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Revision as of 08:52, 1 February 2018
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This is a new page, currently under construction! |
KDE Promo Sprint 2018 will take place in Barcelona, Spain, from 16th to 18th of February (Friday to Sunday).
This will be the first Promo sprint in many years, so we are excited to get together and work on various aspects of promoting the KDE Community and KDE software, attracting new users and contributors, and establishing partnerships with other communities, organizations, and companies.
Organization and Communication
The sprint is jointly organized by Paul Brown, Ivana Isadora Devcic, and Aleix Pol.
The main Phabricator task for the sprint is here: https://phabricator.kde.org/T7316
For any questions about the sprint, feel free to ask on the appropriate Phabricator (sub)task, or contact any of the organizers in the Telegram group. The KDE Promo IRC channel on Freenode is bridged to the Telegram group, so you can also ask questions there.
Venue
Espai 30/Nau Ivanow: http://www.espai30lasagrera.cat/
Accommodation
[TBD]
Regarding accommodation, the plan is to do a joint reservation somewhere near the venue.
Suggested Topics and Tasks
Improving Promo workflows, establishing groups and policies
+ Briefly presenting the work from last year and the results of the promo survey (Covers https://phabricator.kde.org/T5938)
+ Quickly addressing the current state of promo and highlighting areas in which we could improve (Covers https://phabricator.kde.org/T5741)
+ Creating a repository of visual assets for social media
We seem to be in dire need of quality KDE-related images to use in social media posts. We should decide where to host this repository (Nextcloud? somewhere else?) and define a process for collaborating with VDG on creating the images (how to request new images?).
+ Establishing content guidelines - updating wiki pages for posting on the Dot
+ Establishing a coherent social media policy that's easy to follow
(Covers https://phabricator.kde.org/T5974 and https://phabricator.kde.org/T5973)
+ Improving communication with other groups within KDE; especially the developers, and establishing a better process of announcing new software releases (writing release notes, scheduling social media posts, preparing visual material...)
+ Organizing smaller groups within Promo to focus on specific goals
Outreach Team - coordinate with other FOSS communities for cross-promotion, reaching out to companies and organizations for possible partnerships, reaching out to potential sponsors for our events and sprints, contacting media with information about new releases and activities in the KDE Community
Release Team - staying in touch with the developers, preparing announcements and release notes, getting screenshots of new software/features, coordinating videos
Monitoring Team - tracking new stuff in the community - events, new features, new projects...all the small details, filtering what's worth reporting about, and forwarding that information towards social media editors and the rest of the Promo
Design Team - consulting and staying in touch with VDG, creating visuals, maintaining the visual assets repository
Integrating KDE Goals and Mission into Promo work
+ Integrating new contributors into Promo (aligns with the goal to streamline the onboarding of new contributors)
Possible ways to do it: mark Promo tasks as "easy", "beginner" or similar; adding Promo tasks to appropriate mentorship programs
+ Discussion: Leverage the power of KDE community
What behaviors of community members would be beneficial for KDE and how can we promote and enable them?
How can we turn a large yet passive audience into active promoters and contributors?
Invest effort in creating/strengthening local KDE communities. LoCos may act as reference points among local KDE users, serving as 1st level support and make language barriers easier to overcome.
+ Discussion: Reaching more users
There is a proposal in https://phabricator.kde.org/T6895 that suggests trying to make KDE the default tech solution for research and academia. Brainstorm more specialised fields we could attack and how to go about it involving developers.
Brainstorm more actions to reach end-end users.
Content Creation and Website Work
+ Discuss how we can use video content in our promo materials
+ Develop a comprehensive, but simple checklist that will allow project managers know if their web is audience-friendly
+ Discuss what we want to do with the KDE.org website and its subpages; define tasks to proceed
+ Revive the "Behind KDE" project
Fundraising and Events
Develop an event that will help more end users become familiar with KDE apps and environments
Develop a list of things to do to boost our presence at technical-events held by others, based on experience at QtWS 2017
Brainstorm and develop ways of having a presence in non-technical or, at least non-FLOSS specific conferences and events
Set up a boilerplate for crowdfunding campaigns
Long-term marketing strategy
Discussion points:
Gathering and analyzing data about the KDE brand, adoption, target markets, needs, awareness...
How to tap into the resources of 20 years of history?
What makes KDE remarkable? What is our "purple cow"?
Thinking outside the box. What haven't we thought off before? We could do some creative brainstorming. There are nice formats for this.
Looking back. What has worked before? What can we do again?
Sprint Schedule
Day 1 - Friday, February 16
[TBD]
Day 2 - Saturday, February 17
[TBD]
Day 3 - Sunday, February 18
[TBD]
Attendance
Confirmed Attendees
Please note that this information is public, and can be accessed and viewed by anyone.
If you do not wish for your personal information to be displayed on this page, contact the sprint organizers.
First Name | Last Name | Arriving From (Country, City) | Arrival Date and Time | Departure Date and Time | Accommodation (Shared, Individual) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Test | Dummy | London, UK | February 16, 12:30 | February 19, 15:30 | Individual |
Remote Attendees
If you would like to participate in the sprint, but you are not able to attend in person, add yourself to this table.
Depending on the number of people interested in attending the sprint remotely, we will look into organizing an appropriate solution.
Name | Timezone (relative UTC) | IRC/Telegram Nickname | Preferred method of attending |
---|---|---|---|
Name Surname | UTC +1 | Sample Nickname | Video chat |
Report
After the sprint is over, this section will contain the full list of community members who attended the sprint, as well as the list of accomplishments, conclusions, and plans from the sprint.