Short version:
Barcamps are awesome because everyone sets the agenda and participates, not just a small group that the organisers have picked. So go to BarCamp Sydney 5 this Saturday, June 27th, 2009.
Long version
Recently I attended the Future Summit event in Melbourne (thanks Steve). A very important topic (the future of the planet) and a very qualified audience (people from academic, government and corporate who care about and work in jobs that heavily impact the future).
500 attendees.
2 days of time together.
What was the result?
About 100 hours of talking/discussion/debate.
Doesn’t sound bad does it? But that’s 1 hour for every five attendees? Hmmm. Why so low? It’s because it was run in the old style. Pick people to talk to the audience, the audience listens. It wasn’t all bad. There was a night cap session that was open and there was a lunch on the second day where you could pick your table based on interest and thrash around some ideas. Both of these sessions were great.
But overall, the summit was a few people talking to a lot of people. What’s wrong with this? It assumes that the most knowledgeable people are on the stage. The reality is that for most events, the people in the audience have as much to contribute to the issue at hand as the people on stage.
It also doesn’t take into consideration that with so much media available so quickly, it is actually very hard for the person on stage to say something which the people in the audience haven’t already heard.
So what could have they done? Even half talk, half open discussion would have produced;
500 people x 2 days x 6 hours of discussion = 6,000 hours of discussion.
OK, it’s not mathematically perfect but you get my point.
And that’s why Barcamps are awesome. The agenda, the formats, the discussion, the themes, the everything is decided by those who turn up. It ebbs, flows, explodes, dies, rocks, rolls and is because of the people. All you need to do is get some space, get some coffee and get good people there and the rest takes care of itself*.
And that’s why they are important. There is no filter between what ‘the people’ care about and what gets talked about. It’s about as raw as you get.
So get along to BarCamp Sydney 5 this Saturday, June 27th, 2009. It’s open, but there is a big push for stuff on the Future and Government 2.0.
But come prepared. Barcamps are a full-contact sport – not for spectators. If it’s your first time at Barcamp – you have to present! (not really, but you should and I like the Fight Club reference…)
I can’t wait. See you there.
You can browse through the last BarCamps here at BarcampSydney home or just by searching and finding things like these pics.
- By ‘takes care of itself’ I mean it takes a good chunk of work from a lot of people (specially JodieM and Ajay) and some healthy sponsorship from good companies.