The post How to Welcome and Engage People in Community Spaces appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>A lot of it comes down to how people are welcomed.
Last April, I joined a group of activists and academics in Madrid, Spain, to build software that helps communities self-organize. This group was part of the P2Pvalue project, a three-year research initiative that looked into what makes peer production sustainable in commons-based communities.
To see things in action, I reached out to dozens of community spaces, from meditation centers to pop-up events. My visits, interviews, and workshops with organizers only brought up more questions: Why are the most thriving community spaces often led by volunteers? How do some spaces accomplish so much without the help of any digital tools? And what about these spaces made it possible to charge people either very little or nothing to participate?
At the end of August, I honed in on one space: The PLACE for Sustainable Living in Oakland, California. PLACE, as it’s known to friends and neighbors, is an experiential learning center. It’s a thriving space, where people cowork, garden, repair bikes, make art and music, and so much more. The organization gets people involved through a concentrated effort — a monthly “Action Day.” Every month, PLACE invites people to explore the space, connect with peers, and learn how they can join.
At PLACE, I learned a key lesson: organizers can improve their community space simply by looking at where things break down in welcoming new people.
Translating this and other lessons made it possible for the group in Madrid and me to build a better self-organizing platform. It is now online at http://teem.works and serves dozens of communities.
And to create a second, more accessible resource for community spaces, I repurposed the stories, data, and cartoons from the software development process and created a guide and worksheet to help community space organizers welcome people.
To download the guide and worksheet, scroll to the bottom of this blog post
Here are key points from the guide:
Welcoming new people is the first step to getting them involved in the space — first impression matters. The next steps after welcoming can lead to three different outcomes: failing, struggling, or thriving.
The community space is a one-time stunt. At first, it enjoys waves of excited visitors — a grand opening party, friends inviting friends, and more. But without organizers showing the work behind the scenes or asking people to get involved, only a few people offer to help and fewer end up actually helping. Sooner or later, the space closes.
A group manages to keep its space open. Organizers spread the word about activities and projects and open decision-making meetings to the public. Once in awhile, someone “gets it” and takes initiative. They might do neighborhood outreach or balance the books. But without defined roles and responsibilities, even for the core group of organizers, participation is unpredictable and limited. Managing the space involves all kinds of unexpected, unsteady work.
The healthy, sustainable participation most groups hope for. A critical mass of volunteers show up to help at the community space one day, thanks to word-of-mouth, an article with a call to action, or good timing. After a positive experience, many volunteers come back. Some become active organizers, taking on defined roles and responsibilities. The space grows organically.
In all three of these cases, different practices might lead to better outcomes. What principles are behind better practices?
How can organizers lift up the vision and values of their community space without shutting down volunteers who bring new perspectives and capacity? The two principles of alignment and affirmation can help turn frustrating questions into productive conversations. This helps bridge the gap from a visitor to a volunteer.
Work towards a common goal by integrating diverse opinions instead of rejecting them. For example, when people are in alignment, they listen to and respect one another — any stakeholder can support a decision even when they have concerns.
Encourage and support people, especially as they try new things and take initiative. For example, organizers can encourage everyone to help — even if they fail at first — by sharing positive stories and recognizing effort.
How can we apply these principles?
One way to explain what happens in welcoming new people at a community space is to break it down into three steps to help people:
Visiting – getting curious
Trying – seeing connections
Joining – making a commitment
To help understand these steps in action, I’ll use the PLACE for Sustainable Living as a case study:
In community spaces, welcoming people often leads to collaborations on projects that keep everything growing and thriving. However, some people may never feel welcomed in a space.
Progress means returning to these issues time and again. For example, you can continually develop community agreements, a statement of solidarity, or a set of policies. This is where the principles of alignment and affirmation matter most, because they emphasize the role of practice in bringing intentions to life.
Please fill out this form to get PDFs of the full guide and worksheet.
And if you use this resource, please let me know how it goes! Email [email protected].
The post How to Welcome and Engage People in Community Spaces appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>The post Do it Together: Discover the power of collaboration appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>This video was put together by our good friends at Teem, with whom we collaborated as part of the P2PValue project. Read more about Teem in the text below.
Teem is an app developed specifically with collaborative community teams in mind, and it’s meant to increase participation along with sustainability. Although it was originally conceived for commons-based peer production communities, its features can certainly apply to any kind of open, online community. [1]
The features that went into Teem were determined through intensive social research, followed by prototype testing. This research revealed the main needs of the people in specific roles in communities – those roles as defined in the classical 1-9-90 rule, including “core, occasional collaborators and users” – and what tools the people in these roles often find themselves lacking. These missing tools may be related to management, internal organization, the listing of available subprojects and needs of those subprojects.
Teem was created with those particular needs in mind, to reduce the frustrations of everyone involved and help increase participation while providing a type of project management, too – but keeping it informal, liquid, open, as fits the context. Teem also features a workspace with collaborative edition – like a Google doc – and group chat – like Telegram, or Whatsapp. But it’s open source, of course. [2]
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]]>The post A photo contest to grow community projects everywhere (submit by Nov 21) appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>Teem www.teem.works is a project hub for the commons – projects from community centers to pop-up events that openly share space and resources. It is a web and mobile app where organizers can share images of their community projects, show the vision, activities, and requests, and grow participation sustainably. Because of its participatory design, Teem makes it easy for people to build their vision!
The Teem platform was created over the past two years by a group of activists and academics inspired by what they experienced in communities where organizers include volunteers as peers. The work was coordinated and supported by the www.P2Pvalue.eu project.
Now, Teem is running a global video contest, and everyone is a winner!
To participate, send 1 to 3 project photos with captions to [email protected] by November 21!
We’ll produce a video with everyone’s photos, and promote it far and wide.
The post A photo contest to grow community projects everywhere (submit by Nov 21) appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>The post Picturing the Commons: A P2P Foundation Live Conversation appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>How might we help people appreciate what’s going on in common spaces? Can shared pictures do that better than websites and wikis?
The P2P Foundation believes it’s worth exploring. Since April, I’ve been doing research on peer production with a group they brought together. Next week, we’re organizing a participatory show & tell about how people picture their commons – the fun, easy stuff as well as the hard, unseen, and often thankless work.
Join to hear people’s wisdom, share your own, and get involved!
Lead image by Henry Flowers
The post Picturing the Commons: A P2P Foundation Live Conversation appeared first on P2P Foundation.
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