As an aside:  I’m not sure that anyone really sees that need for the full 
chapter treatment.  I also don’t think this would necessarily aim to compete w/ 
locals, at least as contemplated by the people looking into it.

In fact, I was seeing it as a monthly speaker series, likely on Hangouts on 
Air, with some Q&A.   Some of it might be at hours that wouldn’t make any sense 
for locals, but might be possible for a lunch hour live stream.

It can also pull in speakers or viewers from places far & wide, including 
Europe & AUS.

Very good points about advertising the locals, and such.  


At this point, I you can expect to see a post about scheduling, and us looking 
for speakers, shortly.



On May 14, 2014, at 11:23 AM, Tom Limoncelli <[email protected]> wrote:
> This project does not fit within the priorities identified by the board.  In 
> fact, it goes against them.  One of the top priorities is to build local 
> chapters.  A virtual chapter would sap potential members from local chapters. 
> There would be no reason to attend a meeting if LOPSA national was creating 
> content that was free and attracted big name speakers.  The local chapters 
> are important because they build community and provides networking 
> opportunities that only work in-person.  If LOPSA is trying to do anything, 
> it is trying to create community so that good things happen all over the 
> country.  This would destroy that.
> 
> I think there is a place for some kind of nationally livestreamed periodic 
> event.  Can it be done without putting the local chapters at risk?
> 
> The two biggest problems I see local chapters having is (a) finding content 
> and (b) finding new members.  How are you helping fix those two problems?
> 
> One way would be, rather than having it be a "virtual chapter", simply have 
> it be a monthly speakers series that is done via Google Hangouts Live.  This 
> would raise awareness of LOPSA in general, which would increase the number of 
> people that local chapters could recruit from (helping problem B).  At the 
> start of each on-line event there should be a brief and subtle mention that 
> local chapters exist, and show a URL that helps people find their local 
> chapter, or start a chapter themselves.  Local chapters could have "viewing 
> parties" where people get together in-person to watch the talk (live or 
> recorded) and then discuss it in person.  Local facilitators could use the 
> viewing party as an ice-breaker to encourage networking. (helping problem A)  
> Perhaps they would schedule a local speaker to go first before the viewing, 
> or the viewing event would be separate.
> 
> The other benefit to doing it this way is that is is more likely to get off 
> the ground than virtual chapters.  Sometimes projects at LOPSA never launch 
> because we get mired in forming the infrastructure.  It will take a long time 
> to set up a chapter, go through all the motions, figure out how to define and 
> manage membership, etc.  Don't risk losing momentum during all that.  
> Starting a speaker series is light weight; you need 1-2 people to start 
> recruiting speakers and 1-2 people to do PR. There's no membership structure 
> to set up, and people can join LOPSA using the normal channels that exist 
> already.
> 
> That might not be what you were looking to do initially, but I think it would 
> have a higher chance of success and be more in alignment with the 
> organization's goals.
> 
> Tom
> 
> -- 
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> Skype: YesThatTom
> Blog:  http://EverythingSysadmin.com
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