The OCC is pleased to announce virtual community bank director workshops starting in February 2021. These virtual workshops will continue to deliver important content with interactive sessions led by some of the OCC’s most experienced and qualified professionals. These sessions are designed to meet the needs of new directors as well as experienced directors looking to review the fundamentals or get critical updates.
Who Can Attend?
Our workshops are designed for directors of national community banks and federal savings associations.
Workshops Available
We offer four workshops for directors of national community banks and federal savings associations throughout the year in two series:
Building Blocks Workshop (3-hour virtual workshop)Show
Topics Covered
Learn about key and current issues impacting bank supervision.
Enhance understanding of board responsibilities, duties, and governance.
Learn about the tools senior management needs to provide information to the board.
Increase familiarity with strategic planning and enterprise risk management.
Who Should Attend?
This workshop is designed exclusively for national community banks and federal savings associations. The following individuals should attend:
Outside directors with less than three years of experience in a national community bank or federal savings association with assets less than $5 billion
Longer tenured directors who want to review the basics
Directors of new national community banks or federal savings associations
Enhance understanding of the OCC's approach to risk-based supervision.
Increase familiarity with major risks in the financial industry.
Recognize common ways to identify, measure, monitor, and control risk.
Learn the risk-related questions to ask managers, auditors, and regulators.
Enhance understanding of strategic planning and responsible innovation.
Who Should Attend?
This workshop is designed exclusively for directors of national community banks and federal savings associations. The following directors should attend:
Outside directors of national community banks and federal savings associations with assets less than $5 billion