Events create concentrated experiences. Attendees engage deeply over a short period. This intensity builds relationships faster than any other format.

The event ladder moves attendees from free exposure to paid participation to premium experiences. Each event type serves a different rung.

EVENTS

Free Webinars as Top of Funnel

Free webinars attract new prospects. Deliver genuine value while demonstrating your expertise. End with a soft offer for next-step engagement.

Structure webinars to leak your methodology without giving everything away. Leave attendees wanting more.

Event Type Purpose
Free webinar Attract, educate
Paid workshop Deeper transformation

Paid Workshops

Paid workshops offer deeper transformation in 2-4 hours. Participants get focused learning and interaction. Price accessibly to encourage attendance.

Multi-Day Courses

Extended events (weekend workshops, week-long intensives) provide immersive experiences. These command higher prices and produce deeper results.

Conferences and Summits

Large events with multiple speakers and tracks. These can be produced solo or with partners. Conferences build community at scale.

Retreats and Masterminds

Top of the event ladder: multi-day retreats with limited attendance. Intimate, transformative, premium-priced. These create lifelong memories and relationships.

If you run events, map your offerings against this ladder. What rungs are missing? What could you add to serve attendees at different levels?

Klana Mask Dance, Traditional Dance From Cirebon






Cirebon mask dance is one of the traditional dances that come from Cirebon, including Indramayu, Losari, Jatibarang, and Brebes. This dance is one of the dances in Tatar Parahyangan. In Cirebon, mask dance is a lot of its kind, in terms of movement or story to be conveyed. Sometimes the mask dance will be played by a single dance dancer, or it can also be played by some dancers.



One of the kinds of mask dance that comes from Cirebon is the Klana mask dance. This Klana mask dance is a kind of another part of other Cirebon mask dance that is like Kung Wungu Topeng Dance. Sometimes these two mask dances are presented together and commonly referred to as klana kung wungu mask dance.



This Klana mask dance is a series of dance moves that tell the King Minakjingga (Klana) who is crazy about the beauty of the Queen Kencana Wungu, until then trying to get the idol of his heart. But his pursuit did not get results. The anger he could no longer hide then revealed all his bad temper. That would be the inspiration of Nugraha Soeradiredja when creating Klana Dance.



Basically, the shape and color of the mask will represent the character or character of the character being played. Klana, with masks and clothing dominated by red, represents a temperamental character. In this dance, Klana is a greedy, angry person, and can not keep the passions visualized into long, stomping movements of footsteps. His hands are also open and fingers are always clenched.



Part of his dance moves depicts someone who is dashing, angry, drunk, or laughing out loud. This dance can be combined with the rhythm of Gonjing which is then followed by Sarong Ilang. The pattern of dancing is similar to the other masks that consist of the part of the baksarai ( the dance that has not used the mask) and the ngedok (masked dance).



Before the end of this dance, the dancers will usually go around to guests who come to ask for money. He toured by way of masking the mask worn as a money container giving the audience. This section is called Ngarayuda or Nyarayuda, the symbol of the rich king and still does not feel sufficient with what he has, to continue to seize as much wealth from the small people without any rights.



Klana mask dance is sometimes referred to as rowana mask dance, which refers to the character of Ravana in the Ramayana story that has the same character. But this is clearly different because the character Rowana is in mask dance panji.