In a previous post we wrote about the concept of leverage when running events.
We think that satellite events are a promising area of leverage around EA conferences, and that local groups & community builders (not the core conference organising team) are well positioned to run them. If you or other organisers already investing hundreds of hours into a conference, you could plausibly boost the connections by 25% by investing time into recruiting pre/âpost-event organisers. I think you could pick the lowest hanging fruit with ~50 person-hours of work (this could be a paid role). In this post, we present the impact case for satellite events, and list out several specific, low-cost things people could do.
Overview
Here are some very (very) rough and conservative BOTECs to give you a sense of the additional hours needed and the connections that could be made at a typical EAG(x).
Weâve used connections made as the main benchmark metric, since this is a key metric for EAG(x) conferences. We think it is overly simplified and doesnât capture all of the impact and value.
Organising events around the main event results in about ~half as many connections as the conference itself, excluding the retreat.
We think repeated connections are just as valuable as one-off connections. They might plausibly be more important. You might also want to weight peer to peer connections and advisor-advisee connections (which youâd expect more of at the conference) differently, depending on what goals you are prioritising. We will write more about measuring connections in a future post.
Events
Pre-/âpost-event coworking space coordinationâest. 1-6 hours
How to do it:
If you arenât sure about demand and want to be sure youâll be able to find a large enough venue, you can send a message on the chat groups (see below), or create a short google form.
Let the conference organisers know youâre planning this so they can inform attendees ahead of time and they can prepare for it.
Find a coworking space /â coffee shop /â public library that are near the conference venue (if you canât get funding, go for the coffee-shop solution)
Share the exact dates & location details ~2 weeks before the event, including how theyâd find you.
Pre-events can make the conference less intimidating as people will now see familiar faces around (more important if they are newer) and allow for additional time for people to meet and connect.
Social eventsâest. 5 hours per event
People in town early /â more of a reason to come to town early
Higher than average attendance, good for both the visitors and locals
Can be very low effort eventâe.g. just book space at a nice bar and people can buy their own drinks & food and have name tags
If your locale has EA group houses, you can ask them to host an open dinner (consider capping it at a certain capacity and having RSVPâs).
EAG prep sessionâest. 3-4 hours (2 hours for the MVP)
You can run and encourage other group organisers to run more content-focused sessions such as:
Quick things:
Pre-EAG planning sessionsâhere are some examples, 1, 2
The conferences are pretty formal /â intense for the most part, so it can be nice to have an explicitly social event where there is no expectation or norm of working. Itâs important for newcomers to see that the EA community is also a place where we can also have fun, unwind and relax. Socials are also a great opportunity for making friendships and deeper connections with others.
The EA London group often organises socials at bars before EAG London (they just book a place and publicise it, and might have name tags, and people can order food or drinks if they want), which mostly run themselves . But if youâre throwing a social for an EAGx, the dynamics are differentâthere may be more students, more first-0time
How to do it:
Decide what events you want to host. You can host multiple socials at the same venue (e.g. Thursday night before the conference, Saturday night if the conference venue is not accessible late at night, and a Sunday afterparty)
Find a venueâgenerally if you can use group houses thatâs the easiest since it doesnât require booking a venue. Other things to consider (in order of cost) are restaurants and bars and just making a big reservation, renting a co-working spaces and other community spaces, renting out a venue like a bar or restaurant
Sort out cateringâthis depends on the event. If itâs in a restaurant, thereâs not much to sort out. If youâre hosting something at a house, consider getting food and drinks.
Clearly communicate expectationsâshould people RSPV? if yes, how? if itâs at a house, is everyone living there okay with it? should people pay to attend, if yes how?
Advertise the eventâconsider putting it on Facebook, adding it to a pre/âpost events list, and asking the conference /â event organiser if they can share it with attendees
Short 2-page guide to your city /â regionâest. 2 hours for MVP
We have previously made the case for writing a guide to your cityâwith housing info, how to get around, find vegan food, any weird travel restrictions or tips, and contact people who could answer questions. You could draft a low-effort version by copying parts of the guide we wrote for Berkeley or this one on EA in the UK.
