Thanks, Emma! And sorry for the rather curt comment. I typed it out while my phone was dying and I was on the move after a rough start to the day. In hindsight, it came across more strongly than I intended.
I really appreciate the context you shared. To give a bit of background from my side: it’s felt like things are moving quite quickly on CEA’s end with branding and related work (which is exciting!), but from where I sit, it’s sometimes felt like orgs like ours are struggling to keep up. I can’t speak for all community builders, but I usually try to follow CEA’s lead to keep things coherent across the ecosystem — so the lack of engagement has at times felt a little disorienting, and honestly, a bit disempowering.
For example, we’ve recently been putting quite a bit of time and money into revamping our website and visual identity. If we’d known more about what was happening at CEA, it could have helped shape our direction. A short note to CEA’s groups team, which could have been forwarded on, would have gone a long way — something like: “Hey, we’re working on EA brand stuff at the moment. It’s being informed by such-and-such findings. Here’s our rough timeline and broad direction. More soon”.
What’s made that feeling a bit more acute is that I’d actually tried to reach out a couple of times to find someone at CEA to talk with about this, but didn’t get a response. I almost certainly didn’t go about it the right way (in hindsight, I probably should’ve just emailed you directly), but that lack of feedback added to the sense of being out of the loop.
That said, I’m really glad to hear about the progress and new capacity on your team, and I’d love to stay in sync however we can. And sorry once again for the abrasive tone of my comment!
Thanks for this, James! No worries at all about tone—I completely understand how those kinds of days go.
I really appreciate you sharing more context about where you’re coming from. It sounds like there may have been some communication gaps or crossed wires here—I know I’ve talked to your co-director Marieke about comms more than once (most recently in February at EAG), and Britney from our team left some comments on one of your comms strategy docs recently that the Groups team flagged to us. But it sounds like there may be a disconnect between those conversations and what you were looking for, or maybe the information didn’t flow in the most helpful ways for your planning, which is great to know.
You also raise a really good point about proactive communication. As I said, we’re definitely still figuring out the best ways to keep stakeholders informed as we scale up our capacity and work, and this is helpful feedback in that.
Thanks, Emma! And sorry for the rather curt comment. I typed it out while my phone was dying and I was on the move after a rough start to the day. In hindsight, it came across more strongly than I intended.
I really appreciate the context you shared. To give a bit of background from my side: it’s felt like things are moving quite quickly on CEA’s end with branding and related work (which is exciting!), but from where I sit, it’s sometimes felt like orgs like ours are struggling to keep up. I can’t speak for all community builders, but I usually try to follow CEA’s lead to keep things coherent across the ecosystem — so the lack of engagement has at times felt a little disorienting, and honestly, a bit disempowering.
For example, we’ve recently been putting quite a bit of time and money into revamping our website and visual identity. If we’d known more about what was happening at CEA, it could have helped shape our direction. A short note to CEA’s groups team, which could have been forwarded on, would have gone a long way — something like: “Hey, we’re working on EA brand stuff at the moment. It’s being informed by such-and-such findings. Here’s our rough timeline and broad direction. More soon”.
What’s made that feeling a bit more acute is that I’d actually tried to reach out a couple of times to find someone at CEA to talk with about this, but didn’t get a response. I almost certainly didn’t go about it the right way (in hindsight, I probably should’ve just emailed you directly), but that lack of feedback added to the sense of being out of the loop.
That said, I’m really glad to hear about the progress and new capacity on your team, and I’d love to stay in sync however we can. And sorry once again for the abrasive tone of my comment!
Thanks for this, James! No worries at all about tone—I completely understand how those kinds of days go.
I really appreciate you sharing more context about where you’re coming from. It sounds like there may have been some communication gaps or crossed wires here—I know I’ve talked to your co-director Marieke about comms more than once (most recently in February at EAG), and Britney from our team left some comments on one of your comms strategy docs recently that the Groups team flagged to us. But it sounds like there may be a disconnect between those conversations and what you were looking for, or maybe the information didn’t flow in the most helpful ways for your planning, which is great to know.
You also raise a really good point about proactive communication. As I said, we’re definitely still figuring out the best ways to keep stakeholders informed as we scale up our capacity and work, and this is helpful feedback in that.
Looking forward to chatting directly soon!