Course Lab
Interview with Christina Becker
Jungian Analyst & Vice President, Becker Associates
Interview Summary
Christina Becker, a Jungian analyst and nonprofit consultant with over 20 years in the sector, built a subscription-based governance training program for nonprofit boards through the Canadian Nonprofit Academy. Her model addresses a persistent problem: board members who rotate on and off need continuous, accessible training — not a one-time workshop. By keeping lessons under 10 minutes and offering a coaching component, she created a program that 25 organizations have adopted.
When the Buyer and the Learner Are Different People
Most online courses serve individuals who buy the course for themselves. Christina's situation is fundamentally different. She sells board governance training to a nonprofit's executive director or board chair, but the people who actually need to complete the training are all the board members — some of whom may not be personally invested. "How do you get people who are not totally bought into this yet?" Abe asks during the episode. "They may be on board with it intellectually. But they're not necessarily jumping up and down to go through this training." Christina's answer has evolved through experimentation: progress reports sent monthly to a champion within the organization, email reminders highlighting specific lessons, and encouraging boards to make the training mandatory through a formal motion. None of these fully solve the completion challenge, but each moves the needle.
The person who's making the decision and writing the check is different than the board members who have to take the time and energy to go through the training and apply it.
Subscription Model for a One-Off Industry
Nonprofit boards traditionally hire a consultant for a single workshop every few years. Christina broke from that pattern by designing a subscription model: organizations pay a larger fee upfront (ranging from $2,000 to $6,000 depending on board size) and then a smaller annual fee to maintain access. This ensures that when new board members join, they have immediate access to training without the organization reinventing the wheel. "Often I think that that means that they could be fully functional as soon as they get to the table," Christina explains. The subscription approach also means her content stays current. She has iterated through two versions of the program and is planning a third, incorporating new best practices as they emerge.
Board development and board training is an ongoing thing. It's not just a one-off thing. So I needed to create a sense of security that we were building something they could rely on in the long term.
Accessible Learning for Busy Volunteers
Board members are volunteers with full-time jobs and families. Christina designed every lesson to be under 10 minutes, available in video, audio, and transcript formats. "I was so mindful of making sure that the lessons were less than 10 minutes," she says. "If they're in their car, or making dinner, they can just take 15 minutes and listen to this particular lesson." She also incorporated a coaching component modeled on the Course Builders Laboratory: board members can post questions in a discussion board or schedule a phone call at any point during the program. This availability to apply knowledge in real time — not just consume content — was central to her design philosophy.
I was so mindful of making it really accessible for adult learners and for busy people, because I think board members don't want to be sitting down in front of a computer for 45 minutes.
The Joy of Constant Iteration
Christina runs two entirely separate businesses — Jungian masterclasses and the Canadian Nonprofit Academy — which goes against typical advice to pick a single focus. She makes it work by following her energy and letting one take priority in different seasons. But the thread connecting both is a commitment to iteration. "Once you create a course, that's not it," she says. "It's a dance between your students and yourself and learning new things." Her most meaningful validation came from a board member with 16 years of experience who said the program deepened their ability to serve as a fiduciary. Several organizations have enrolled after a board member completed the training at another nonprofit and recommended it — organic referrals driven by genuine results.
Once you create a course, that's not it. It's a dance between your students and yourself and learning new things.
Christina's Action Steps
Christina recommends these 3 steps to improve your course planning:
Design for the gap between buyer and learner
When the person purchasing your course is not the person completing it, build accountability structures into your design: progress reports for the buyer, email nudges for learners, and clear completion expectations set at enrollment.
Use a subscription model for ongoing training needs
For any audience with regular turnover — new hires, new board members, rotating teams — a subscription ensures continuous access. Price it with a higher upfront fee and a lower annual renewal to reduce friction.
Keep lessons under 10 minutes for busy adult learners
Short, multi-format lessons (video, audio, transcript) let busy professionals learn during commutes or between meetings. Pair short content with a coaching component so learners can apply knowledge to their specific context.
About Christina Becker
Jungian Analyst & Vice President, Becker Associates
Christina Becker is a Jungian analyst and the Vice President of Becker Associates, as well as the founder of the Canadian Nonprofit Academy. With over 20 years in the nonprofit sector before training as a Jungian analyst, she brings deep expertise in board governance and organizational development to her subscription-based training programs. She also runs Jungian masterclasses combining recorded lectures with live creative processing sessions.
Listen to the full episode
From Course Lab with Abe Crystal & Ari Iny on Mirasee FM