Help attendees coordinate with each otherâest. 1 â 20 hours
Create group chats /â Slack channels as schelling pointsâest. 1 hours to set up & 1-4 hours to answer questions
Creating a Messenger or WhatsApp chat people can join helpsâfolks often actively seek out ways to meet each other! You can also create a Slack channel (or equivalent) if your group for conference-specific questions (this could also boost engagement on your workspace in general).
To save your time, add your top 10 most engaged community members to help address any questions attendees may have! We recommend doing this ~2 weeks before the conference.
Housing coordination (beyond blocking rooms at a hotel) - est. 2-20 hours
The simplest version of this is creating a housing chat, channel, or spreadsheet and making sure itâs shared with attendees (you can ask the event organiser for help with that) (1 hour). You could also help with matching people with roommates, helping larger groups stay at nearby Airbnbs, and asking local group members to also host visitors- this can be pretty fun! These kind of connections can be quite counterfactual, since it can be hard to know who is looking for housing without being very proactive about it, and it makes a better attendee experience (and save some community time in coordination and money).
Having a fun housing experience makes the event a more memorable and becomes a bonding experience in and of itself for attendees. It can help to have some familiar faces going into a conference, and to have people to go home with at the end of a busy dayâbasically, more chances for folks to get social support if they need it. Conferences can be overwhelming.
Start housing coordination earlyâideally 3 weeks before the eventâand encourage people to sign up by setting deadlines.
How to do it:
Decide if you want to help with roommate matching at the hotel for people whoâve gotten funding (easiestâin groups of ~2-4 people sharing a room) or local group members hosting (harder to coordinate). If you do the latter, run the list of hosts by CEAâs Community Health team.
Ask the event organisers to send out via email a <5 minute form with rooming preferences to fill out (name, email, gender preferences, whether they feel comfortable sharing a bed, any other notes or comments)
Create a spreadsheet of room assignments
Coordinate with the hotel liaison to assign those rooms (ideally on the same floor so people can meet each other)
Introduce roommates them via email along with check-in details (or ask the hotel to email the guests with check-in details)
We donât have much to say hereâsimply put, itâs usually a good time to run retreats when people (especiall senior EAs) are already in town. However, keep in mind that both retreats & conferences are really intense, so packing them closely could affect peopleâs overall ability to fully engage with either. (and keep in mind your energy levels tooâitâs okay to not feel like you can attend a conference and plan a retreat for the same week). A more relaxed community retreat which focuses on reflection and socializing could be a good option if youâre concerned about energy levels (some notes on creating the right âvibesâ).
Coordinate & publicize all the eventsâest. 2 hours
Share a public doc with all the information on the event (like this one for EAG SF 2022). Make sure to add all the logistical details & updates in the doc for people not on Facebook
Create events online (if itâs a Facebook event itâll get added to EA Forum by the Forum team)
Share events in the group chats /â Slacks /â Swapcard with reminders as they are about to happen
Ask the event organisers to mention there will be satellite events and the rough dates at least 3 weeks before so people can plan their travel accordingly, link the info doc at least 2 weeks before the event, and ask them to add the events & link the doc in the conference agenda appâsee how it looked on the EAG SF Swapcard:
How local groups can leverage EA conferences
In a previous post we wrote about the concept of leverage when running events.
We think that satellite events are a promising area of leverage around EA conferences, and that local groups & community builders (not the core conference organising team) are well positioned to run them. If you or other organisers already investing hundreds of hours into a conference, you could plausibly boost the connections by 25% by investing time into recruiting pre/âpost-event organisers. I think you could pick the lowest hanging fruit with ~50 person-hours of work (this could be a paid role). In this post, we present the impact case for satellite events, and list out several specific, low-cost things people could do.
