Good day all,
One suggestion is to engage various journalists, tech bloggers, or other online personalities who either write about GNOME (good or bad feedback) or use/have used it.
For example, Bruce Byfield just wrote a fairly positive article on how we need to engage with the community, get our message out more clearly - hey, good idea ;-)
Others have not been so kind, but I'd say if we reach out to them with positive news before they pick up rumours from the grapevine, we can sort of use them as positive messengers.
Another idea for instance - some tech blogs that have been writing about GNOME welcome guest articles (Muktware is one) - if we can start getting articles out there, again food for us. I could take Muktware as I know the owner of the site.
Brett
Howdy folks,It's that time to start thinking about when to schedule our marketing meeting next week. Is the same time frame okay or do people want to try a different time frame in order to have more people. I know that several people keen on attending.I would request the people who volunteered for community outreach attend this as we will probably spend the entire hour talking about community management.Before we talk, we probably want to plan on a structured discussion as I think that without one we won't come out of the meeting without any concrete goals. We should strive to have some kind of actionable item at the end of the discussion.Can we open the floor on what we want to focus on, in the next meeting?I want to do one test call Friday so that we can get everybody's software working prior to the real meeting. We spent way too much time trying to get things working and I want to not waste time getting people's software working.Once we find a bullet proof method, we can put it on l.g.o and reference it.sri
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