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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230301T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230301T160000
DTSTAMP:20260504T154312
CREATED:20221122T151716Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230210T150850Z
UID:10950-1677682800-1677686400@wvnpa.org
SUMMARY:Role of the Board Chair Series
DESCRIPTION:This series is offered by the Nonprofit Association of Washington.\n\nWednesdays\, March 1st – March 22nd\, 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM ET\n\nRegistration Fees: $60 for Members\, $120 for Nonmembers.  Please log into the Member Portal to find the member discount code\, or email hilaria@dev.wvnpa.org. \n\n\nRegister Now\nEvent Details\n\n\n\n\n4-Part Series\nWednesday\, March 1\, 2023\nWednesday\, March 8\, 2023\nWednesday\, March 15\, 2023 &\nWednesday\, March 22\, 2023\n3:00 pm-4:00 pm ET\nOnline Via Zoom \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLeading a group of governance volunteers can be challenging as well as rewarding. Serving as the chair of the board is not a role for the uninspired and undecided. In this workshop\, participants will learn about the chair’s responsibility in strengthening and improving the leadership work of the board as a whole. \nThis course is a great primer for new board chairs and excellent refresher for more seasoned board members! Whether you’re a current chair\, chair-elect\, or head up a committee\, this workshop covers leadership skills every board member needs. Topics include: leadership characteristics of effective board leaders\, key relationships in and out of the board room\, your leadership legacy\, facilitating meetings that matter\, and ways to engage individual board members. \n\n\n\n\nLearning Outcomes\nYou will leave with: \nA better understanding of the board chair’s responsibility in strengthening the work of the board as a whole.\nStrategies that can help you lead more effectively as a board chair.\nWays to more effectively structure board meetings and engage individual board members at meetings. \nCourse Outline \n\n\n\n\nPart 1: What Kind of Leader are You? \n\nThe Changing Landscape of Nonprofit Leadership – What’s Important Now\nCharacteristics of Great Board Leaders –How do You Measure Up?\nYour North Star – What Will Your Legacy Be?\n\nPart 2: What’s Your Job as Board Chair? \n\nCommon Mistakes and Frustrations\nThe Do’s and Dont’s of Effective Chairmanship\nHow to Make the Most of Key Relationships\, including the Board Chair – ED partnership\n\nPart 3: Meetings that Matter \n\nThe Bone structure: A Masterful Agenda\, Meeting Mechanics\, Strategic Information\, Ways to Evaluate Meetings\nShaping Powerful Questions that generate great discussion\n\nPart 4: Presiding vs Facilitating \n\nHow to Develop Facilitative Leadership\nCommunication Tips for Effective Listeners\nThe people side of things – managing meeting dynamics and conflict\n\n\n\n\n\nWho Should Attend\n\n\n\n\nBoard Members\, incoming Board Chairs\, other committee chairs\, and Executive Directors are encouraged to attend. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAccessibility\n\n\n\n\nCaptioning: We will have automated captioning enabled. \nInterpretation: Please indicate during registration if you have an interpretation request. Typically\, we need at least two weeks in order to schedule an interpreter. \nVisual Descriptions: Presenters will include visual descriptions of themselves and the slides to give a person who is low-vision\, blind\, or calling in without video a sense of space and place. \nIf you have additional accessibility requests\, please let us know when you register. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout the Speaker\n\n\n\n\nAmanda Madorno is an executive leadership coach\, consultant and planning facilitator who helps nonprofit leaders and their teams drive personal and organizational change. After many years in the nonprofit sector as a fundraiser and executive\, Amanda began consulting in 1994 and incorporated Roam Consulting LLC in 2001. Her firm focuses on helping leaders build the skills they need to lead with excellence\, successfully navigate change\, and create productive teams. She believes emotional intelligence is the cornerstone of leadership excellence and is a certified EQ practitioner. \nA seasoned nonprofit interim executive\, with more than 18 interim assignments under her belt\, she brings real-life leadership experience to her coaching and consulting practice. Her clients include community health clinics\, Native American tribes\, associations\, museums\, independent schools\, social service agencies\, and Fortune 500 companies. Credentialed in Equine Experiential Learning\, Amanda blends her horse sense with her understanding of leadership. Leadership with Horses is an innovative leadership development experience that draws leaders and teams from around the globe. They join Amanda and her herd of horses in the arena to work together and make breakthroughs in their leadership skills and competencies.
