Difference between revisions of "Meta Question"

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Free Geek has evolved through several stages. Each stage operated in its own way, but failed to work well at a certain point due to an increase in the size of the organization. Each new stage grew out this growth, often because we had no choice.
 
Free Geek has evolved through several stages. Each stage operated in its own way, but failed to work well at a certain point due to an increase in the size of the organization. Each new stage grew out this growth, often because we had no choice.
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We'd rather think a little about the future and consciously decide how and how big Free Geek should grow.
  
 
=So what are those stages we've evolved through?=
 
=So what are those stages we've evolved through?=

Revision as of 10:35, 8 January 2005

What is the meta question?

How big should Free Geek get?

That's it?

In a nutshell, yes. But we are now large enough to think about it a bit more than in the past. In the past, we've grown in response to more demand coming in (e.g. people signing up for free computers) or because we finally reached a level where we were able to do something we'd wanted to do all along (e.g. finally starting to grant hardware out to nonprofits). All along there was very little planning. More often than not, we were reacting to crises and Free Geek grew however it had to in order to solve the problems at hand.

Where does this come from?

Over the years, we've mostly done stuff because we had to, reacting to emergency situations as they came up and forming our policy out of necessity. We think it's time to think ahead and starting deciding where we want to go.

Free Geek has evolved through several stages. Each stage operated in its own way, but failed to work well at a certain point due to an increase in the size of the organization. Each new stage grew out this growth, often because we had no choice.

We'd rather think a little about the future and consciously decide how and how big Free Geek should grow.

So what are those stages we've evolved through?

From a staff perspective, we could identify several stages:

One staff person
We didn't know if we were a viable organization and were trying to see if we could could become somewhat viable before our seed money ran out. The ASS group and the education group formed. During this stage, the public "discovered" us and as a result the adoption program overfilled. We had to set up a waiting list in order to manage the volunteer schedule. As the waiting list grew longer, it became impossible to manage all the volunteers with just one (or even two) paid staff members, so we expanded.
  • Adoption -- The adoption program was formed.
  • Build -- There was no build program. The ASSes did it.
  • Coding -- There was no coding program. The ASSes did it.
  • Education -- The education group developed the first adoption classes and manual
  • Recylcing -- Basically we hucked dead computers into boxes and sent them elsewhere.
  • Sales -- There were no sales.
Informal collective
We had three members and few formal staff meetings. We decided things by word of mouth. There were a few people outside the collective being paid by outside agencies. The build program was formed during this stage when it became clear that we couldn't rely on perpetual unorganized volunteer energy to build computers. Financial setbacks forced us to open a store, which at first was run by volunteers and staff members. It was only being watched when customers wanted to buy something. The waiting list for the adoption program was still growing and we received a financial setback when we didn't receive an expected grant. Thus we were forced to expand at about the same time we needed to raise more money.
  • Adoption --
  • Build --
  • Coding --
  • Education --
  • Recylcing --
  • Sales --
Regular collective
Four to ten people that met on a weekly basis. We hired a Sales Coordinator to expand and add consistency to the store in specific and sales in general. We hired a Reception Coordinator. Quality control was added to the build program which was run by a temporary contractor and then by two Build Co-coordinators. The council was formed during this stage to coordinate between several working groups and deal with "big picture" and controversial issues. The adoption program waiting list was still growing more often than shrinking. Production was improving. Recycling was rather chaotic but slowly gaining efficiency.
  • Adoption --
  • Build --
  • Coding --
  • Education --
  • Recylcing --
  • Sales --
Larger collective
We had a dozen or so people. We were able to hire a Volunteer Coordinator and a Recycling Coordinator. Staff meetings devolved into a laundary list of issues that got delegated to ad hoc committees. At the beginning of this phase those committees often didn't have the time to schedule a meeting. A designated person started putting these meetings onto the schedule. We began to have enough time to devote some energy to more peripheral activities like new Free Geek startups. Paid internships, the Hardware Grants group and Collaborative Technologies started during this stage. The adoption program waiting list was finally starting
  • Adoption --
  • Build --
  • Coding --
  • Education --
  • Recylcing --
  • Sales --
Partially decentralized collective
There are 15 collective members and 2 paid interns. We still meet regularly as a whole staff, but also have several standing committees, reducing the need for the overhead involved with setting up an ad hoc committee. We're trying to spend any "spare" energy
  • Adoption --
  • Build --
  • Coding --
  • Education --
  • Recylcing --
  • Sales --