Remove Certificate Remove Education Remove Innovation Remove Press Release
article thumbnail

ASAE Launches Challenge to Recognize Power of Digital Credentials

Associations Now

ASAE’s challenge—hosted along with the American Council on Education, digital credential platform Credly, and the Lumina Foundation—invites groups to submit proposals for ways to better promote, evaluate, and use digital credentials in assessing job candidates and helping with hiring decisions.

article thumbnail

6 Ways To Engage Association Members

CMA Solutions

Communicating and promoting your association’s recent innovation would help jog their memories.) Our association management clients want more members, more attendance at their events and more purchases when it comes to their educational products. Users must open an account to access free and paid education items.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Association Brain Food Weekly: 6.1.18

Reid All About it

The weekly list of free educational events and resources for the association community… Forget robots, keep your eye on old people —they’ll help companies thrive, says Tyler Cowen. Figure out what your aging members need so they turn to you first for education. don’t use press releases to find new story ideas. (

article thumbnail

APICS Aims to Fill a Need with its New Credential

Associations Now

Integrating AST&L into APICS allows us to fortify our supply chain education and certification offering with deeper content in the areas of transportation and logistics,” said APICS CEO Abe Eshkenazi in a press release issued last July. And we actually felt a pretty big need for this type of certification.”.

article thumbnail

Spillover: Heartbleed’s Big Lessons, One Drop at a Time

Associations Now

We tend to give our good press a spit-shine and bury the bad news in a press release that few people will ever see. “Well, it might rwith making the educe finger pointing or blame when things go bad, but that has little to do right choices for the security of your organization’s data.”