Sponsorship and Finances Weekly Report for March 25

Here’s that weekly update on the payments and income for WordPress community events that we post on Fridays. This report might get more elaborate as we get the time to build more tools around financial reporting (currently it’s pretty manual), so if there’s a level of detail we’re not providing that you’d like to see, please mention it in the comments!

Between March 18 and March 24, here’s what came in:

Ticket revenue via PayPal: $11,505.90 USD (total tickets 241)
Sponsorship income via wire transfer: $26,178.01 USD
Sponsorship income via PayPal: $26,178.01 USD
Sponsorship income via check: $3,000 USD

Total revenue (in USD): $55,188.77

And in that same period, here’s what went out:

Due to some changes we’re making to the back end of the vendor payment tool, I don’t currently have a straightforward way to create a breakdown of what payments were for which event, but here are the totals:

Total number of payments/reimbursements: 17
Total payments (in USD): $20,299.21

Here’s a list of this week’s global sponsorship grants (which are determined at the budget review):

Seattle, WA $10,000 USD
Frankfurt, Germany 5,000€
Bilbao, Vizcaya, España 2,000€
Saint Louis, MO $4,200 USD

As always, if you have any questions, please ask away in the comments!

#finances, #sponsorship, #wordcamps

Sponsorship and Finances Weekly Report for February 19

Here’s that weekly update on the payments and income for WordPress community events that we post on Fridays. This report might get more elaborate as we get the time to build more tools around financial reporting (currently it’s pretty manual), so if there’s a level of detail we’re not providing that you’d like to see, please mention it in the comments! 🙂

Between February 12 and February 18, here’s what came in:

  • Ticket revenue via PayPal: $42,676.59 USD
  • Number of tickets sold: 882
  • Sponsorship income via wire transfer: 11 payments totaling $20,833.35 USD
  • Sponsorship income via PayPal: 14 payments totaling $13,412.51 USD
  • Sponsorship income via check: 4 payments totaling $52,500.00 USD (includes the global sponsorship payment of $45,000 from DreamHost)

Total revenue (in USD): $129,422.45 USD

And in that same period, here’s what went out:

  • Vendors paid for WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Europe: 1
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Lancaster PA: 4
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp London: 4
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Miami: 1
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Minneapolis: 1
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp New Orleans: 1
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Northeast Ohio: 1
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp San Diego: 2
  • Total number of payments: 15

Total payments (in USD): $26,743.08

Here’s a list of this week’s global sponsorship grants (which are determined at the budget review):

Asheville $11,000.00
Buffalo $1,000.00

As always, if you have any questions, please ask away in the comments! 🙂

#community-management, #finances, #global-sponsorship, #sponsorship

Sponsorship and Finances Weekly Report

We’re going to be posting a weekly update on the payments and income that we handle for WordPress community events on Fridays. This report might get more elaborate as we get the time to build more tools around financial reporting (currently it’s pretty manual), so if there’s a level of detail we’re not providing that you’d like to see, please mention it in the comments! 🙂

Between February 5 and February 11, here’s what came in:

  • Ticket revenue via PayPal: $14,728.64
  • Number of tickets sold: 365
  • Sponsorship income via wire transfer: 3 payments totaling $28,047.05 (includes the global sponsorship payment of $11,250 from Plesk)
  • Sponsorship income via PayPal: 10 payments totaling $9,787.18
  • Sponsorship income via check: 4 payments totaling $14,600.00 (includes the global sponsorship payment of $11,250 from WiredTree)

Total revenue (in USD): $67,162.87

And in that same period, here’s what went out:

  • Vendors paid for WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Paris: 4
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Lancaster PA: 3
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Miami: 6
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp Atlanta: 1
  • Vendors paid for WordCamp CentralWordCamp Central Website for all WordCamp activities globally. https://central.wordcamp.org includes a list of upcoming and past camp with links to each. (SD cards for camera kits): 1
  • Total number of payments: 16

Total payments (in USD): $43,514.28

Here’s a list of recent global sponsorship grants (which are determined at the budget review):