Overview
Here are some very (very) rough and conservative BOTECs to give you a sense of the additional hours needed and the connections that could be made at a typical EAG(x).
Weâve used connections made as the main benchmark metric, since this is a key metric for EAG(x) conferences. We think it is overly simplified and doesnât capture all of the impact and value.
Organising events around the main event results in about ~half as many connections as the conference itself, excluding the retreat.
We think repeated connections are just as valuable as one-off connections. They might plausibly be more important. You might also want to weight peer to peer connections and advisor-advisee connections (which youâd expect more of at the conference) differently, depending on what goals you are prioritising. We will write more about measuring connections in a future post.
Events
Pre-/âpost-event coworking space coordinationâest. 1-6 hours
How to do it:
If you arenât sure about demand and want to be sure youâll be able to find a large enough venue, you can send a message on the chat groups (see below), or create a short google form.
Let the conference organisers know youâre planning this so they can inform attendees ahead of time and they can prepare for it.
Find a coworking space /â coffee shop /â public library that are near the conference venue (if you canât get funding, go for the coffee-shop solution)
Share the exact dates & location details ~2 weeks before the event, including how theyâd find you.
Show up!
Pre/âpost-event satellite eventsâest. 5-30 hours
Pre-events can make the conference less intimidating as people will now see familiar faces around (more important if they are newer) and allow for additional time for people to meet and connect.
Social eventsâest. 5 hours per event
People in town early /â more of a reason to come to town early
Higher than average attendance, good for both the visitors and locals
Can be very low effort eventâe.g. just book space at a nice bar and people can buy their own drinks & food and have name tags
If your locale has EA group houses, you can ask them to host an open dinner (consider capping it at a certain capacity and having RSVPâs).
EAG prep sessionâest. 3-4 hours (2 hours for the MVP)
You can run and encourage other group organisers to run more content-focused sessions such as:
Quick things:
Pre-EAG planning sessionsâhere are some examples, 1, 2
Q&A sessions targeted at first-timers
More ambitious /â experimental things:
A high energy reading group on readings from featured speakers at the conference
Ideally make sure someone is running 1-3 virtual sessions to allow people not with in-person groups to attend and learn.
Post-conference events
Next Steps Sessionâest. 3 hours
4 week career workshopâest. 15 hours
Reflection sessionâest. 1-2 hours
Accountability groupâest. 3-10 hours
Hackathonsâest. 5 hours
Forum post-writing workshopâest. 1-2 hours
And more ideas for activities listed here
Socials & Afterpartiesâest. 5-10 hours each
The conferences are pretty formal /â intense for the most part, so it can be nice to have an explicitly social event where there is no expectation or norm of working. Itâs important for newcomers to see that the EA community is also a place where we can also have fun, unwind and relax. Socials are also a great opportunity for making friendships and deeper connections with others.
The EA London group often organises socials at bars before EAG London (they just book a place and publicise it, and might have name tags, and people can order food or drinks if they want), which mostly run themselves . But if youâre throwing a social for an EAGx, the dynamics are differentâthere may be more students, more first-0time
How to do it:
Decide what events you want to host. You can host multiple socials at the same venue (e.g. Thursday night before the conference, Saturday night if the conference venue is not accessible late at night, and a Sunday afterparty)
Find a venueâgenerally if you can use group houses thatâs the easiest since it doesnât require booking a venue. Other things to consider (in order of cost) are restaurants and bars and just making a big reservation, renting a co-working spaces and other community spaces, renting out a venue like a bar or restaurant
Sort out cateringâthis depends on the event. If itâs in a restaurant, thereâs not much to sort out. If youâre hosting something at a house, consider getting food and drinks.
Clearly communicate expectationsâshould people RSPV? if yes, how? if itâs at a house, is everyone living there okay with it? should people pay to attend, if yes how?
