Hi all,
Just to briefly chip in,  in this crazy busy time.

I am also +1 on keeping the current membership policy that served well, echoing 
John's,  Ed's and Hamish's sentiments.  Outreach,  communication,  and 
activities for te broad community should be,  in my eyes,  or focus now. With 
little numbers of active community members,  I would prefer to dedicate energy 
to support the community,  rather then on refinements of internal org 
processes.  I note that we not only serve the ~ osgeo community in Oceania,  
but equally the more fluid, but maybe larger community around OSM.

Martin

On 17 Dec. 2020 9:03 pm, Hamish Campbell <hn.campb...@gmail.com> wrote:
Chipping in to say I support the Membership Policy as it stands, for the 
reasons outlined by John and Ed, and I would encourage us to defer revisiting 
it.

I wanted to note that the policy already gives us a starting point answering 
what it means to be a member (see Eligibility), which could be summarised as 
"contributing to OSGeo Oceania in some way". This could be more clearly stated 
outside of that document perhaps, but it seems like the engagement questions 
are the important ones at this time. If we have a welcoming environment with 
clear opportunities to get involved with OSGeo activities and better reach into 
the wider region, the question of "what does it mean to be a member" answers 
itself.

One question that is worth adding is "how do members currently engage with 
OSGeo Oceania and how do they want to engage with OSGeo Oceania". FOSS4G 
highlighted that different communities engage in different ways and we really 
need to ask people about what works for them. E.g. there is no requirement to 
be in this mailing list (and public mailing list discussions are definitely not 
for everyone). One approach here might be for the Membership WG to deliver a 
series of on-boarding emails for new members specifically aimed at (1) 
providing a welcoming and inclusive introduction to the organisation, (2) 
highlighting the ways they can engage with the organisation, (3) enumerating 
ways the member can contribute and (4) specifically asking about the needs of 
their local communities.

This is a timely discussion. On the Outreach & Comms WG we're starting to put 
together the wider comms strategy (more on that later), and having engaged 
members who can tell us how their communities operate would be invaluable.

On Thu, 17 Dec 2020 at 18:27, John Bryant 
<johnwbry...@gmail.com<mailto:johnwbry...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Thanks for this discussion. My thoughts:

Official "membership" of OSGeo Oceania is an important way to keep the 
organisation accountable. By maintaining a register of engaged people willing 
to pay attention and vote, we make sure there is a way to fix things if they go 
wrong.

I like that there's a low threshold for belonging to our community, because it 
feels inclusive and welcoming. But maybe it would be better to apply these 
principles in a broader sense, making sure it's easy to join the community, and 
take a narrow view of the role of "membership". This is how I see it: 
"membership" is simply about participating in board elections and voting on 
resolutions, as needed to maintain a democratic organisation. Embracing this 
would mean putting a low emphasis on membership as a day-to-day concern of the 
organisation.

This feels approximately similar to the OSGeo model Bruce has linked to: Anyone 
can join the OSGeo community (we have the same, but maybe this is not well 
enough articulated). OSGeo has "charter" members who must pass an eligibility 
threshold and can vote, but the organisation is focused on serving the whole 
community.

Related: the topic of "how do we deliver value to members" has come up a few 
times in the past, but I think it's the wrong approach. For me, I think members 
are best served when the organisation keeps its focus on the mission of 
supporting a healthy community, rather than providing any special access, 
benefits, or services to members. As a member, that's what I want to see :)

On Thu, 17 Dec 2020 at 11:39, Bruce Bannerman 
<bruce.bannerman.os...@gmail.com<mailto:bruce.bannerman.os...@gmail.com>> wrote:
I encourage everyone involved in our community to contribute to evolve how we 
want to work together. You may not think so, but your thoughts and opinion 
**are** important.

Hear hear!

John
_______________________________________________
Oceania mailing list
Oceania@lists.osgeo.org<mailto:Oceania@lists.osgeo.org>
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/oceania<https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/oceania>
_______________________________________________
Oceania mailing list
Oceania@lists.osgeo.org
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/oceania

Reply via email to