Why your supporters are wealthier than you expect. Course details.

CHASE 2016 will offer 50 free seminars

Howard Lake | 4 December 2015 | News

CHASE, the two-day event for charity and association professionals, returns in February 2016 to the Business Design Centre in London’s Islington.
The event features 50 free seminars, covering Fundraising, technology, marketing, membership management, governance, legal and financial issues. There is also a new workshop stream, sponsored by PayPal Giving Fund.
These take place around an exhibition featuring a range of charity and association sector suppliers, consultants and agencies.
Registration for CHASE, which runs from 16 to 17 February 2016, is, as usual, free.
Michelle Moran, Business Development Director at the event’s organisers Conference House, said:

“The not for profit sector is under more public scrutiny than ever before, and is always under pressure to achieve more with less.
“But there is also huge potential out there, with ever more sophisticated solutions and strategies emerging to help charities achieve the best for their beneficiaries, and association to do the same for their members. CHASE 2016 has been structured to celebrate those opportunities, and take a fresh, thought provoking look at how we as a sector can maximise them.”

Seminar topics

Seminars include:
• Kids Company – Learning the Lessons of the Past to Provide a Path for the Future – Andy Burman,
• Interactive Fundraising Technology to Raise You More – John Roberts, Givergy
• Expert Guide to Charity Loans – Paul Davis, Charity Bank
• Why a Diverse Board Matters and how to have one – Alex Swallow, Young Charity Trustees
• Membership Engineering – Using the Membership Model to Find Solutions – Mervyn Pilley, Not for Profit Business Services Ltd.
• Planning Your Membership Digital Content Strategy – John Martinez, Shocklogic
• Elections as an Opportunity for Better Member Engagement – Luke Ashby, Electoral Reform Services
 

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Why your supporters are wealthier than you think... Course by Catherine Miles. Background photo of two sides of a terraced street of houses.

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