Reflections on #changecamp
January 28, 2009 by Daniel Rose
Whew. It’s been a few days since we threw the first ChangeCamp. There was lots of energy and activity and if nothing else, people had their views and opinions go through a creative destruction process to create some new thinking and gain new perspective. But there was lots more accomplished. In fact, I’m still going through the work that was done because there was so much. Here are some musings on how I thought ChangeCamp went.
ChangeLab
We wanted to play with the framework of the Open Space model which has sessions of 1 hour in length as the standard. I do believe that sessions longer than 2 hours start to have diminishing returns but we introduced the idea of a 3 hour session with specific sub-objectives for each 1 hour segment. The intent was to select project ideas that had been planned out a little bit and give people a 3 hour segment in which to recruit talent to bring the idea as far along as it could go. Rough code, wireframes, schematics, strategy, project plans….something tangible that a community of professionals could quickly build.
I would give this idea a passing grade with room for improvement. We refined this idea pretty late in the process so in the future I like to receive ideas for ChangeLab a few days in advance, perhaps via a standardized template, and have some trusted folks review the proposals so we can start the day knowing exactly which ideas will be going through the ChangeLab process. This will give the project owners a bit more time to prepare and we can announce at the beginning of the day which projects are a go and what kind of talent is needed to see those ideas through. We kind of made it up on the fly the day of and it was a bit muddled. It’ll be better next time.
The great thing was that it resulted in a meetup a few days later to continue the work of the initial ChangeLab. People got together on their own to refine the idea, codenamed Project Shamen. Awesome. (Interesting side note: the ChangeLab dealing with face to face meetups drew a crowd of programmers and the ChangeLab dealing with a web application drew the policy wonks. Thanks to Sean Howard for making this observation.)
Dotmocracy
Jason Diceman was kind enough to offer his services and tools as a dotmocracy facilitator throughout the day and next time I would like to work with him in advance to see how we can build in his process so that it’s a bit more planned. I don’t think we gave it its due. That said, there are still some good results on the ChangeCamp wiki.
Meet and Greet Module
We decided that the Intention Question for ChangeCamp should be broad but with a desire to get it more focused. We realized early in the planning process that trying to narrow it down with the planning team was counter-productive. As a combination “meet and greet” and work activity we randomly divided everyone at ChangeCamp into about 15 small groups and gave them the same question to ponder for about an hour: “What Problem Are We Trying To Solve?” We knew that each person would introduce themselves but also talk about what drew them to ChangeCamp. This would help draw out from the crowd how the ChangeCamp movement should be more focused. But it’s also a flexible question in any context because the “Problem” in Toronto will be different than the “Problem” in Moose Jaw.
While I don’t like starting any event from a “Problem” mindset, I think the question worked in this context. We then tried to pollinate the conversations by having 1 person stay behind while the other members of the group dispersed and wondered around the space for 45 minutes, kind of like at a tradeshow going from table to table, seeing what other groups had talked about. My sense is that most people found another group and then stayed there for the duration of the time rather than wandering but that worked well enough.
This was a very generative exercise with lots of ideas being proposed. A super valuable exercise would be to bring all of the notes together and try to extract themes. As an event designer, I might try to force this activity in some way by making it a permanent part of the grid or by suggesting that at least one person take it on as a task. I didn’t have to do either in this case because Patrick Keenan and Indra Behrouz rocked it by picking up on this idea and running with it. First they tagged and created the themes, then they created a visual model of the themes. Truly stunning work in a couple short hours.
Not sure what to say about Twitter except we broke it. #changecamp was the number one tag on Twitter for most of the day, the Search function on Twitter broke and Twitter served to bring people from outside Toronto and Canada into the conversation. We had people at ChangeCamp trading information within the session via Twitter. We organized the event through Twitter. Lots has been written about how Twitter is bringing communities and movements together. A great local example of how Twitter has served the community is with the #hohoto event that was hatched and planned on Twitter in 13 days. The resulting holiday party had 600 guests and raised $25,000 for Daily Bread Food Bank. Hyper connected communities=success.
Other Thoughts
As part of another project, I’m working with TV Ontario on the AgendaCamp project and we did a bit of outreach to the community and got an interesting note in reply. One of the AgendaCamp participants from Windsor in October said that while the activity on the wiki had slowed down, the face to face activity had picked up. Windsor’s bloggers are meeting monthly, walking tours of the downtown have started and there is talk of a collective of artists buying a factory to create a live-work space. In this case it seems as though the AgendaCamp wiki was a place to start but the activity became too important to keep online and it was elevated to actual face to face contact, which is the most powerful form of human engagement. That said, keeping a record of the progress, photos of the projects and videos help spread and solidify the word so keep that wiki fresh!
It’s so cool to see the ChangeCamp activity heading down a similar path. I would love to hear some comments on how you thought ChangeCamp went (if you were there) or if you have any experience in OpenSpace/BarCamp/Unconference would love to hear your thoughts.







[...] feedback? Write a post about what worked, what didn’t and ideas for the future, like this, this, this, this or [...]
[...] re-cap: The Product is Change; Reflections on #changecamp; Change Is Good; Column 2: ChangeCamp; ChangeCamp: Pulling people and creativity out of the public [...]
[...] feedback? Write a post about what worked, what didn’t and ideas for the future, like this, this, this, this or [...]