Gdynia, Poland: 1600 EUR
Tokyo, Japan: 1500000 JPY
Albuquerque, USA: 1500 USD
Orange County, USA: 5000 USD
North East Ohio, USA: 4500 USD
Calgary, Canada: 2000 CAD
Bratislava, Slovakia: 3500 EUR
Antwerp, Belgium: 9000 EUR
Nuremberg, Germany: 6000 EUR
Helsinki, Finland: 2500 EUR
Tampa, USA: 7000 USD
Porto, Portugal: 1600 EUR

Kevin and I are adding WiredTree (Q1 only), Plesk, and Dreamhost to Western region events (the Americas) today as Bronze level global sponsors, so organizers in the Americas please be on the lookout for new sponsors on your sites and new emails in your inboxes! 🙂

As always, if you have any questions, please ask away in the comments! 🙂

#community-management, #finances, #global-sponsorship, #sponsorship

2016 Global Sponsorship

tl;dr — new leaders, new payment system, new $ levels, new regions, new names, sponsor feelings, local levels, weigh in

Oversight

For 2016, @andreamiddleton and @kcristiano will be working together to oversee the program. Andrea’s familiarity and relationships with the sponsors combined with Kevin’s financial background will be a good combination, and having two people in charge of an area of responsibility rather than one builds in a bit of a failsafe if things get behind. This will mean that Kevin will be less involved in day-to-day WC oversight/mentoring. While there are other people who have access to the bank account, paypal, etc and have interacted with these sponsors before, only Andrea and Kevin will be managing these relationships, sending invoices, or attributing payments in 2016, to prevent the oversights that led to missing money in past years. Side note: Kevin will also be creating a new budget template for us to use that will be better for tracking estimates vs final prices vs money actually collected or spent. Keep an eye out for news on that from him early next year.

Automation

In 2016 we’ll be switching to an automated QuickBooks-based system for sending invoices and having global sponsors pay electronically right from the online invoice, saving time and money on our end. What, you say? Automatic invoicing and online payment? That sounds awesome and time saving? Why yes, yes it does. Our first big development project in 2016 will be to add invoice requests to the payments pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party so that there will be a central system for managing local sponsors as well, reducing the number of places organizers have to track sponsor income and reducing the possibility of sponsors who haven’t paid yet going unnoticed. We’ll talk more about this as we scope it out.

Levels and Regions (Proposed)

Last but not least, 2016 global sponsor levels. Andrea, Kevin, and I discussed possible changes to the program and levels last week. One change we want to make is regions. Last year it was split out into a bunch of distinct regions, but the big ones were US and Europe because of the number of WordCamps. Of the regions with fewer WCs — Canada, Asia/Pacifica, Central & South America, and Africa — only Canada had a sponsor that had chosen just that region. To make things simpler, this year we want to split things into just two regions: Western and Eastern Hemispheres.
If we combine last year’s regions into the 2-hemisphere model, 2015 levels looked like this:

Level Western (The Americas) Eastern (Europe, Asia Pacific, Africa)
Outstanding (Gold) $198,000 $102,000
Superb (Silver) $99,000 $51,000
Splendid (Bronze) $39,600 $20,400

Another thing that came up when looking at the previous levels what because the levels had been based on overall number of attendees at events in a region, sponsors were paying the same amount of money whether it was a WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. of 1 day and 80 people of a WordCamp of 800 people for 3 days with sponsor booths or tables. While we love both of those kinds of WordCamps here at Community Central — and every size and shape of WordCamp in between — the costs associated with them are pretty different, as are the opportunities for sponsors to meet with community influencers, etc. To address that disparity, we’ve also changed the math from being based on number of attendees to being based on a combination of size range and number of days. Proposed new levels for 2016:

Level Western (The Americas) Eastern (Europe, Asia Pacific, Africa)
Gold $160,000 $80,000
Silver $80,000 $50,000
Bronze $45,000 $35,000

This is based on expecting to have 100 WCs in 2016 (about the same rate of growth as previous years), with a similar-ish ratio between western and eastern hemispheres. It does not include WCEUWCEU WordCamp Europe. The European flagship WordCamp event. or WCUSWCUS WordCamp US. The US flagship WordCamp event., but I propose we offer anyone who does a worldwide sponsorship 10% off on sponsorship levels for those 2 events. Why is eastern hemisphere so much cheaper? 1. It only contained 40% of the events in 2015, and 2. Those events tended to be smaller, shorter, or both.

