Public Area: Becoming a Trainer - Benefits |
Last updated February 11, 2007
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I’m already an intercultural trainer. How can I know if this is something for me?
To help you find out the answer, here are a few questions to consider:
Do you have a clear and efficient intercultural approach that has proved itself?
Do you have tools and materials to organize and deliver seminars and to measure their results?
Do you have the sales tools you need to sell your courses?
Do you have enriching contacts and exchanges with other intercultural trainers who share your vision?
If you’re satisfied with the answers to these questions, the Global’Ease certification program and network may not have much to offer you. If you’re not entirely satisfied with your answers, the Global’Ease Certification and network might offer the support you need.
Does Global’Ease take a percentage on the contracts?
Once certified, if you find a client, get the contract by yourself and deliver it yourself, you don’t owe anything to Global’Ease.
If you get a contract for which other trainers (in addition to you) need to intervene, 5% go to Global’Ease to contribute to developing the network.
If Global’Ease helps you with the sale of a contract, a lump fee or a percentage of the sale will be agreed on beforehand.
If you are asked by Global’Ease or another trainer to deliver a session, the fee you will be paid will be agreed on before the action.
I’ve already developed my own courses. May I keep selling them if I become certified?
You are allowed to keep selling your own courses in addition to the Global’Ease courses for which you are certified. You’ll only need to state clearly in your sales tools and in your speech which courses are your own and which ones are Global’Ease ones.
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