In today’s interconnected and resource-constrained world, arts and culture leaders must move beyond transactional relationships to build strategic partnerships that foster shared purpose and organizational resilience. This program, offered in partnership with the UK based global Partnership Brokers Association, will enable participants to explore ethical partnering, interest holder alignment, and strategies for long-term impact.
Participants will receive a certificate of completion from the Banff Centre and the Partnership Brokers Association, which includes access to their resource materials and global Partnership Broker’s network.
This six-day course equips participants to design and lead high-performing partnerships across public, private, nonprofit, and community sectors. Participants will explore the full partnership cycle—from scoping and brokering to sustaining outcomes and learn about the full spectrum of collaborative relationships. Topics include interest holder mapping, shared governance, resource sharing, and navigating power dynamics.
Through hands-on workshops, peer exchange, and real-world scenarios, participants will leave with a customized partnership strategy and the confidence to lead collaborative initiatives that are bold, inclusive, and future-focused.
Program highlights:
- The partnership spectrum: from cooperation to co-creation
- Principles of equitable and ethical partnering
- Tools for interest holder mapping, value alignment, and shared governance
- Strategies for resource sharing, joint storytelling, and collective outcomes
- Case studies of cross-sector partnerships in arts and culture
- Navigating power dynamics, risk, and accountability in complex collaborations
Requirements
This program is designed for arts, heritage, and creative industries professionals working in organizations of any size and across all art forms, including visual arts, galleries, museums, theatre, dance, opera, film, music, and literature.
It is well suited to:
- administrators, managers, and directors in arts and heritage organizations and creative industries
- creative producers and consultants working with arts organizations
- education and engagement specialists in these sectors
- artists (Indigenous, Canadian, and international)
- community-based arts and heritage workers in urban and rural settings
Limited funding is available.