.  I doubt Joseph Gawler in 1850 even imagined the advent of embalming.  Yet a mere 30 years after the founding of Gawlers the first embalming school was established. Likewise, I doubt he could have foreseen the day when manufactured caskets would supplant the home-built coffin.

Funeral Service has progressed and developed continuously here in America.  The skill sets important in Joseph Gawler’s day are largely irrelevant today.

So, what do we have going for us?  Well, people still die and will for the foreseeable future.  Families still have need of someone to help with the process of disposal.  What they seem to be moving away from is the furniture.  At the same time, those who have begun to develop the skill of “Appreciative Inquiry” in the arrangement interview are discovering that they still want to honor the dead and interact in, what used to be, unconventional ways.  The public does, in fact, care.  We just haven’t yet developed the skill of helping them do it the way they feel is appropriate to them.  A few have, but most are still locked into the furniture mindset.  The funeral professionals who have, are experiencing renewed enthusiasm, renewed relevance and increased customer loyalty.  It’s a new skill set.  I think that skill set is well suited to most funeral director’s personality.  It’s just a different approach.

The Takeaway:

Things change.  Your task is to discern which of the old practices are “babies” and which is the “bathwater” and then to adjust accordingly by learning and leaning into the skill sets appropriate to our times.

 

 

 

Six Blind Funeral Directors – Third Installment

Six Blind Funeral Directors – Third Installment

In our prior two installments we looked at our future from a theoretical perspective and a rational perspective.  This installment we will focus on a contextual perspective.

A Contextual Approach To The Future

 A study of the evolution of contemporary American DeathCare beginning in 1850 suggests that our current transformation is the fifth in a series of iterative transformations.  Each, including this one, is a response to changes in society and culture.

Compare the skill sets necessary for success in 1850 (livery and cabinet making) with the, yet undefined, skill sets necessary for success today and the difference is worlds apart.  This is not our first rodeo.  Imagine you are the 30-year-old son of a coffin maker coming home from the very first NFDA convention in 1880 and telling your coffin – maker dad that you were going to get your embalmer’s certificate and the company needed to switch to premade caskets instead of making coffins. I just can’t see that conversation going well.

Just 30 years ago the primary skill sets for funeral directors were embalming, casket merchandising and never making a mistake.  Today, people skills dominate as well as teaching (better word: coaching), listening and creating.

So, in context, this is the fifth time in our history we have needed to respond to cultural changes by assimilating new and different skill sets.  Those that seek out and embrace those new skill sets will realize the “First Mover” advantage.

Each time we have undergone transformation we have emerged better and stronger and I am hopeful we can do the same now.  What is needed are two insights.  The first has to do with what has not changed. And the second with what we need to become.  In other words: “we need to change the bathwater without discarding the babies.”

What has not changed and is a thread that reaches back over at least 4,000 years of recorded history and beyond is the human response to death.  This includes both the deceased and their survivors.  That core need is the same today that it was from the beginning of time.  The substance has not changed but the form has.  The essence or consistent theme has only changed relative to its expression and platform.  When death occurs, humans need to gather, comfort one another, and affirm the meaning of life (the deceased and our own).  There are probably other ways to describe it but in a succinct way those are the common elements, the three universal drivers that reach across all individual preferences.  You can change the form, the ritual, the process, the venue; but those three elements are constant.

That leaves us with what we need to become.  Clearly, in much the same way coffin makers and livery providers yielded to embalmers and casket sellers, we need to move to the next generation of funeral director: Muse, creator, guide, teacher, trusted advisor.  Each of these involves that we take on new roles.  We have done that before and we can do it now.  What makes this reinvention a challenge is that it requires us to abandon our historical bias toward being unobtrusive.  These are active roles producing intentional outcomes.  “What do you want?,” is no longer a relevant question.

Next week, the fourth and final installment: What, Then, Shall We Become.