Compared to last year, this new math makes global sponsorship significantly cheaper at the top level, about the same at the middle level, and a little more expensive at the bottom level, but with more events in play.

Names

I propose we change the level names. I proposed this the last time too, when I suggested that champion, pillar etc didn’t really indicate a hierarchy of levels because they were disparate things. The replacements, however, are still a problem IMO. To most people, outstanding, superb, and splendid all mean more or less the same superlative thing, which makes them not good labels (talking as a ux person now). If you dig down into official meanings, superb means excellent or first-rate, but it is the 2nd level. Splendid means luxurious or expensive, but it’s the cheapest level. Outstanding means superior or excellent, but not necessarily the best. I suggest we go back to the classic gold, silver, and bronze. The hierarchy of Olympic medals is known around the world, and we can leave clever sponsor level names to the local organizing teams. Which leads us to local levels. 🙂

Blending In and Feeling Valued

Some of the complaints from global sponsors make it clear that the program increased efficiency (one bill, all WordCamps) at the expense of feeling a connection to organizers and/or feeling as valued as local sponsors. This was especially true of WordCamps that were breaking out the global sponsors into separate categories rather than integrating them with their local levels (and in some cases listing the globals below the bottom local level). In 2016, we’ll want to make sure organizers integrate global sponsors into their overall sponsor listing. We’d need a good way to designate global sponsors without listing them separately (the dreaded asterisk? a gold/silver/bronze ribbon? we can figure something out I bet, there are a lot of creative people who have an interest in this). We also need to set up a way to give the globals a connection to organizers and/or sponsor wranglers, whether that’s having automated introduction emails that suggest a hangout to “meet” or something else. We can talk more about this after WCUS.

Local Sponsorships

When you sit around copying the budget levels for every WC in the past year out of their individual budget spreadsheets (like Andrea) or you sit around doing a couple of hours of calculations with them on your phone’s calculator (like me), you quickly notice something about the variation between sponsor levels. With a few notable exceptions for big expensive cities (like NYC), most of the sponsor levels are *really* similar once you adjust for size of event and number of days. As we think about ways to streamline the deputyProgram Supporter Community Program Supporters (formerly Deputies) are a team of people worldwide who review WordCamp and Meetup applications, interview lead organizers, and keep things moving at WordCamp Central. Find more about program supporters in our Program Supporter Handbook. workflow and the organizer setup process, I think we should consider standardizing WC sponsorship levels based on these criteria. This would mean that when a WC was approved based on dates and estimated attendance based on venue, the sponsor levels would be automatically set and published. This would cut out the back and forth about how much the levels should be, saving everyone some time, and the local organizer could spend that time instead coming up with those locally-flavored level names so many people love and jazzing up the level descriptions. If we chose to adopt this model, we would want to allow organizers to add additional lower levels as desired to bring in small local businesses and microsponsors if they want to. And for that handful of big expensive cities, we’d have to figure out if it would make more sense to add a higher level or for us to just make up any difference from the common fund. We can discuss this one in more depth after WCUS as well, just wanted to plant the idea since this post is already talking about sponsors.

What do you think about the hemispheres concept? The dollar levels? The change to basing it on size and duration of WCs rather than just attendance? Weigh in in the comments!

#global-sponsorship, #sponsorship, #wordcamps

Sponsor Info

Someone wanted information about sponsoring WCs so I went to central.wordcamp.org to look for it for them.

  • I went to https://central.wordcamp.org/global-community-sponsors/ because it was near the top of the list and bc I know that’s the current program. It lists the current sponsors but has no information on what the levels mean or how to become one.
  • Then I went to https://central.wordcamp.org/sponsor-multiple-wordcamps/, listed lower in the subnav. This is the old program, and links to the 2014 packages.

This is bad IA/content to have there. I’d like to suggest a change:

  • Make Sponsor a top level nav item.
  • First item should be Sponsor a WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more., a page that doesn’t exist yet. It should say how great WCs are, how they’re all run by volunteers, how we depend on the kindness of strangers money of helpful businesses to keep the events going, and outline the difference between sponsoring an individual WC and joining the global program. Should link to other subpages showing current sponsors, global program rates/benefits, the upcoming WCs schedule (for people interested in sponsoring a single WC), and an application form to become a global sponsor.
  • Change the Global page label to Current Global Sponsors.
  • Remove the 2014 rate sheet that is linked from the multi-event page. Create a current rate sheet (as a page, not a pdf) and update once a year. Each year, post the upcoming year’s rates as well by September so businesses can plan for the coming year.
  • Remove multi-event page since it’s not the current program.
  • Create the page with a sponsorship application form for those interested in global sponsorship.

Any objections to this update?

(Where is the 2015 global sponsorship plan info?)

#official-websites, #sponsorship, #wordcamp-org

Update to sponsorship remittance

We’re changing the way we accept checks as remittance for WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. sponsorship. Moving forward payment by check will be sent to a lockbox with our bank. This means better security and more efficient depositing of checks. In addition it means that multiple team members will be able to process and note sponsor income.

Starting today checks should be sent to:

WordPress FoundationWordPress Foundation The WordPress Foundation is a charitable organization founded by Matt Mullenweg to further the mission of the WordPress open source project: to democratize publishing through Open Source, GPL software. Find more on wordpressfoundation.org.
MS 65
PO Box 4000
Portland, OR 97208-4000

Please ensure that all sponsors mark the check with your WordCamp city.

If you’ve already sent out invoices with the previous address there’s no need to reissue but please update your templates and use the PO Box 4000 for all future requests.

#sponsorship, #wordcamps

Community event sponsorship in 2015

One of the goals I had for the Community team working days after WCSF was to iterate on the Multi-Event Sponsorship program for 2015. Kevin Cristiano, Tina Kesova, and Karim Marucchi met with me for a couple of hours to discuss where we thought the program needed to go for next year, and below are the results.

Great things about the multi-event sponsorship program:

  • When WordCamps get their budgets approved, they know they can count of a certain amount (sometimes a lot) of sponsorship money from multi-event sponsors. Reducing the fundraising burden on organizers allows them to spend more time on making great WordCamps.
  • Larger companies that want to support WordCamps but don’t have the time to spend working with individual organizers can just work with WordCamp CentralWordCamp Central Website for all WordCamp activities globally. https://central.wordcamp.org includes a list of upcoming and past camp with links to each., be billed quarterly, and get an email every time a WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. is added to the schedule with useful information about the WordCamp.

Issues with the multi-event sponsorship program:

  • In 2014 many WordCamps (especially in the US) were over-funded before ever recruiting local sponsors. We don’t want to leave out our local sponsors, since WordCamps are local events, but we do want to keep providing WordCamps with a funding “nest egg” at budget approval so that the fundraising burden on organizing teams is eased.
  • WordCamps received lots of financial support in 2014, but more communities are looking at doing more events that are not WordCamps, so we’d like to extend that support to those events, too.
  • Since chapter account meetupsMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. now have their meetup.com dues paid by the Foundation and can now ask to have the Foundation pay for their meetupMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. venue costs, it’s appropriate to extend the sponsorship relationship to include meetups.
  • Some WordCamps did not fulfill the sponsorship packages as consistently as we expected them to.

Moving forward, I think the best course is to facilitate the sponsorship of local communities, not just WordCamps. Therefore, this proposed 2015 Community Sponsorship program addresses sponsorship of all official events.

