Referral Program

The Third Layer has worked with thousands of clients and students, almost every single one by word-of-mouth. Happy clients and students have shared this work around the world.

This is awesome!

So here’s a program to encourage this, and to thank you for sharing your satisfaction with others. 

Constraints are like batteries for creativity*

How it works

Creativity Intensive clients

Individual semester clients: Refer either another Creativity Intensive client OR any corporate/organizational client. You’ll get:

1) One additional creativity coaching session for yourself for $180 (normally a $495 value).

2) The new client receives a 20% discount on their Creativity Intensive or workshop.

Organizational Clients

Want to share The Third Layer model with another organization? After they successfully sign up for a workshop, keynote or consulting, you’ll get:

1) One creativity coaching sessions for any member (or combination of members) of your team or one brown-bag hour-long online lunch session for your entire team for $180 (up to 24 people; a $495 value).

2) The new organization client will receive a 20% discount on any workshop or keynote.

Consulting

Do you know an organization that could use a fractional Director of Creativity? Refer me to an organization that hires me for a minimum of one month, and you’ll get:

1) A single session for $180 (normally $495), whether we’ve worked together in the past or not.

2) A discount of 20% for the organization who hires me as a consultant.

* True story: My great-uncle Ernie (Ermal Fraze) invented the pop top. Like most creative ideas, the flip-top can was born out of the constraint of frustration (Ernie was stuck at a picnic with nothing to open his beer except a car bumper).

Ernie wasn’t alone in his quest; several rivals were also trying to develop a method for keeping a tab on the can. After experimenting for years, Ernie came up with an earth-shatteringly simple yet creative idea: It wasn't about the lid. It was about the rivet that held the lid on.

Third Layer lesson: Everyone tries to solve the lid problem. Solve the rivet, not the lid.

  • “The workshop was fabulous! Like, truly amazing! I know nothing’s perfect but I can’t think of how this workshop could get any better! Maybe more of it?”

    Anonymous response