Structured educational workshops on Argentina's financial system, designed for companies, cooperatives, universities, and community organizations. Content is adapted to the group's background and context.
Every organization that engages with Dynmado for group sessions has a different starting point. A cooperative whose members are considering savings options faces different questions than a university economics department or a company running financial wellness programs for staff.
We begin by understanding the group's existing knowledge level and the specific questions they are trying to answer. Sessions are then structured to address those questions using the financial system's actual mechanisms as the explanatory framework.
The goal is always the same: participants leave with a clearer map of how the system works, not with a set of recommendations about what to do.
An introductory session covering the architecture of the Argentine financial system: which institutions exist, what roles they play, and how they relate to each other. Suitable for groups with no prior financial background.
A deeper look at the main categories of savings instruments available in Argentina. This session explains how each one works legally and operationally, and what regulatory framework governs it.
A practical session on how to interpret the key characteristics of a financial product: rate type, currency, liquidity terms, issuer, and regulatory status. Participants practice applying these dimensions to real product descriptions.
We discuss your group's background, the questions they are trying to answer, and the context in which they are making financial decisions.
We structure a session outline that addresses your group's specific knowledge gaps using our existing educational frameworks as the foundation.
Sessions can be delivered in person in San Juan or remotely. Format includes explanation, examples using publicly available information, and a structured Q&A.
Participants receive a written summary of the session's key concepts, with references to relevant regulations and public sources for further reading.
Financial literacy sessions work well in settings where a group of people share a common context that involves financial decisions, even if those decisions are not the primary focus of the organization.
HR and finance teams running financial wellness programs for employees. Sessions cover how payroll savings vehicles work and what options exist within Argentine regulations.
Member organizations considering how to manage collective savings or reserve funds. Sessions focus on the instruments available to legal entities and the regulatory requirements that apply.
Student groups, economics departments, and faculty development programs. Sessions can be structured as introductory modules or as supplements to existing economics curricula.
Neighborhood associations, social organizations, and community development groups. Sessions emphasize accessible explanations of how the banking system and basic savings instruments work.
Use the contact form to tell us about your organization and the kind of session you have in mind. We will follow up to discuss whether and how we can help.
Contact us