Training & Executive Coaching

for Organisations

Strategic Planning

Change is inevitable. But it doesn't need to be chaotic.

I've conducted countless strategic planning sessions that result in co-designed documented Strategic Plans for managing change, seeking new direction, getting back on track and ending chaotic disorganisation. Delivering in Darwin and across the Territory and Australia by arrangement.

Organisations like No More and The Women's Innovation Network NT benefitted from everyone having their say, multiple options being presented and a consensus being reached.

Half Day Session + Report from $3300

Full Day Session + Report from $5500

Digital Marketing & The Web

Understanding marketing in today's online world.

No one got into business to do marketing. But it's a neccessary part of the game. Likewise, a lot of us find ourselves doing marketing as part of our multi-disciplinary roles and we're finding the whole online world a little overwhelming.

I have guided over 2000 small businesses through marketing online since 2017 through Business Station and Business Enterprise Centre NT.

I've trained staff from Matt Wright Adventures, Charlies of Darwin, Ocean Buyers Agency, Perth Speech Therapy and even government agencies in the Northern Territory and New South Wales.

Half Day Training from $3300

Full Day Training from $5500

Design Thinking

When you want new revenue sources or to produce new products.

Design Thinking is one of those really annoying academic concepts that no one really uses because it's full of jargon that no one understands.

My Design Thinking workshops break down the mess and make it fun and effective for teams looking to build new products, design new services or come up with new ideas for revenue.

I've taught it at Charles Darwin University and Central Queensland University. And I've helped the teams at Darwin Innovation Hub, Catholic Care and City of Darwin get their design thinking breakthroughs.

Half Day Training from $3300

Full Day Training from $5500

LinkedIn & Thought Leadership

Leaders are surfaced, discovered and created on LinkedIn.

Organisations can't ignore LinkedIn. Especially when 16 million Aussies are active on it - and they are doing business, finding jobs and unskilling in a time when skills are hard to find and very in-demand.

However, few organisations have a LinkedIn strategy and their executives aren't active on the world's biggest professional platform.

But they are waking up to the opportunity and LinkedIn use has skyrocketed in the last few years.

I was awarded a LinkedIn Top Voice status in 2024: only 300 are awarded globally each year.

I provide training and executive coaching on how to work with LinkedIn for individuals and organisations using a tested and provdem method.

Half Day Training from $3300

Full Day Training from $5500

Private Consultations from $550

Entrepreneurship

We're all part of the sales and innovation departments these days.

Even if we are not business owners, there's value in employees learning about entrepreneurial thinking.

It's not necessarily about starting businesses. Entrepreneurship helps your team thinking from the point of view beyond just their own role - and to the bigger picture of how organisations operate, and how thinking beyond the routine and set processes can transform an organisation from stagnant to dynamic.

My entrepreneurship workshops are based on both experiences as a serial entrepreneur, my studies with University of NSW in Marketing and Business Information Systems as well as the principles in the curricula that I've taught at Charles Darwin University, Central Queensland University and the Australian Catholic University.

The workshops are highly interactive and practical.

Half Day Training from $3300

Social Media for Business

It's changed the way we communicate forever - especially in business.

If you're a business without an online presence, you're not in business. However, business treats social media like it's a television or radio ad.

In this comprehensive full-day program, your team will learn about the platforms, the purpose, the best practices, the fine line between brand values and the attention economy as well as forming a content plan for your business that will not only reach your target customer, but lead them to engagement.

Full Day Training from $5500

Speaking with Confidence

Confidence isn't born, it's learned.

The power of public speaking can be used to inspire, move and transform teams. But even at the smallest level, it brings the confidence to speak up in meetings, contribute to team work and collaborate with others. Simply, public speaking is less about TEDtalks and more about everyday use of our voices and our thoughts.

This is what Study NT Student Ambassadors, NT Training Awards Participants, Airport Development Group and Real Estate Institute of the Northern Territory learned when they used this training.

Half Day Training from $3300

Half Day Training from $5500

AI Literacy

Using AI safely, privately and effectively in 2025.

Your staff are already using ChatGPT. Even if they've been told not to. So you could try and. "policy your way out of it" or you could provide the tools and training for them to use it safely and more effectively.

My half-day and full-day AI tools training introduces your team to not only the tools, but to how to best use them to get real work done in a privacy-first and safe way.

You'll learn how to integrate AI into your workflows so that everyone works better, faster and more accurately without compromising data privacy and business confidentiality.

Half Day Training from $3300

Full Day Training from $5500

Specialist Training for Government

Things in government are a little different to the private sector.

