I think it would be quite useful. You, Alicorn, and Jasen (off the top of my head) know a lot more than you realize about doing this. If you created a common sense guide for this with some tips on how to schedule, how to find people, and how things have run in your experience, you could really lower the barriers to new meetups forming.
I’m planning to encourage SIAI volunteers to start these groups in new areas and it would be helpful to be able to link them to a guide that explains what I want them to actually be doing since “Start a Less Wrong Meetup” is a pretty opaque request if you’ve never been to one yourself (a position most new organizers will find themselves in).
You, Alicorn, and Jasen (off the top of my head) know a lot more than you realize about doing this.
The thing is, they have to realize that they know it in order to write a good guide to it. A lot of making meetups happen is caring enough to ensure they happen and putting in the effort to contact other people and take charge- and that’s not really something you can learn from a guide.
I was already aware of some people in my area (SarahC and Tom McCabe, plus thomblake who already lives where I do). I got all of ’em to agree on a day (via IM), declared the start time to be noon, had food ready then, sat around for an hour because everyone was late, and proceeded to participate in idle chit-chat until my guests departed.
I think it would be quite useful. You, Alicorn, and Jasen (off the top of my head) know a lot more than you realize about doing this. If you created a common sense guide for this with some tips on how to schedule, how to find people, and how things have run in your experience, you could really lower the barriers to new meetups forming.
I’m planning to encourage SIAI volunteers to start these groups in new areas and it would be helpful to be able to link them to a guide that explains what I want them to actually be doing since “Start a Less Wrong Meetup” is a pretty opaque request if you’ve never been to one yourself (a position most new organizers will find themselves in).
The thing is, they have to realize that they know it in order to write a good guide to it. A lot of making meetups happen is caring enough to ensure they happen and putting in the effort to contact other people and take charge- and that’s not really something you can learn from a guide.
I was already aware of some people in my area (SarahC and Tom McCabe, plus thomblake who already lives where I do). I got all of ’em to agree on a day (via IM), declared the start time to be noon, had food ready then, sat around for an hour because everyone was late, and proceeded to participate in idle chit-chat until my guests departed.