Just Get the Job Done! Serving the Community One Argument at a Time.
Just Get the Job Done! Serving the Community One Argument at a Time.
By Jacinta Richardson (jarich) from Melbourne.pm
Date: Tuesday, 4 August 2009 11:40
Duration: 40 minutes
Target audience: Corporate Perl
Language:
Tags: community conferences
The president of your committee is doing most of the work and none of the management. The secretary hasn’t written the minutes for any of the meetings for the last 6 months (you wrote the last 4 agendas on the day of the meeting). The treasurer can’t access the bank account, and you haven’t heard from your publicity officer since you started planning the big event. Welcome to the fun of volunteer communities!
Communities form around points of interest and commonality, but this doesn’t mean that everyone in the community has the same interests or even much in common with each other. Rarely does this come to the fore as clearly as when you gather together with a group of people, form a volunteer committee and try to achieve something great! In a perfect world, these committees would work smoothly with no excess over-head and awesome events would just fall out like clock-work.
The real world is far from perfect. The people in your committee are volunteering their time, effort and resources to make something happen, yet their skills probably lay in entirely different arenas. For example, by day they might be a developer, not a treasurer; or a systems architect but not a project manager (president). Your fellow committee members may also have conflicting ideas as to what their position means; and they almost certainly have different motivations for participating in the first place.
This talk is about building communities and surviving in committees, from small user groups to running big conferences. There will be some amusing anecdotes, stories from the trenches and a bunch of suggestions from war heroes on how some of these issues could have been avoided earlier.
Attended by: Nicholas Clark, Thomas Klausner (domm), Leon Brocard (acme), Martin Schipany (ElCondor), Dave Cross (davorg), Barbie, H.Merijn Brand (Tux), Andrey Shitov (ash), Damian Conway (damian), Panu Ervamaa (pnu), Gabor Szabo (szabgab), Joaquín Ferrero (explorer), Jesse Vincent, Jacinta Richardson (jarich), stigo, Jordi Porta, Michele Beltrame (arthas), Joel Bernstein (joel), Luis Motta Campos (LMC), Bálint Szilakszi (szbalint), Mário Barbosa, Billy Abbott (cowfish), Salve J. Nilsen (sjn), Salvador Fandiño (salva), Enrique Nell (e-nell), Vincent Pit (vincent), Andreas Hetey, Solli Honorio (shonorio), Chisel Wright, Jose L. Hernandez, Rui Patinha (rfp), Joerg Meltzer (codeacrobat), Stefano Rodighiero (larsen), Michael Kröll (pepl), Rosellyne Worrall (rozallin), Damon Davison (allolex), Philippe Bruhat (BooK), Markus Förster, Franck Cuny, Alexandru Nedelcu, Sergio Arias, Lutz Gehlen, Smylers, João Carreira, Christian Westgaard (ComLock), Gianni Ceccarelli (dakkar), Abe Timmerman (abeltje), Alistair MacLeod (anm), Henrique Alves (Halves), Elizabeth Cholet (zrusilla), Alex Muntada (alexm),