Leadership Deep Dive Build a Learning Strategy to Expand Reach, Revenue, and Impact Wednesday, June 5, 2024 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
This program proudly sponsored by Seattle Convention Center
Scholarships for this program sponsored by Third Sector Company
Nancy Bacon Nancy Bacon Consulting, LLC
Jeffrey Wilcox, CFRE Third Sector Company
DESCRIPTION
Build a Learning Strategy to Expand Reach, Revenue, and Impact
Your association is working hard to produce workshop and webinars, online courses, certificate programs and networking events. Your staff is tired and revenue is down. People aren’t showing up to events the way they used to. They can watch those experts on YouTube for cheaper, so why attend the annual conference? What can you do to fix this?
It is time for a learning strategy.
A learning strategy is a planned approach to achieving reach, revenue, and impact. It outlines how you can meet your members’ evolving educational needs and networking interests, ensuring that your association remains relevant in today’s changing landscape.
An effective learning strategy will help your members solve problems so they can do their jobs better. It gives them what they need when they need it so they have greater impact. It also provides you with guidance on how you communicate, price programs, and prioritize opportunities. Just as the process of building a strategic plan makes space for important conversations about direction and priorities, a learning strategy answers core questions so you can deliver programs with greater efficiency and effectiveness.
During this hands-on deep dive, we will cover the core elements of a learning strategy:
Learning Objectives:
This course includes:
Audience: This course is designed for association CEOS, learning leaders, member staff, and consultants interested in making their learning program more strategic.
What people are saying about this course:
“I gained clarity on a number of questions and have concrete next steps.”
“The best part of the course was getting a broad overview of programming and seeing programming through a cost/benefit lens.”
“Framing the questions we need to ask ourselves is so very important and helpful.”
Speaker Bios: