--- On Mon, 15/2/10, James Laver <james.la...@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: James Laver <james.la...@gmail.com>

> As I shall shortly be leaving london
> for somewhere with no PM group, I
> thought it might be nice to create one.
> 
> How do I go about it?

I rebuilt portland.pm from scratch. We had a "group", but they hadn't met in 
over a year and when I took over, I made a few mistakes.  However, it's now one 
of the strongest, most active groups in the world. Here's what I and my 
successors did:

1.  Never miss holding a meeting.  Ever.  If you don't have a technical, have a 
social. We had technicals followed by socials.

2.  Try to arrange to have chromatic, Allison Randal, Schwern, Ingy, Randal 
Schwartz, Tom Phoenix, Ward Cunningham, and Jeff Zucker move to your city.  It 
makes for fantastic presentations.

3.  If the above people live in your city, encourage them to leave.  Other 
people wind up being too intimidated to give presentations.  That's a hell of 
an audience if you're showing off your thalidomide-baby Perl.  Fortunately, 
they were also a very respectful audience.

4.  If the above people live in your city, encourage one of them to not show up 
falling down drunk at a technical meeting.  The comedic value is astonishingly 
short-lived. [1]

5.  Coordinate with other user groups in the area for cross-disciple 
presentations.  Don't get into language wars with them.  Respect means a lot.

42.  Always know where your towel is.  Towel is a euphemism for "projector".  
Crowding around someone's laptop makes for a lousy presentation.  Make sure 
this towel works with your laptop.

6.  Always have a back up presenter.  Randal was great for this and he saved my 
@$$ more than once.

7.  Always have a back up *presentation*.  Staying up late the night before to 
write one because your presenter dropped out is no fun.

8.  If there are local companies which use Perl, see if they'll donate meeting 
space.  If they do, they'll often have towels.

9.  Try to get the presentation sent to you beforehand and make sure you can 
display it on your laptop in case your towel doesn't plug into their laptop.

10.  Make sure that some presentations appeal to newer programmers.  This was 
one of our biggest weaknesses at portland.pm (I don't know about now).

11.  Try to make sure your group leader is named Joshua.  It helps, really.

12.  Open up every meeting with an amusing video.  People really like this.

Cheers,
Ovid

[1].  Don't email me offlist and ask who this is.  I'm not telling.  Period.

--
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