Soft skills for meetups

post by mingyuan · 2022-09-27T17:26:12.406Z · LW · GW · 3 comments

Contents

  Welcoming new members
    Engage with first-time attendees
    Appoint Welcomers
    Make points of contact legible
  Retaining members
    Make your events pleasant to go to
    Delegate responsibilities
    Encourage friendships 
  Leading discussions effectively
    What if I can't?
None
3 comments

This post is adapted from a memo I wrote for the 2022 global meetup organizer retreat, and owes some of its content to the organizers who attended.


'Soft skills' is a broad and somewhat fuzzy term, but the OED defines it as "personal attributes that enable someone to interact effectively and harmoniously with other people", and that seems close enough to me. Being able to interact effectively and harmoniously with other people is obviously an important part of running a community, and it can be hard to work on, especially because everyone is starting out with very different strengths and weaknesses.

The most important thing I have to say about this topic is:

If there's something that you don't know how to do, acknowledge that and find a way to work around it, rather than ignoring it / pretending it's not a problem.

For example, a lot of 'soft skills' involve reading non-verbal cues. If this is hard for you, maybe you can work on it, but in the meantime, you still need to be aware of conflicts, tension, and discontentment in your community. 

One way to solve this would be to enlist a trusted friend / member of your community who's better at reading people, and make it their job to notice potential problems and bring them to your attention. This way you can still address problems despite your trouble with non-verbal cues. Similarly, if you find it hard to talk to people or ask people for things, you might have a friend do the actual talking in your stead.


Welcoming new members

Engage with first-time attendees

When a new person shows up, speak to them (ask their name, etc) and help them get oriented. Ask if they have any questions, and set expectations for what's going to happen at this event. You might also ask them what brought them there, what they're hoping to get out of it, etc, but just conversing at all is good. When you inevitably have to leave them, make sure you've introduced them into another conversation, rather than just leaving them alone.

Note: This doesn't necessarily just apply to in-person events! The Miami ACX organizer DMs every new person who joins his Facebook group.

Appoint Welcomers

A Welcomer is someone whose job it is to attend to the experience of new members, as described above. By default you as the organizer are in this role, but if your community is large, or if you struggle with shyness or awkwardness, you can delegate it to one or more other people. (If you're lucky, you may have enough people naturally filling this role that you don't need to appoint anyone.)

Recognize that, if you take on the role of Welcomer, you need to be attending to it constantly. I've seen large-ish public events where the organizers just got absorbed in conversations and no one took responsibility for welcoming. New people who showed up would just stand around looking lost :(

Make points of contact legible

If you're gathering in a large group, the Welcomer(s) or organizer(s) should be visually identifiable, so that anyone in the crowd can find someone to help if they need something. This is the reason why events often give their volunteers brightly-colored T-shirts. 

Examples:


Retaining members

In order to retain people, you need to give them reasons to stay! Here are some ways you might do that:

Make your events pleasant to go to

This is the main one! People are more likely to come back if they have a good time. Time, location, and activities are all important parts of making an event appealing, but there's a lot more to subjective experience than that.

Try to give everyone at your meetup a good experience and make them feel included:

And try to avoid making them unhappy:

Delegate responsibilities

People are more likely to continue coming if they feel some sense of ownership in the community. You might:

Encourage friendships 

People are more likely to continue coming if they become friends with the other people in the group!


Leading discussions effectively

This advice is for meetups where you're having semi-formal discussion on a specific topic, since that's a somewhat different environment than just casual socializing.

What if I can't?

It may be the case that you aren't well-suited to leading discussions — for example, you might be extremely timid and unwilling to interrupt people, or on the other side, you might be someone who unintentionally dominates discussions. If this is the case, following the advice above, it would be a good idea to find a trusted member of your group who's willing and able to moderate discussions.

If no such person is available, it's probably time to explore other options, for example:


So, that covers some aspects of meetup-related soft skills! I recognize that some of this advice is just telling you to do things, without telling you how — if you're dealing with a meetup situation that you don't know how to manage, I recommend asking other organizers in the Discord :)

3 comments

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comment by mingyuan · 2022-09-27T18:34:40.881Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

And see also also Anna Salamon's How to learn soft skills [LW · GW], which could possibly be helpful here

comment by mingyuan · 2022-09-27T18:16:21.261Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

See also Raemon's very similarly named post [LW · GW], which is also good and covers pretty different ground!

Replies from: Raemon
comment by Raemon · 2022-09-27T18:19:51.534Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I indeed did a doubletake when I saw this post, thinking "...did... didn't I write that?"