The other big change in this proposal is that we’ll still be billing sponsors based on (projected) attendance, but we’ll be distributing sponsorship funds to events based on need. I’ll give an example based on WordCamp workflow: when a WordCamp’s budget is being reviewed, the organizing team will be asked how much they think they can raise from local sponsors with about 20 hours of work (including the work needed to acknowledge those sponsors). The budget reviewer will then suggest a sponsorship blockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. grant to the WordCamp to help them reach their fundraising goals. This will allow us to give more support to new WordCamps (and other events) that don’t have the established fundraising relationships like other, more established events.

In the discussion we had at the Community Summit about the IRS rules that affect how official events can acknowledge sponsors (due to the non-profit status of the WordPress FoundationWordPress Foundation The WordPress Foundation is a charitable organization founded by Matt Mullenweg to further the mission of the WordPress open source project: to democratize publishing through Open Source, GPL software. Find more on wordpressfoundation.org.), it was agreed that while those rules were a little complicated, following them was preferable to the unattractive alternatives, and that in fact those rules resulted in a much less commercial “feel,” which we like for our official events. When those discussion notes are published, I’ll come back and edit in a link to them. 🙂

Read on for the proposed 2015 Community Sponsorship program in its novella-level entirety, and reply with a comment if you have a suggestion, doubt, or concern. 🙂 Continue reading

#multi-event-sponsorship, #sponsorship

Sponsorship Squad, Activate!

As you might recall from my call for volunteers to form a WordCamp Sponsorship Squad a few weeks ago, I made a call for volunteers who are experienced WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. organizers and would be interested in helping WordCamp organizers work with fundraising and sponsors. That team has been formed and is made up of:

Kevin Cristiano, WCNYC organizer and one of the co-creators on the Multi-Event Sponsorship Program, yay

Andy Christian, WCNYC

Aditya Kane, WordCamp Mumbai

Valent Mustamin, WordCamp Indonesia

Noel Tock, WordCamp Switzerland

This squad will hold IRC office hoursOffice Hours Defined times when the Global Community Team are in the #community-events Slack channel. If there is anything you would like to discuss – you do not need to inform them in advance.You are very welcome to drop into any of the Community Team Slack channels at any time. at two different times on Wednesday: Aditya, Valent, and Noel will be in #wordpress-getinvolved at 4:00 UTC, and Kevin and Andy will be in at 17:00 UTC. Hopefully this will allow organizers from all over the world to check in about doubts or questions they have when fundraising or working with sponsors.

If no one has questions for the squad during office hours, squad members will review WordCamp sites to help organizing teams avoid missing anything in their sponsorship packages, as well as reviewing sponsors for any issues around GPLGPL GPL is an acronym for GNU Public License. It is the standard license WordPress uses for Open Source licensing https://wordpress.org/about/license/. The GPL is a ‘copyleft’ license https://www.gnu.org/licenses/copyleft.en.html. This means that derivative work can only be distributed under the same license terms. This is in distinction to permissive free software licenses, of which the BSD license and the MIT License are widely used examples. or trademark that the sponsoring company and organizing team might have missed.

They’ll be recording their reviews and findings on this spreadsheet for now (which I’ll embed into a page when I can figure out how to do that): https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AiOGe9LzBlkOdGpXclRid1Vmc2Q1eldyU3laTEhBbXc&usp=sharing

Thanks to these volunteers for helping WordCamps keep their/our promises to sponsors and advising organizers on sponsor wrangling! 🙂

#multi-event-sponsorship, #sponsorship, #wordcamp, #wordcamps

WordCamp Sponsorship Squad

Particularly for newer or first-time WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. organizers, managing sponsors can be tricky. Not everyone relishes working with sponsors, and not every organizer is as trademark- or GPLGPL GPL is an acronym for GNU Public License. It is the standard license WordPress uses for Open Source licensing https://wordpress.org/about/license/. The GPL is a ‘copyleft’ license https://www.gnu.org/licenses/copyleft.en.html. This means that derivative work can only be distributed under the same license terms. This is in distinction to permissive free software licenses, of which the BSD license and the MIT License are widely used examples.-savvy as they might like to be. WordCamps approach event sponsorship differently from most other conferences, and sometimes a potential sponsor’s expectations don’t fit common practice (or IRS requirements) for WordCamps.

