In my opinion, keynotes and pre-scheduled slots take away from the equality aspect of BarCamp, where people show up and present about their passions as peers. Keynotes denote a hierarchy or level of status that is the antithesis of BarCamp spirit.I understand that events will try to use keynotes to draw people in or increase interest, but that again is not the point of a BarCamp. Indeed, you might as well just do a conference with open space on the side if you're going to have a format like that.
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 6:11 PM, Laura Hale <la...@fanhistory.com> wrote:
>
> That kind of goes along with my views. That said, I'm helping put together
> a barcamp ( http://barcamp.org/Camp+Fandom+20 ) where we've got scheduling
> before hand and we're trying to prod some people to sign up for slots as the
> community we're aiming for is really new to the BarCamp model, we don't
> necesarily have the community credibility to get people there based on us
> saying it is going on (and BarCamps are awesome. Trust us) and we're trying
> to get some people from out of town. You can still sign up day of. We're
> just afraid with a blank schedule, people will think that no one is going to
> show up so they won't show up... :/
>
Trust your users! :-) That was a _big_ worry at the first BarCamp in
Dallas, and in fact the planners originally were going to go with
advance signup for some slots for the very reasons you mention. Luckily,
we had an attack of courage and decided not to. People got it
right away, it was no problem, and in fact I think advance signups
would have made it harder, by sending a mixed message. YMMV.
> But we're committed to not charging and I think charging is not something
> BarCamps should be doing. It is one thing to ask for donations at the door
> but another to demand it up front.
>
I think I wouldn't entirely agree. At least, I think it's fair to do things
like charge for t-shirts and other extras. And with larger events,
(200+) the venue can become expensive. Asking people
to defray the cost seems fair. I like the rule of thumb that says
that monetary considerations should never be a barrier to anyone,
but that leaves open a $5 charge with maybe a workaround like
free entry for students or a (private) opt-out for anyone who just
doesn't want to pay.
-cks
--
Christopher St. John
http://praxisbridge.com
Trust your users! :-) That was a _big_ worry at the first BarCamp in
Dallas, and in fact the planners originally were going to go with
advance signup for some slots for the very reasons you mention. Luckily,
we had an attack of courage and decided not to. People got it
right away, it was no problem, and in fact I think advance signups
would have made it harder, by sending a mixed message. YMMV.
I think I wouldn't entirely agree. At least, I think it's fair to do things
And with larger events,
(200+) the venue can become expensive.
Asking people
to defray the cost seems fair. I like the rule of thumb that says
that monetary considerations should never be a barrier to anyone,
but that leaves open a $5 charge with maybe a workaround like
free entry for students or a (private) opt-out for anyone who just
doesn't want to pay.
I attended SocialDevCamp in Chicago and it had a schedule. It felt a bit better than BarCamp Chicago just in terms of the turn out, the conversations that people had, etc. I've seen the open source model really work for RecentChangesCamp and it was really fantastic but that community is built totally on collaboration. This instance? Not so much the case and much more than anything, the fandom community model for these things seems to be built on guests. :/ We've got two real big rooms for presentations and about three smaller ones. We're still playing around with what to do with those but one option is always "Sign up day of."
And with larger events,
(200+) the venue can become expensive.
How do most people get a guage of how many people are going to show up for their BarCamp when they've never hosted one before?
For me, I'll look at overall signups and estimate that between 50-60% will show up. That's historically how's it gone.There are techniques, like limiting attendance, or by doing a lot of email/Twitter/IM outreach before the event that will increase these numbers -- so I'd recommend planning your communications strategy in advance of even getting started.