URL:https://wvnpa.org/event/role-of-the-board-chair-series/
LOCATION:Webinar\, WV\, United States
CATEGORIES:Webinar,Workshop
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230321T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230321T170000
DTSTAMP:20260504T154312
CREATED:20230217T170101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230217T170102Z
UID:11183-1679396400-1679418000@wvnpa.org
SUMMARY:Spotlight on Community-Centric Fundraising
DESCRIPTION:This session is offered by the Minnesota Council of Nonprofits.\n\nTuesday\, March 21st\, 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM ET\n\nRegistration Fees: $129 for Members\, $169 for Nonmembers.  Please log into the Member Portal to find the member discount code\, or email hilaria@dev.wvnpa.org. \nREGISTER NOW\nCommunity-Centric Fundraising (CCF) is a grassroots movement that seeks to move philanthropy and fundraising forward in a way that centers racial and economic justice. CCF\, and its 10 Principles\, were introduced to the nonprofit world by a collective of nonprofit fundraisers of color in 2018. You’ve probably heard of the concept\, but as a young(ish) movement\, many in the nonprofit sector are still unsure how to implement CCF in their own practice. \nThis one-day training of four sessions is designed to support nonprofit fundraisers in better understanding the Community-Centric Fundraising movement\, its Principles\, and how to both incorporate CCF into their work and help advance the effort to further fundraising practices that are grounded in race\, equity\, and social justice. \nParticipants of this Spotlight will: \n\n\n\n\nLearn about the philosophy and principles of CCF\nExamine the inequitable history of philanthropy\, and possibilities for the future\nExplore how to move fundraising practices forward to focus on social justice\nHear from practitioners who have applied CCF at their organization\nGain knowledge and strategies they will be able to implement in their own work\n\n\n\n\nSpotlights are day-long virtual trainings\, offering four to five 60-minute sessions\, each exploring a different aspect of a specific topic. Each session will be led by experienced nonprofit leaders and subject-matter experts. Spotlights are designed to offer practical information that can be applied immediately along with larger-picture questions and possibilities to consider for the long-term. \nThe Spotlight will be hosted by Mallory Mitchell of CCF MN. \nSchedule\nAll times listed in Central Time \n10 – 11 a.m. // Introduction to CCF\nThe history of philanthropy is rooted in inequity. Some of these same narratives and systems remain embedded in the sector today. In order to move the work of nonprofits forward\, and to best serve our communities\, a re-examination of the philosophies and practices of fundraising is needed. The Community-Centric Fundraising movement aims to center social justice and reduce harm in nonprofit work. This session will touch on the history and systemic problems with nonprofits and foundations\, introduce the Principles and key concepts of the movement\, and share the values and vision of CCF.\nAndrea Hite\, associate program director\, Breakthrough Twin Cities \n \n11:30 a.m. // 12:30 p.m. – CCF in Action\nSession description forthcoming. \n1:30 – 2:30 p.m. // Getting Buy-in from your Organization\nAre you interested in implementing CCF at your nonprofit? Great! Now what? Join this session to hear from a fundraising professional about her experience of making the case for CCF at her organization. She’ll share how she presented the opportunities to leadership\, what has been implemented so far\, and some potential strategies for how to get from maybe to yes in the future. Transformational change is a process; and can start with building support and strengthening your case to bring others along with you in the work.\nPie Paulson\, grants specialist and Mala Thao\, vice president of individual philanthropy\, Greater Twin Cities United Way \n \n3 – 4 p.m. // What it Means to be an Anti-Capitalist Fundraiser\nCCF is deconstructing the way we have historically viewed fundraising. One thing that comes to focus from it all is that fundraising is hard work. Whether you’ve been doing it for years or just starting out\, the physical and mental tolls can be overwhelming. As we seek to continue changing the way we think about fundraising for a more equitable world\, we also need change the way we take care of ourselves and our relationships with power and wealth. This session touches on how community healing\, re-examining our structures\, and becoming an anti-capitalist fundraiser helped battle doubts\, solidarity\, and provided continuing hope for the future of the fundraising field.