What is an International Council “Global Leaders”
Program?
A “program” for current and emerging international
leaders is a labor-intensive exercise that requires the combined skills of project management, event planning,
logistics, sales and marketing, government client relations, cultural knowledge and sensitivity, hospitality
management and public diplomacy. Doing it best is an intricate
choreography of balancing substantive issues, different objectives, diverse cultures and community resources.
“Programming” is as much an art as a science and “flexible response” is the operating
principle.
Each program, whether with 2 visitors or 25, demands a
full understanding of the expectations of three distinct “clients” of the International Council of the Tampa Bay
Region, each with individual agendas: The US Department of State and its Embassies overseas; National
Programming Agencies; and the international visitors themselves. Moreover, while programs are organized under a
single topic or subject area, large groups are typically comprised of many different nationalities, cultures,
and professional status, experience and objectives.
The International Council averages 50 programs per year
totaling over 200 global emerging leaders, or approximately one program a week! Many times, we host more than
one group in a given week, while planning and preparations for the next group are ongoing. Typically, a program
organized by the International Council looks like this:
· 4-6 day duration
· 2-25 individuals per
program
· 2-4 week notification and
preparation
·
Professional agenda and logistics (including approximate travel times and directions)
·
Coordination with hospitality and transportation professionals
·
Up to four business appointments per day
·
5 lunches and 5 dinners
·
Hospitality and social gatherings (at least once per program)
·
Cultural activities (including history, arts and cultural events)

Programming includes professional meetings and hospitality, allowing our visitors to experience how Americans work,
live and play.
It is vitally important that international visitors see our cultural and educational resources, and to
meet Americans in social settings, to learn what we are really like, to see that we live in harmony
regardless of political, social or religious differences.
Informal, “home hospitality” gatherings – whether at a baseball game, a museum, at the beach, or at a backyard BBQ
– are the best ways in which our cultural values are conveyed and exchanged, and where long-lasting friendships are
formed.

What Is An IVLP
"Program"?
Global Network
IVLP Program
Topics
2010 IVLP
Programs
2009 IVLP
Programs
2008 IVLP
Programs
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