Entries tagged “barcampbangalore4”

Seeking a statistician for Barcamp

We’re experimenting with the format each event and taking in feedback intuitively. We could do with being more thorough in examining what works and what doesn’t. We need help.

There are questions raised each event that tend to not be answered satisfactorily. Consider the significant changes Barcamp Bangalore has gone through with each iteration:

BCB1: (from existing conferences) No projectors for the most part, no pre-defined agenda, no introduction or conclusion, small rooms suited for 5-10 people at a time.

BCB2: Change of management, upholding the principle that anyone can put together a Barcamp.

BCB3: Rooms with well-defined themes; drive to induct non-techies and turn Barcamp into a space for cross-disciplinary interaction.

BCB4: Collectives, whereby people hooked up with each other pre-event; groups oriented around people rather than topics.

BCB5: Voting for some sessions? (Where the voting format is intended to encourage pre-event discussions.)

The questions following each event:

  1. What works?
  2. What doesn’t?
  3. What is “worked”?
  4. What was intended and achieved?
  5. What was unintended but desirable and observed occurring? What caused it?
  6. What was unintended and undesirable and also observed occurring? What caused it?
  7. Some participants don’t speak where someone in a position to effect change will hear them. How do we hear what they’re saying?
  8. Some participants don’t come back. Why not?
  9. New participants come in each time. How did they hear of the event? What did they expect it to be?
  10. What would participants like to achieve at Barcamp? What constitutes a suitable return on energy invested?

Some of these questions can be answered by selecting items on a check list. Others cannot. We need help with (a) reframing these questions suitably, (b) conducting the survey, and (c) making meaning from the results.

We need a statistician for Barcamp.

Proposal for a new take on event scheduling

Barcamp Bangalore 4 concluded last week. It was easily my best event yet, and appears to have gone down well with the crowd too, given the level of engagement we’re seeing both before and after.

Scheduling is top priority on the agenda for improvements for BCB5. Several participants came to BCB4 with high expectations for the sessions they’d be partaking in, fueled no doubt by pre-event online discussions. At the event however, it turned out a lot of it was running in parallel, or worse, was off the charts because there was no clear place to list it.

There are several ways in which scheduling could be improved. Here is one such proposal. Because this proposal runs counter to the spontaneous order of a Barcamp, I will not call this a proposal for scheduling in Barcamp. Consider this a proposal for an entirely different event.

The proposed event will be more like a conference than an unconference, but with a significant community element. There will be a single track at this event, with all schedules pre-defined. The event will run over a regular two day weekend. If you want to speak, the audience must vote for you. Voting is done in the months/weeks preceding the event. Speakers may campaign for votes, but campaigning may only be in the form of explaining their presentation. Merchandising (giveaways, etc) will not be allowed.

In effect, to get to speak, you must first deliver the pitch online with sufficient effectiveness so as to outshine the contenders. It is expected that this process of honing the pitch will ensure high quality during the actual event, and further, because many in the audience will already be familiar with the material, will lead to the session being more discussion of material-oriented than presentation-oriented.

Why have an offline event at all then, if the important bits are online? Because the offline audience will likely be significantly different from the online audience (and also likely not having the bandwidth to engage and vote online), and because the event in real life will form an anchor around which to organise things.

An earlier draft of this idea was sent to the Barcamp community mailing list. You may want to follow up there.

Barcamp this weekend

Only three days to go for Barcamp Bangalore 4. Regular programming should resume soon.

Barcamp Bangalore 4 Logo

BCB4 dates confirmed

In which, we interrupt our unplanned hiatus to announce that Barcamp Bangalore 4 will be on July 28 and 29, 2007 at the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore. The same venue as last time. Mark your calendars.

Reformatting Barcamp Bangalore 4

Planning for Barcamp Bangalore 4 has been slow, but may have gotten into gear over the weekend. I have previously reflected on BCB3. This time we discussed how we could tweak the format to make it better.

BCB3 was an event of individuals organised into spaces. One registered as an individual, listed a session individually, and decided for oneself where one wanted to spend their time. We had four rooms available, designated Internet, Mobile, Society and Demo, for the broad categories of sessions held within. The designation of these rooms was admittedly not the emergent community definition we’d have liked it to have been, but on that we’ll excuse ourselves for a mix of excitement, impatience, and nervousness at whether the concept would work.

Of the four, I think it was pretty clear the Mobile crowd was the most cohesive. They had a full house both days and the same people sat through most sessions. Rajan observed that several were regulars from Mobile Monday. Their presence at Barcamp effectively turned that room into an extended MoMo meet.

There’s something to be noted here. Barcamp’s participant base has been growing with each event. We’re getting to a stage where it is no longer possible to have an intimate space like we did for BCB1 and BCB2, and yet, each event brings back familiar faces, people who’ve met each other at previous events and have conversed since. Coming to Barcamp, then, is not an isolated event, but just another milestone in an ongoing conversation, a regular interval at which to gather and share what’s new. We’re proposing tweaking the format to encourage this. You no longer register to participate in Barcamp; you instead register to participate in a collective that decides on its agenda before coming to the event.

If you’re not satisfied with the existing collectives, you propose a new one and gather the interested. We’ll assign the available spaces based on their relative strengths.

With this move, we recognise that we’re no longer following a format that encourages participants to move from session to session depending on what interests them. We’re instead asking that participants collaborate in advance with fellow participants, decide in advance what they’d like to achieve at Barcamp, and focus on it when at the event. The initial investment is higher, but so is the return. Activities like CodeJam and hands-on workshops were discouraged by the earlier format. The new one makes them possible.

