Remove Communications Remove Georgia Remove New York Remove Recruitment
article thumbnail

Association Brain Food Weekly: 5.1.20

Reid All About it

Gabrielle Hamilton, New York Times ). Host: New York Society of Association Executives. With association advocacy efforts on Capitol Hill never more urgent, who does Congress listen to in an over-communicated world? IFTF Online Collaboration: A Global Communication Hackathon. (Anne Saxelby, Eater ). “My

article thumbnail

Advocacy and Governance 2.0

Association Adviser

Besides having boundless energy and vision, Sabuco and Hedberg are relentless networkers who leverage their global connections to recruit powerhouse board members, advocates and ambassadors to support their missions. You just need frequent and effective communication to keep them engaged. Communicate your organization’s mission.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Moose to MOOCs and 3 other articles for association executives

SCD Group

Coursera, a Silicon Valley-based company, is announcing today that it will partner with university systems in Colorado, Georgia, New York, Tennessee and Texas to develop and evaluate the potential of technology that is fueling dramatic changes in how higher education is designed and delivered. via YourMembership.com blog.

Mooc 40
article thumbnail

Association Brain Food: 9.9.22

Reid All About it

Rather, it’s a communications medium. He writes about the apps helping him develop a vision for the metaverse, the need for interoperability in the metaverse, and his hope that it goes beyond just being a communications medium. Lossy communication. David Brooks, New York Times paywall-free view). Josh Spector ).

article thumbnail

What Associations Need to Know About Technology

Association Adviser

As Thomas Friedman, bestselling author of The World Is Flat, quipped in a recent New York Times op-ed , “something really big happened in the world’s wiring in the last decade, but it was obscured by the financial crisis and post-9/11.” By Hank Berkowitz. ” The fax is back.