\nCarlos García León\, individual giving manager\, Chicago Shakespeare Theater \nThis event is offered in partnership with CCF MN\, a collective for Minnesota-based fundraisers who are committed to the CCF movement. This Spotlight will be hosted by Mallory Mitchell of CCF MN. For more information on the history of CCF\, the vision of the collective\, and resources for learning more\, visit the national CCF website. \n\nEvent Details\nThis virtual event will take place on the Zoom platform. Your access link will be emailed to you the day before the event after 12 p.m. \nThis session will be recorded. The recording will be made available to registrants after the live event. \nCaptioning is provided automatically through Zoom. For information on requesting CART\, ASL\, or another accommodation\, please visit our Registration Policies page. \nTo learn more about events\, registration\, and payment\, visit our Event & Registration FAQ page. \nState Association Partners\nThis event is presented in partnership with Kentucky Nonprofit Network\, Common Good Vermont\, New Hampshire Center for Nonprofits\, and West Virginia Nonprofit Association. \nSpeaker Information\nCarlos García León (he/they) is a queer\, nonbinary\, Latine\, Mexican-Statesian\, and anti-capitalist fundraiser. They were born in Atlixco\, Puebla\, Mexico\, but currently reside in the stolen land of the Peoria\, Potawatomi\, Kickapoo\, and Kaskaskia tribes\, also known as Chicago\, Illinois and work as the individual giving manager of Chicago Shakespeare Theater. Their work\, both in the arts and through writing\, is driven by a fight for cultural equity\, decolonizing the arts\, and social justice. \n \nAndrea Hite (she/her) is the donor engagement officer at Breakthrough Twin Cities. A Korean adoptee\, Andrea grew up in the suburbs of St. Paul. She began her working career as a pediatric dental assistant\, enjoying the opportunity to arm young people with the skills and techniques to have a long-lasting positive dental experience. Always interested in learning and growing\, Andrea went back to complete her undergraduate degree in youth studies at the University of Minnesota and then moved to Chicago to pursue her master’s degree in child development at the Erikson Institute. After almost a decade of working on the programmatic side of multiple education-focused nonprofits\, Andrea made the transition to fundraising and development and hasn’t looked back! \nMallory Mitchell (she/her) is an independent fundraising coach and trainer specializing in individual giving and community-centric fundraising. Hailing from Alabama\, Mallory has been a noteworthy leader in the fundraising space for over 12 years. She is an experienced fundraiser and takes great pride in using her natural gift for relationship-building\, strategic thinking\, and fundraising with integrity to provide the best fundraising education possible. She has created fundraising curricula used by dozens of nonprofits across Minnesota\, and has coached more than 100 nonprofits and schools to help them build sustainable fundraising strategies. Mallory holds a bachelors in business administration degree from the University of Montevallo\, and a masters of public policy degree from the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs. \nPie Paulson is grants specialist at Greater Twin Cities United Way. She has been in the role for almost three years. Pie has been working in the nonprofit fundraising field for the past decade\, focusing specifically on grantwriting for the last five years. \nAs VP of individual philanthropy at Greater Twin Cities United Way (GTCUW)\, Mala Thao helps donors become smarter philanthropists and strengthens Greater Twin Cities United Way’s mission. Mala started her career in philanthropy more than 20 years ago with Women’s Foundation of Minnesota and gained additional fundraising experience with American/Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy\, Indian Land Tenure Foundation\, and American Red Cross. Prior to joining GTCUW\, Mala was a philanthropic advisor at Saint Paul & Minnesota Foundation. She has volunteered on boards and committees such as Headwaters Foundation for Justice and Facilitating Race & Equity Conference. Mala has been appointed by the Mayor of St. Paul to serve as commissioner of the Human Rights & Equal Economic Opportunity and appointed by the Metropolitan Council to serve on the Livable Communities Advisory committee.
URL:https://wvnpa.org/event/spotlight-on-community-centric-fundraising/
LOCATION:Webinar\, WV\, United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
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