Sponsorship Squad to the rescue! This intrepid group of WordCamp veterans will be available for WordCamp organizers to consult when they have questions about sponsorship issues and will check WordCamp sites for trademark or GPL issues that a sponsor might not have been aware of. The squad will also check in a few weeks before WordCamp to help ensure that WordCamp organizers have fulfilled the promises in their sponsorship packages. I’ll still be available for the really knotty problems, but the Squad will be the first line of defense. I’d love to have team of 5-6, and have the squad hold office hoursOffice Hours Defined times when the Global Community Team are in the #community-events Slack channel. If there is anything you would like to discuss – you do not need to inform them in advance.You are very welcome to drop into any of the Community Team Slack channels at any time. — one hour a week — in IRC to answer questions and/or check WordCamp sites.

If you enjoy working with sponsors, have organized more than one WordCamp, and have one hour a week to help WordCamps navigate the straits of sponsorship wrangling, please volunteer by leaving a comment below.

#sponsorship, #wordcamps

Meetup Sponsorships and Other Local Community Stuff

Current Status: I tell meetupsMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. on the chapter account that the Foundation will cover meetup.com dues and approved venue fees (based on reasonable budget, etc), and that they can allow local sponsors to provide refreshments if desired. I’ve tried to stay away from having a lot of clunky rules, but we’re starting to get so many meetups on the account, with so many organizers (including many who weren’t around when the group joined/we went through the rules) that I’m starting to see some questionable/inappropriate stuff come up around sponsorships.

I do not want to make top-down rules that squelch the freedom and individuality of the local communities.

I do want local communities to be about sharing knowledge and connecting with each other, not about selling the community/events as a cheap marketing platform.

To that end, I need your help! I think we do need to come up with some (preferably light) rules around sponsorship and what’s okay to do under the WordPress name.

A meetupMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. sponsorship example I’ve liked:

  • Asking local sponsor to cover refreshments and putting a tent sign near those refreshments with thanks, and noting in the meetup event description (which also is emailed to group members) that they are sponsoring the refreshments and who from that company will be in attendance if anyone is coming.

A meetup sponsorship example that is pressing every button:

  • Paid speaking time at meetups, printed signs and tablecloths at meetup (paid for by meetup group), and forcing attendees to go to sponsor table for drink tickets.

The example I mentioned above had these three issues off the bat:

  • Pay-for-play. Letting anyone give money to the group in order to buy speaking time is not cool. Meetups are short, and people are giving up time with their families to attend, so we should not be using up their time with advertising.
  • Plastering marketing materials. Covering the meetup space with logos and signs is distracting and unnecessary. It definitely should not be getting paid for by the meetup group. Acknowledgement/thanks and explicit marketing are different things, and we should err on the side of acknowledgement. We’re talking about pizza money here, not a new hospital wing.
  • Forcing interaction with sponsors. Sponsors who attend the meetups because they are interested in the topics, love WP, and want to engage with the community are excellent. Forcing the attendees to interact with sponsors is not excellent, it should be optional.

We’ve discussed the idea of merging the currently-separate WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more./Meetup programs into one Local Communities program for easier administration and to make the multi-event sponsorship program even more robust, but until we get to something bigger like that, I’d love some help figuring out where to draw the line for meetup sponsorships.

What do you all think about meetup sponsorships? What rules would you suggest as appropriate? Or do you think we don’t need rules, we just need better education? Any and all suggestions greatly appreciated, and since we just had our meetups team chat last week, if there’s a lot to discuss based on comments, maybe we can discuss this week after the diversity/mentorship stuff is taken care of.

#events-2, #meetups-2, #rules, #sponsorship