I have been delivering Digital Skills, AI Literacy, Strategic Planning, Design Thinking, Social Media and Crisis Communications training for the public sector for years now through local councils like Coomalie Community Council, West Arnhem Regional Council, Trade & Investmetn Queenland, NSW Health, WA Small Business Development Corporation, Northern Territory and Queensland Governments, Austrade and Ausindustry.

I am also a contracted trainer for the Public Sector Network across all three levels of government in Australia and both levels in New Zealand.

All my training programs are available and contextualised for both your government and local application.

Half Day Training from $3300

Full Day Training from $5500

Latest from The Saturday Sprint

Dante St James

When competition is just duplication. And not helping anyone.

March 01, 20254 min read

I sat in a large meeting earlier this week with a mix of consultants, government agencies, funding bodies, and not-for-profits—all working to support new, growing, and established businesses in my region. The conversation, as always, circled back to one recurring theme: duplication.

For years, this sector has been accused of creating redundant services. Some programs have been shut down under the guise of ‘right-sizing’—forcing people into silos, afraid to collaborate. I know this firsthand. In 2023, I was caught in one of these ‘efficiency measures’ and had a program I worked on scrapped. But instead of disappearing, I was brought on to work with Darwin Innovation Hub, where I continued doing almost exactly what I was doing—just for a different business cohort.

The irony? While organisations were cutting ‘duplicated’ services, they weren’t filling the gaps they created. They had huge budgets for service delivery and administration but barely a dollar allocated to marketing. So the businesses that needed their help never even knew they existed. And that’s a massive failure in logic. If your service doesn’t reach the people it’s meant to serve, does it even exist? It’s like a signposted road that leads to nowhere, or a library full of books that’s never open.

The Real Problem with Duplication

We often hear that competition makes everything better. And in many cases, that’s true. Supermarkets, fuel stations, airlines—all benefit from competitive forces. But what happens when the market is small, and the service isn’t competing on price but on access?

Business support services don’t operate like airlines or supermarkets. If they all exist in silos, they’re not competing—they’re just duplicating efforts inefficiently. When these silos don’t communicate, businesses get lost, not knowing who to turn to for help. Worse still, they end up seeking help from people who aren’t equipped to support them, which only leads to frustration.

Over the last two years, I’ve worked to break down those silos. It wasn’t easy. Some organisations ignored my emails. Some refused to acknowledge my work. But I kept at it, making inroads where I could. Last year, I cracked open the biggest one. But now, I see more barriers ahead—more organisations that should be working together but aren’t. And it’s not that they’re malicious or lazy. They’re just conditioned to believe that their work is so unique, so special, that it can’t possibly be done by anyone else. And that’s where they miss the point entirely.

Why I Sometimes Choose Duplication

I’ll admit: I’ve stepped into lanes that weren’t mine. Not to compete, but because the services meant to be there weren’t doing their job. If businesses needed networking, I built my own network. If digital skills weren’t being taught consistently, I created my own training program. If no one was running an accessible public speaking club, I started one.

And guess what happened?

Eventually, the organisations responsible for these services woke up. They saw the demand and got back to work. That’s when I stepped back. I don’t compete for the sake of competing. I step in when there’s a gap—and I step out when the right people step up.

But there’s a key lesson in this: If you’re providing a service, and you don’t make yourself known to the people who need it, someone else will. That’s not competition. That’s just filling a vacuum. And if you’re mad about someone else stepping in, maybe it’s time to ask yourself why they had to in the first place.

The Capitalist Illusion

Capitalism tells us competition drives innovation and lowers prices. That’s true for businesses where profit is the main driver. But in non-profit services, competition just confuses people.

I could keep running my own version of these programs, but why? The organisations I stepped in for have the funding. I don’t. I operate off momentum and passion, but they have the resources to sustain long-term programs.

That’s the difference between competition and duplication. Competition is useful when businesses fight for customers on price, quality, or service. Duplication in a niche sector with limited resources? That just creates inefficiency and confusion. Sometimes, stepping back is just as important as stepping up.

The challenge for those running these programs is to stop seeing their services as proprietary and start seeing them as necessary. The more visible you make your service, the less likely someone else will feel the need to step in and do it for you. And if someone does step in, don’t fight them—collaborate. The best outcomes happen when people work together, not when they hoard opportunities like they’re the last cold Great Northern in the esky at a networking event.

competitioncollaborationdarwinnorthern territorybusiness
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Dante St James

Dante is the Director of Australian Digital Education & Retail Group and Founder of Clickstarter, Speakstarter and Dante St James Consulting.

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