Please note: This evening is exclusively for non-profit Executive Directors, CEOs, and equivalent positions.
Wine & Wisdom is your chance to network with fellow Executive Directors & CEOs and to exchange insight and stories about your experiences in the nonprofit sector. Wine & Wisdom is built on the belief that regular networking is essential to creating a strong non-profit sector and affecting change in our communities.
Don't miss this opportunity to join your peers in a comfortable atmosphere and pick their brains on the issues leaders face in the non-profit sector!
For the last Wine & Wisdom of 2019 and the first to be held with our next federal government, ECVO Executive Director Russ Dahms is taking the mic for one final discussion about the state of the sector locally, provincially, and nationally. Russ will speak on what he's learned about charity, capacity building, and collection action in more than a decade as ED and what he sees emerging in the next decade and beyond. He'll speak to recent developments, including the Senate Report on the Charitable Sector, and what opportunities they present for Executive Directors in the future.
With Russ set to retire in early 2020, this Wine & Wisdom is one of the last remaining opportunities to connect with him. Don't miss it!
Tickets are limited and this event regularly sells out, so don't hold off on registering for this and future Wine and Wisdom events! Tickets include light snacks and attendance at the event.
Wine & Wisdom is open to all Edmonton area non-profit Executive Directors and CEOs, and will be of particular interest to leaders of human services organizations. We encourage organizations to share this invitation with other Executive Directors/CEOs in your network.
"People talk about bike riding when they want to remind us that some things, once learned, are not forgotten. What they don't mention is how we learned. No one learns to ride a bike from a book, or even a video. You learn by doing it. Actually, by not doing it. You learn by doing it wrong, by falling off, by getting back on, by doing it again." - Seth Godin
"People talk about bike riding when they want to remind us that some things, once learned, are not forgotten. What they don't mention is how we learned. No one learns to ride a bike from a book, or even a video. You learn by doing it. Actually, by not doing it. You learn by doing it wrong, by falling off, by getting back on, by doing it again."