![]() ![]() Offering a sliding scale for classes and products comes from a desire to create multiple access points for the wild and big hearted creatures called to learn from us. I’ve also written about ways that I focus on creating access and not scarcity in my marketing. Want to know my updated thoughts on the sliding scale including troubleshooting and alternatives? Come this way. ![]() Please feel free to share, cross-post, and incorporate information (including the graphics) from this article onto your site - I just ask that you give credit to keep the conversation going. In future articles, I will talk more about the realities, upsides, and pitfalls of using the sliding scale model as well as how to figure out if such a model is sustainable for your business. So, these are my thoughts, and they are a work in progress. I wrote this article, in part, because it was really hard to find any online resources about creating and using a sliding scale. ![]() I think the sliding scale is a great way to begin a conversation about class because it frames the discussion from the standpoint of access. Class and economic justice are topics that lots of folks struggle to talk about in the United States because most of us aren't educated in schools or the culture at large to talk about money, access to resources, and what class actually is. Class, of course, cannot be understood as an isolated experience, but is part of the complex interactions of race, gender, ability, privilege, sexuality, and the myriad of identities we all hold. ![]()
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