Advertise the eventâconsider putting it on Facebook, adding it to a pre/âpost events list, and asking the conference /â event organiser if they can share it with attendees
Short 2-page guide to your city /â regionâest. 2 hours for MVP
We have previously made the case for writing a guide to your cityâwith housing info, how to get around, find vegan food, any weird travel restrictions or tips, and contact people who could answer questions. You could draft a low-effort version by copying parts of the guide we wrote for Berkeley or this one on EA in the UK.
Help attendees coordinate with each otherâest. 1 â 20 hours
Create group chats /â Slack channels as schelling pointsâest. 1 hours to set up & 1-4 hours to answer questions
Creating a Messenger or WhatsApp chat people can join helpsâfolks often actively seek out ways to meet each other! You can also create a Slack channel (or equivalent) if your group for conference-specific questions (this could also boost engagement on your workspace in general).
To save your time, add your top 10 most engaged community members to help address any questions attendees may have! We recommend doing this ~2 weeks before the conference.
Housing coordination (beyond blocking rooms at a hotel) - est. 2-20 hours
The simplest version of this is creating a housing chat, channel, or spreadsheet and making sure itâs shared with attendees (you can ask the event organiser for help with that) (1 hour). You could also help with matching people with roommates, helping larger groups stay at nearby Airbnbs, and asking local group members to also host visitors- this can be pretty fun! These kind of connections can be quite counterfactual, since it can be hard to know who is looking for housing without being very proactive about it, and it makes a better attendee experience (and save some community time in coordination and money).
Having a fun housing experience makes the event a more memorable and becomes a bonding experience in and of itself for attendees. It can help to have some familiar faces going into a conference, and to have people to go home with at the end of a busy dayâbasically, more chances for folks to get social support if they need it. Conferences can be overwhelming.
Start housing coordination earlyâideally 3 weeks before the eventâand encourage people to sign up by setting deadlines.
How to do it:
Decide if you want to help with roommate matching at the hotel for people whoâve gotten funding (easiestâin groups of ~2-4 people sharing a room) or local group members hosting (harder to coordinate). If you do the latter, run the list of hosts by CEAâs Community Health team.
Ask the event organisers to send out via email a <5 minute form with rooming preferences to fill out (name, email, gender preferences, whether they feel comfortable sharing a bed, any other notes or comments)
Create a spreadsheet of room assignments
Coordinate with the hotel liaison to assign those rooms (ideally on the same floor so people can meet each other)
Introduce roommates them via email along with check-in details (or ask the hotel to email the guests with check-in details)
Low time alternative: Create a rooming coordination spreadsheet and share it with attendees (ask the event organiser for help).
Pre-/âPost-conference Retreats
We donât have much to say hereâsimply put, itâs usually a good time to run retreats when people (especiall senior EAs) are already in town. However, keep in mind that both retreats & conferences are really intense, so packing them closely could affect peopleâs overall ability to fully engage with either. (and keep in mind your energy levels tooâitâs okay to not feel like you can attend a conference and plan a retreat for the same week). A more relaxed community retreat which focuses on reflection and socializing could be a good option if youâre concerned about energy levels (some notes on creating the right âvibesâ).
Coordinate & publicize all the eventsâest. 2 hours
Share a public doc with all the information on the event (like this one for EAG SF 2022). Make sure to add all the logistical details & updates in the doc for people not on Facebook
Create events online (if itâs a Facebook event itâll get added to EA Forum by the Forum team)
Share events in the group chats /â Slacks /â Swapcard with reminders as they are about to happen
Ask the event organisers to mention there will be satellite events and the rough dates at least 3 weeks before so people can plan their travel accordingly, link the info doc at least 2 weeks before the event, and ask them to add the events & link the doc in the conference agenda appâsee how it looked on the EAG SF Swapcard:
This post is part of an ongoing series: Events in EA: Learnings and Critiques.
^
EAGxâs vary quite wildly in terms of sizeâin 2022 size ranged from ~350 attendees to 1000.
^
From CEAâs estimates