%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% Start off with some headers
Title: Event Planning for Geeks
Author: Christie Koehler, Sherri Montgomery, and Audrey Eschright
Generator: self
%css
body {
font-family: ‘Helvetica Neue’, Helvetica, sans-serif;
}
.slide h2 {
font-size: 24pt;
}
img {
display: block;
margin: 0 auto;
}
.caption {
font-size: 12px;
text-align: center;
}
%end
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
% Start Presentation
John Labovitz
- Audrey Eschright
- Christie Koehler
- Sherri Montgomery
- Conferences (Open Source Bridge)
- Unconferences (BarCamp Portland, WhereCampPDX)
- Open source code sprints
- Workshops
- Ignite
- Potlucks and socials
- and more!
How to get started planning your own event, in your own community, and where to find resources for learning more.
Reid Beels
<% left do %>
- Conference
- Unconference
- Code Sprint
- Hackathon
- Workshop
<% end %>
Reid Beels
<% end %>
Reid Beels
Ankur Naik
Possible sources of income:
- Contributions from individuals
- put a contribute link on your website
- allow people to contribute during registration
- be transparent about your expenses
- Contributions from companies
- ask your community for contacts
- focus on supporting the community
- be creative about your offerings: logo placement, job listings, mentions in email newsletters, recognition during event, videos, etc.
- don’t let the sponsors boss you around
- Registration fees
- free events are great—cost is not a barrier to attending
- but some events really ought to have a registration fee
- Grants
- Pros: Requires no setup. Sponsors know exactly what their money is going towards.
- Cons: can be logistically difficult. Hard to pool smaller contributions to pay for expensive things.
Option 2: Have contributors pay individuals on your planning team directly and then have those people pay for things.
- Pros: Requires no setup.
- Cons: Can be difficult to track and is easy to abuse.
- Pros: Possible increase in contributions from 501c(x) status, ability to leverage existing organizational experience, an entity to write checks to and from.
- Cons: A financial overhead of 15-20% is not unusual, possible lack of control, poor execution if the fiscal sponsor is inexperienced or unqualified.
- Pros: Control, transparency of process. Setting up a company is easier.
- Cons: It’s a lot of work and responsibility. And it takes time.
Don’t represent yourself as being able to take tax-deductible donations if you are not eligible according to the IRS. Make sure you sign up for a regular business account with PayPal and Google Checkout, etc., and avoid using the words “donation” or “donate” on your website and other materials.
Reid Beels
Reid Beels
- Simple options: unconferences and hackathons often gather ideas on a wiki page or a mailing list
- Many conferences use some kind of software to manage this process
- We wrote an open source conference proposals and scheduling system called OpenConferenceWare that can handle everything from single-evening Ignite events to full multi-day conferences
<% left do %>
- Write a reusable announcement
- Cross-post everywhere
- Get the whole team involved
- Ask for help from willing partners—relevant bloggers, user group leaders, mailing list moderators
- Postcards, flyers, and stickers are nice if you have funds
<% end %>
Aaron Hockley
<% end %>
<% left do %>
- Depending on the size of your event, anything from a simple webform to an online service like Eventbrite can work
- If you sell tickets, you’ll need decide how to handle payments
- Plan for on-site volunteers to check people in and hand out badges/nametags
<% end %>
Reid Beels
<% end %>
Audrey Eschright
<% left do %>
- Stickers, pins, t-shirts, scarves
- Event supplies: paper, pens, signage
<% end %>
Reid Beels
<% end %>
<% left do %>
- Your site: set up a blog
- Twitter and other social media
- Emails: just don’t send too many
<% end %>
Paul Fenwick
<% end %>
- Your venue may provide these
- Or you could need to contract with outside vendors
- Consider your budget and the needs of your participants
- Make sure the vendor is familiar with the space (schedule walkthroughs)
- Document contact info
- Get it all in writing
Reid Beels
Keep it safe, fun, and welcoming: codes of conduct, after parties, and considerations for serving alcohol
Unfortunately, the default in open source is not for events to be open, welcoming and safe for everyone.
If you want your event to be different from that status quo, you’ll need to actively work to make it different. Here are some tips for doing so:
- Adopt a code of conduct: see http://citizencodeofconduct.org
- Be mindful when/how you provide alcohol
- Be available for feedback
- Be responsive to incidents
- Recognize positive behavior along with the negative
- Be radically inclusive: food, t-shirts and environment matter
- Gather feedback from attendees
- Make sure you can contact everyone: collect email addresses, set up a mailing list
- Schedule a retrospective for your team
- It’s never too early to start planning the next event
We started an event planning handbook at
http://stumptownsyndicate.org/wiki
Reid Beels
Stumptown Syndicate – http://stumptownsyndicate.org
Audrey Eschright – http://lifeofaudrey.com – spinnerin@gmail.com
Christie Koehler – http://christiekoehler.com – christiekoehler@gmail.com
Sherri Montgomery – http://vegannosh.me – pdx.yogini@gmail.com
This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Please credit Stumptown Syndicate. Have fun planning your event!