<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
Comments -- Individual user participation in ICANN and GNSO
- To: gnso-users@xxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Comments -- Individual user participation in ICANN and GNSO
- From: "Mike O'Connor" <mike@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2008 10:02:51 -0600
Hi all,
I'm a member of the business wing of the Business Constituency. I
have puzzled about the question you've posed for several weeks and
have concluded that better minds than mine will develop the
answer. But I would like to offer several humble suggestions that
might make that structure more robust as it is implemented.
** Provide a clear "value proposition" for prospective participants **
I think it would be helpful if we made it clear what individual users
would get in return for their participation. After all, it's quite
expensive (both in time and money) to participate in ICANN. It's my
bet that most individual users look at that $5-20k/year commitment
and, in the absence of a compelling answer to the question "what's in
it for me?", conclude that their resources could be better directed
elsewhere.
** Provide clear paths to meaningful participation **
ICANN is a bewildering group to join and not very welcoming for the
newcomer. A new person who's attending their first ICANN meeting is
likely to be very lonely and probably won't find it easy to link up
with a cohort group of new-entrants (or experienced ICANN mentors)
who are able or willing to provide encouragement. As a person
attends subsequent meetings, they're likely to discover that we are a
very clubby group and that it's hard to break into the inner
circle. Perhaps one path to easing individual users into that club
is through the new working-group process (or some adjunct/advisory
arm of it). Even simple things (like color-coded badges for
newcomers and people-willing-to-befriend-and-advise-them?) would go a
long way, methinks.
** Support success **
We're an angry, political, confrontational group too. It's part of
our history, and a habit that we've never broken. Most of the
people sitting around the GNSO and ICANN tables have been rassling
with each other since The Very Beginning. That makes us quite
off-putting to normal human beings who are much more likely to stick
around if they find fun, learning and fellowship rather than anger,
intrigue, and punishment. One approach may be to start consciously
offering positive rewards for helpful contributions, rather than our
current well-developed system of punishments for mistakes. Again, the
new working-group process may provide opportunities for improvement.
In sum, I think that only part of the answer lies in the structure of
participation and I offer my best wishes for success in that
inquiry. An equal component of our eventual success is likely to
lie in the positive and rewarding support we provide to participants
in that structure.
Mike O'Connor
voice: 651-647-6109
fax: 866-280-2356
web: www.haven2.com
<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
|