I am a solo practitioner in Canada and I annually purchase NCSEA's webinar subscription. So, with a 0.69 exchange rate and nobody else to share the webinars with, you can imagine how that bill stings each year. Here's what I like about it:
1) It counts for my US licenses and counts as "live". It can be a struggle to find something that checks those boxes when not actually residing in the US.
2) It's simple in the sense that it's kind of one stop shopping. Easy to track upcoming events, easy to record what you've attended etc.
3) In addition to keeping up with PDH, I get a healthy backlog of old webinars which I can watch on my bike trainer when I'm feeling ambitious.
4) I think that the content is pretty great. Or, at the least, it's got a better batting average than most programs that I have experienced with. Is every single webinar awesome? Hardly. But I kind of know how to game it now:
- Avoid professors.
- Avoid EIT's working on their brands.
- Seek practitioners with gobs of experience.
These are general trends with lots of exceptions of course.
I hate wasting my time on sales adjacent, supplier webinars, even if they are free. As a solo practitioner now, I do not have a great diversity of work. The NCSEA webinars give me a way to stay abreast of topics that I'm not longer involved with professionally.
One thing that is a bit annoying about the webinar subscription is that it does not include many of the nifty miniseries webinars that come out from time to time. It sucks to get excited about one and then find out that it's not included in my subscription. I get why it's that way though.