On Sat, Jun 18, 2011 at 11:28 PM, Florian Effenberger <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > Marc Paré wrote on 2011-06-19 07.20: >> >> I would tend to favour an acronym that will leave no guessing as to >> which group one is emailing to. However, in this case I would favour >> Carl's suggestion of "NorthAmerica.libreoffice.org" (yes, I know that >> uppercase and lowercase do not matter ... I just did it for an effect). >> This will make it completely obvious that we are talking of this region >> of the globe to anyone who is not proficient in EN. It beats any acronym >> that we could come up with. To be perfectly honest, whenever people >> speak of "North America", they normally imagine the US market first and >> foremost. So, in some regards, the change in name will still fill in the >> mandate from the TDF/SC of concentrating on the US market. > > may I ask why you plan a name change at all? I still would object to it - it > means a lot of work to rename the lists and the like, just for "optical" > reasons, and we already had a lenghty discussion on the name before we came > up with "us"... > > Florian >
I had this thought too when the idea first arose to change email addresses. Being from the U.S., it's difficult for me to step into the reality of people from other countries in North America. So please forgive any slights, they are not intentional. >From the perspective of "Marketing LibreOffice", the U.S. is prime territory. Successful marketing programs in the U.S. will naturally benefit the other North American countries as well. In addition, the market (the people, companies, organizations, governments, etc.) who we are trying to reach will have almost exposure to nor impact from internal LibreOffice email addresses. So what we are really talking about is how this affects people working on North American LibreOffice Marketing who do not live in the U.S., as well as those of us who see what we are doing as inclusive. I do not personally get a thrill out of the "US" label on LibreOffice efforts. It makes more sense to me to focus on having LibreOffice be successful regardless of country than to worry over hurting anyone's nationalistic feelings. I'm more concerned with the lack of response to the OHLF Hackfest, OSCON and other marketing efforts than with possible hurt feelings. When we have some significant successes to point to, there will be opportunities to distinguish people and places. We need to focus on marketing more than group maintenance. The people who are actively engaged in LibreOffice marketing get along fine (maillist, IRC, direct communications) and people have plenty of room to be themselves. Seriously, I do not relate to Marc, Italo, Florian and others as being from other countries. We're all in the project together. Carl -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/us/marketing/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