But what of the serendipitous experience of encountering something pleasant and unexpected? What’s the point of coming to Barcamp at all if you’re only going to associate with your group, apart from having someone else taking care of your logistics? What of inter-group mixing?

That deserves attention. I propose we request (but not require) collectives to make exclusive use of their spaces only within limited hours, say 10 AM to 1 PM and 3 to 6 PM. The remaining time should be undefined, allowing individual participants to associate as they see fit.

At BCB3, Kiruba and Amogh expressed interest in a photography workshop. This could be one our collectives. It could propose to conduct a three hour workshop the first morning, disperse for the rest of the event, and reassemble for an hour before closing to discuss outcomes. It’ll no longer be bound by the tyranny of limited time slots. Its participants will know in advance what outcomes to expect and what they’re skipping to be a part of this.

And it’ll still be nothing like getting lectured by a fellow on a podium who may turn up an hour late or not at all.

Venue management

On the venue again: suppose we had to settle for the same venue, but got to change how it’s used? We had four rooms across two floors. What if we abandon the upper two, use the lower rooms, and add the space between and the corridors? We could toss some mats around the place and insist that anyone not giving a projected demo get out of the rooms. If someone wants a breakaway discussion, they simply move further down the corridor.

Would that improve camaraderie?

Planning for the next Barcamp

The Barcamp Bangalore 3 planners had a five hour meeting last evening to discuss the outcomes of the last event and plan for the next. We have decided we’re going to aim for three events a year instead of the previously discussed four. The main concern is with logistics: it takes up to a month after the event to settle with sponsors (BCB2 took three), and organising the next needs a month and a half to prepare for venue, suppliers, theme, publicity, and again, sponsors. Our five hour meet yesterday is typical: each meeting runs five to six hours and we need one at least once a week to stay on track.

That leaves us with practically no time to focus on the actual content of the event. Going from four to three events a year gives us that breather, reduces our financial load while buffering for sponsors (lest it was not emphasised enough, the hardest part of organising the event), and most important, from the participants’ perspective, allows us to publish a calendar in advance so everyone can plan their schedules.

BCB4 and BCB5 will be in July and November 2007. The exact dates are subject to venue availability, to be settled soon.

But what about the content? How can organisers be worried about the content when it’s a Barcamp, a supposedly open event where participants decide what the content is?

Reality is somewhat more subtle.

First, as organisers, we have to justify to ourselves why we put in the effort. All of us agree we’re doing this because there is a certain type of outcome we’d like to achieve, the specifics varying from person to person. We’re clear we want to keep the space egalitarian, fair to all participants, with no organiser raising their agenda above the collective’s. And yet, to deny any individual’s motives for facilitating is to remove meaning from the event.

Second, while actual content is defined by participants, there is the greater question of how one decides to become a participant. We recognise that rank strangers will find it difficult to step into a strange new community, so we take the effort to invite them in. Our goal with this is to encourage people from different domains — the kind of people unlikely to visit a Barcamp by themselves — to come in and engage in the discussions. We trust most will appreciate the results.

Third, there is much about the venue that shapes the content. Our venue at IIMB was four classrooms across two floors, with a canteen some distance away. Despite the great ambience and facilities, we had recurring complaints. The classroom environment focused too much attention on the speaker, making it difficult to have interactive discussions. It only worked for presentations. The canteen was a rather drab place; nobody wanted to hang out there. The four rooms had no common meeting point for everyone to mix. We made the rooms available in half hour slots with fifteen minute margins, but several sessions ran over time and then couldn’t continue because someone else had already taken the room for the next slot. We had complaints about no slots being available. It didn’t occur to anyone to take their audience out into the hallway, or to propose a session there.

Somehow the classrooms became the only acceptable place to hold a session. Lawrence’s session was interrupted when the slot time ran out. We announced it would continue over lunch. Some of us pulled two tables together and had a great discussion on intellectual property and piracy. Others milled around wondering when the session was going to happen.

This is a state of expectations we’d rather not have next time. The classrooms were clearly a bad influence. We’ll no doubt have endless debates about how to tweak the environment, but this is what I like most about the current organising team: we’ve learnt to be outspoken for our beliefs and yet arrive at a consensus with everyone agreeing it was best.

I’ll throw in my two paisa here on this blog: I’m unhappy with the slot system. While it’s great for short presentations, it breaks down for longer, focused sessions that run into several hours.

Take Lawrence Liang again. He could have easily presented for three hours, reinforced the point he was making, and then put another two hours into a group discussion so everyone else could clarify their thoughts. Such a session was not possible in BCB3 — despite clear participant interest — because it would run afoul of the organiser’s ethic of not favouring any one participant.

One of my other interest areas is open locative technologies. I’d really like to see a repeat of January’s Freemap Workshop, where Schuyler Erle and Shekhar Krishnan presented for half an hour on what the workshop was about, divided participants into teams, and assigned each team an aspect of the mapping process. The teams then operated independently until the next evening, when they put their efforts together.

I’d like to see a Freemap workshop within Barcamp. It’ll help them get their minds off the logistics and to focus on the content. Having parallel sessions will convince the fence-sitters to dive in on either side. And it’ll help Barcamp improve its overall level of participation and establish it as an event to plan calendars around.

But it does introduce a fundamental question: as organisers with limited venue resources, how do we dedicate a part for the entire period to one group while parcelling out half hour slots to others? If we judge that said group is deserving, does it not violate the sacred line separating organising from content?

Here’s a idea: let groups that want such long term resources propose in advance, on the wiki. Participants vote for the sessions they want to be part of. Based on how many such proposals we get and what is available at the venue, we accommodate as many as possible. We’ll continue to have some rooms dedicated to ad hoc sessions were the schedules are drawn up only each morning.

Makes sense?