Keynotes and Trainings
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We all can pinpoint specific moments in our lives where we reach a stark pivot point in our journey. Like where we think about life before and life after that specific moment.
Life before you met your lifelong best friend, and life after.
Life before Beyoncè released Lemonade, the visual album, and life after.
Life before March 2020, and life after March 2020.
For Q, he had a few of those moments in college. The unexpected loss of his father and grandmother within 8 months of each other sent him into a spiral filled with depression, anxiety, and difficulty. In those worst times, it wasn’t “the grind,” his coursework, or his responsibilities as a student leader that helped him find peace again.
It was his village.
The village of people around him who helped him pick up the pieces and become whole again.
But this program isn’t about Q’s village only…
It’s about yours!
What Attendees Will Walk Away With
A deeper understanding of why asking for help, seeking guidance, and letting people in aren't signs of weakness. They're how villages get built before you need them.
A completed village map that makes their support network visible and real, identifying who is in their corner, how to activate those relationships, and where they are showing up for someone else.
At least one concrete strategy for building new connections with peers, faculty, and staff that moves them from knowing people on campus to actually being known.
Ideal Audience
Students, faculty, and staff who want to focus on acknowledging the importance of our support systems, the power in connection, and ensuring that we are pouring into those who pour into us. Because we need each other more than we think we do sometimes.
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Most students know they need community.
Few are actually building it.
Because building real community is inconvenient. It requires showing up before you need anything, investing in people before life gets hard, and choosing connection over comfort on the days when it would be easier not to.
This program takes the idea of community beyond inspiration and into practice. Built on decades of community development work, it tactically equips students to build the kind of relationships that hold up under pressure, the ones that are actually there when life gets hard.
The village is built in all the moments before you need it.What Attendees Will Walk Away With
The ability to articulate why proactive relationship building matters and identify at least one area where they can invest in community before a crisis hits.
A completed personal support map that names their key relationships and how to activate them.
A working understanding of the AEAA framework and the ability to identify where apathy shows up in their own life and what to do about it.
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You've planned the meeting. You've built the program. You've sent the reminders.
And over half your members still didn't show up.
Disengagement in student organizations rarely starts with bad intentions. It starts with disconnection: between leadership and members, between organizational goals and personal investment, between what the chapter says it values and what it actually does. When those gaps go unaddressed, apathy spreads and the culture suffers.
This program helps student leaders diagnose what's actually driving disengagement in their organizations and equips them with tools to address the root, not just the symptoms. Built around Interconnected's AEAA Framework, attendees learn to stop treating symptoms and start solving the real problem.
What Attendees Will Walk Away With
A working understanding of why members disengage and how to assess what's actually driving it in their specific organization.
Practical techniques for re-engaging members in ways that feel relevant and worthwhile, including strategies for making development something members actually choose, not just endure. Think of it as sneaking in the vegetables: the growth is real, even when it doesn't feel like a training.
A clearer sense of what a healthy chapter culture actually looks like and the first concrete steps to start building it.
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Statements get drafted. Graphics get posted. And then everyone moves on.
Meanwhile the people who were watching are still watching. And they're taking notes on the gap between what your organization said and what it actually did. That gap is where trust goes to die.
The hard truth is that most organizations aren't performative because they don't care. They're performative because they never built the structures, the accountability, or the culture to back up what they say.
Reacting feels like action.
Posting feels like progress.
And the real work keeps getting deferred.
This program doesn't let anyone off the hook. Including the people in the room.
It pushes student leaders to move past the gesture and into the harder, more meaningful work of building trust, taking accountability, and creating change that actually lands.
What Attendees Will Walk Away With
Concrete strategies for moving beyond the performative gesture toward approaches that create real, lasting impact in their organizations and communities.
A clearer understanding of how trust is built or broken by the gap between what an organization says and what it actually does, and what to do about it.
A personal accountability framework for identifying where their own leadership falls into performance, and the tools to close that gap.
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Greek unity is one of the most talked about and least achieved goals in fraternity and sorority life.
Ask ten people to define it and you'll get ten different answers. Ask them how to build it and you'll get silence.
Michele and Q have spent years watching inter-council initiatives launch with energy and quietly fall apart, and they've noticed the same patterns every time. Unity can't be defined, so it can't be measured. History gets ignored, so it keeps repeating. And there's no real plan, so nothing actually changes.
This session goes after all three.
Built specifically for FSL communities, this is not another feel-good unity program. It's a structured, honest conversation about what trust between councils actually requires, what gets in the way, and how to start building something that holds beyond a single retreat or joint event.
Because change moves at the speed of trust. So that's exactly where we start.
What Attendees Will Walk Away With
A shared definition of unity and community that is specific, measurable, and actually meaningful to the councils in the room, not borrowed from a national framework or a motivational poster.
Practical strategies for designing retreat and programming spaces that build genuine trust across FSL communities, with structures that outlast the event itself.
A concrete next step their inter-council community can take within 30 days to move from talking about unity to building it.
Ideal Audience
Fraternity and sorority communities, inter-council leadership, and FSL advisors looking to move beyond surface-level unity programming toward something that creates real, lasting change across their Greek community.

