Register by October 17 to Secure Your Spot!
Registration Type | Member Price |
---|---|
Early Bird Registration (Sept. 11-Oct.3) | $750 |
General Registration (Oct. 4-Oct.17) | $850 |
Registration Type | Member Price |
---|---|
Early Bird Registration (Sept. 11-Oct.3) | $750 |
General Registration (Oct. 4-Oct.17) | $850 |
Registration Type | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
---|---|---|
Early Bird Registration (Sept. 11-Oct. 3) | $750 | $850 |
General Registration (Oct. 4-Oct.17) | $850 | $950 |
Not a member? We'd love to have you join us for this event and become part of the Chorus America community! Visit our membership page to learn more, and feel free to contact us with any questions at [email protected].
Registration Type | Non-Member Price |
---|---|
Early Bird Registration (Sept. 11-Oct. 3) | $850 |
General Registration (Oct. 4-Oct.17) | $950 |
Think you should be logged in to a member account? Make sure the email address you used to login is the same as what appears on your membership information. Have questions? Email us at [email protected].
Registration Type | Price |
---|---|
Individual Session | $30 each |
All Four (4) Sessions | $110 |
*Replays with captioning will remain available for registrants to watch until November 1, 11:59pm EDT.
Member Professional Development Days are specially designed for Chorus America members. If you're not currently a member, we'd love to welcome you to this event, and into the Chorus America community! Visit our membership page to learn more about becoming a member of Chorus America, and please don't hesitate to reach out to us with any questions at [email protected].
Registration Type | Price |
---|---|
Individual Session | $30 each |
All Four (4) Sessions | $110 |
*Replays with captioning will remain available for registrants to watch until November 1, 11:59pm EDT.
Registration Type | Price |
---|---|
Individual Session | $30 each |
All Four (4) Sessions | $110 |
*Replays with captioning will remain available for registrants to watch until November 1, 11:59pm EDT.
Member Professional Development Days are specially designed for Chorus America members. If you're not currently a member, we'd love to welcome you to this event, and into the Chorus America community! Visit our membership page to learn more about becoming a member of Chorus America, and please don't hesitate to reach out to us with any questions at [email protected].
As optimism for the return to live gatherings cautiously dawns, it’s time to commence the work of rebuilding your choral organization’s capabilities and re-engaging its audiences. Building on “Asking Thru Adversity,” his breakout presentation at the Chorus America Winter Conference, leadership and community engagement consultant Matt Lehrman offers this guide to focusing your efforts.
There’s no textbook methodology for restarting your operational engine after such a prolonged disruption. It’s unlikely that you’ll simply flip a door-sign from “closed” to “open” and pick up where you left off. It’s okay to be making up your strategy on the fly—so long as your board of directors and your team are mindful, purposeful, and united in their efforts.
Right now, you possess a rare and precious opportunity to reimagine the possibilities of your organization. Here are three priorities to guide your efforts: 1) declare a strategic intention, 2) renew your spirit of purposefulness, and 3) animate your customer and supporter experience.
A failure to begin by explicitly setting a strategic intention runs the risk of misaligning the expectations and frustrating the efforts of the stakeholders, donors, audiences, team members, volunteers, partners, and other constituencies whom your organization serves and upon whom it depends.
The question is: “How shall we approach the future?” What’s your decision?
Start your board and team discussion by asking, “Is a return to our organization’s prior way of operating truly in our best interest?”
There’s an understandable craving for the security of what’s familiar and a return to stability, especially for those whose lives and livelihoods have been affected. Emerging from stress and crisis, it’s tough to fault logic that says, “Let’s first get back on our feet before we consider other options.”
Still, your organization’s thorough consideration should include these questions:
When you consider all your organization has experienced and everything our society has witnessed this past year (i.e., a global health crisis, economic stress, political division, reckoning with systemic racism, and more), it’s apparent that the world isn’t turning back the clock. So, is re-setting back to January 2020 truly your organization’s safest or smartest option?
A courageous board is one that’s willing to ask, “What might we achieve if we are willing to reconfigure our resources and embolden our expectations?”
Nurture such innovative thinking by your board and team by posing these questions:
Strategic intentions are the potent building blocks of every nonprofit organization. When all your constituencies are unified in their expectations, your chorus’s possibilities for the future are exciting and unlimited.
You’ve been fundraising your heart out for well over a year. You’ve powered through your own stresses, made difficult organizational choices, and overcome donor exhaustion.
So, what’s your fundraising encore?
It’s a serious question. After such intense fundraising efforts, how anti-climactic will it be to revert to soliciting year-end contributions and holiday performance sponsorships? In the aftermath of everything that’s happened, look at the vast philanthropic need that now exists in your community and think really hard about how important your routine operating support “ask” will appear in comparison.
Sure, your most devoted audiences and supporters may be quick to return (though there’s no guarantee), but few nonprofits make their full contributed revenue goals without inspiring support of a much wider range of supporters.
Don’t back off! This is a time to elevate your sense of purposefulness—to make your organization even more relevant to your donors and your community. Invigorate your organization’s fundraising capacity in three ways:
Arts and cultural organizations should be well disabused of the Field of Dreams fantasy that “If you build it, they will come.” There’s simply no promise that “If you rebuild it, they will come back.”
To re-activate your supporters, they need to know more than you’re getting back to business. To kickstart their attention, interest, and passion, you need to present more than a limited, inward-focused approach to relevance.
To assert relevance in this moment, your organization should position itself as more than a mere beneficiary of your community’s generosity. This is an opportunity to translate your artistic vision into bold community leadership. Now is the time for your organization to contribute its unique talents, perspective, and capabilities to the recovery, health, and collaborative spirit of your entire community.
If necessity is the mother of invention, then your return to live gatherings should spark a renaissance in the ways your organization connects with its audiences and supporters.
My newest webinar, Return to Revenue, is entirely about sparking that reimagination. It features open-ended access to a freewheeling database of creative ideas for generating revenue from ticket sales, admissions, class and activity fees, memberships, special events, and virtual programs.
From the practical to the far-fetched, each thought allows people to add comments, share links, and develop options. The discussion is as far from best practices as it gets. It’s a dizzying free-for-all of possibilities meant to spark creativity and inspire action.
Among the questions and ideas being discussed:
Despite the best hopes and plans, the pathway out of the pandemic isn’t totally clear. Resist the temptation to declare that you’ve found your “new normal.” Nobody’s there yet, so stay alert and nimble. Get used to making adjustments on the fly.
Your return to revenue depends on keeping people throughout your organization mindful, purposeful, and united in their efforts.
Your return to revenue also depends on your revitalization of relevance.
Matt Lehrman, co-founder of Social Prosperity Partners, has taught 70+ webinars for nonprofits nationwide since the onset of COVID, including How to Sustain Donors in Turbulent Times, How to Ask for $ in Tough Times, Asking Thru Adversity—and his newest, Return to Revenue. He is expert at helping arts and cultural organizations with strategic planning, business model innovation, and audience development.