On Thu, Dec 17, 2015 at 1:33 AM, Cosimo Cecchi <cosimo.cec...@gmail.com> wrote: > In my opinion, asking for a specific amount of money almost always works > better than asking for an unbounded amount.
Totally agree. > Of course I agree that the more we get, the better it is; perhaps a good way > to formulate this would be to borrow from crowdfunding and use the concept > of "stretch goal"? Yep. That also means that we should formulate initial goals. It could be something as simple as "keep the infrastructure running for two years". We want to avoid raising funds for a topic without showing attaching something that feels concrete to the audience. "Implementing the following list of security features" would probably work better than the "raising funds for security" campaign we had. From a management perspective once the target is reached as well, because then we have a more precise notion of what we want to do with the funds. > Not sure if it really applies to a field that's almost by design in > "response mode" like sysadmin though. I'm sure we can find a way to express it that feels like a goal to reach. > Relatedly, do you/Andrea see the sysadmin work (and expenses) increasing or > decreasing in the medium term? > Are there any medium or large projects that we would do if we had funds or > resources? https://www.dragonsreach.it/2015/12/02/three-years-and-counting/ has a few items, like implementing single sign-on. -- Alexandre Franke GNOME Hacker & Foundation Director _______________________________________________ engagement-list mailing list engagement-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/engagement-list