No-cost workshops help newcomers, Indigenous Peoples, women and youth launch and run businesses during pandemic
Feb. 26, 2021
A series of no-cost workshops designed for diverse groups in Alberta — including newcomers to Canada, Indigenous Peoples, women and youth — has been updated to reflect the unique challenges of launching and running a business during a global pandemic.
The Alberta Inclusive Innovation Initiative (AI3) is offered by Mount Royal University and the Diversity Institute at Ryerson University, with support from HSBC Bank Canada. Running from March 3 to 31, the weekly workshops cover topics such as sales skills, Microsoft Excel, financial accounting and marketing.
“These workshops are more important than ever, as potential and newly established entrepreneurs navigate an economy affected by COVID-19. Building on our success in providing online learning, we’ve pivoted the AI3 series to deliver effective, accessible online learning, no matter where participants are,” says Dimitra Fotopoulos, director, Faculty of Continuing Education at Mount Royal. “We’ve significantly updated the content in the workshops with practical learning that participants can apply to their situation.”
As a social media expert, instructor Karen Richards brings her real-life experience to the workshops. She notes that the pandemic has not only changed how we work, but how we perceive and interact with the world around us. To reflect those seismic shifts, she substantially revised the content in her Marketing and Sales session to provide strategies for dealing with the “callout culture” taking place online.
“Brands and businesses need to rethink online content and how it is perceived by their audiences, to anticipate potential negative reactions and plan for how they will deal with it,” Richards says, citing “unprecedented levels of negative brand mentions and reviews.”
In 2019, Mount Royal increased the capacity for the AI3 workshops after overwhelming response. About 20 per cent of the participants had already launched their businesses and were looking for support in growing or improving their ventures.
“Canada has an ever-growing demand for skills despite rising unemployment and under-employment, particularly for diverse groups such as newcomers, women and Indigenous people,” said Wendy Cukier, Academic Director and Founder of the Diversity Institute. “The skills that can be developed through entrepreneurship are not only necessary to help people start new businesses, they are in demand and transferable to other forms of employment.”
Read more about the The Alberta Inclusive Innovation Initiative (AI3).
For further information, please contact:
Peter Glenn, Senior Media Relations Officer
403.463.6930
mediarelations@mtroyal.ca