> It is interesting that essentially all public discussion of these > sorts of stategic issues and the criteria for pursuing them almost > always focuses on what is easy or already established, rather than > what will work best for achieving the desired result. In particular, > negative implications appear to be entirely ignored, such as the > one Eric Rosen just pointed out, about encouraging participation > by professional standards goers. So, where would you like to convene IETF 66 and 67? AFAI, the venues for these meetings have not been selected as of yet. Regards, Ed J. -----Original Message----- From: ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx [mailto:ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dave Crocker Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2005 11:44 AM To: Brian E Carpenter Cc: ietf@xxxxxxxx Subject: Re: IETF Meeting Venue Selection Criteria Brian, >>> What is the evidence that we will not gain that new participation >>> without hurting current participation by primary contributors? > It's very hard to get those data... There is no objective way to > identify 'primary > contributors' other than by assuming the regular attendees are > also contributors. > ... > Which, BTW, means income that we badly need. > ... > We also badly need hosts for financial reasons. Unfortunately, the ultimate and practical meaning, of these kinds of conclusions about venue selection, is that we do not place productivity as a high priority. We have a collection of other priorities that take precedence, for a collection of reasons. This means that the impact of face-to-face meetings, on productivity and quality, is almost entirely a matter of luck. I should note that this is a similar problem with respect to Nomcom member selection: We use highly indirect criteria, because they are easy to administer, but which are certain to have poor correlation with member expertise about IETF management -- although IETF management is what is being chosen -- and then we hope for the best. It is interesting that essentially all public discussion of these sorts of stategic issues and the criteria for pursuing them almost always focuses on what is easy or already established, rather than what will work best for achieving the desired result. In particular, negative implications appear to be entirely ignored, such as the one Eric Rosen just pointed out, about encouraging participation by professional standards goers. For an organization that claims to care about the quality of its work product, this all seems a rather strange approach to its management. I suspect that organizations rarely achieve their primary goals by making strategic and tactical decisions that ignore those goals. d/ p.s. "Primary contributors" could be operationally defined as previous IETF attendees who are authors or chairs of current work. One might always want to factor in mailing list activity levels for some individuals, but that's also an indirect measure. However, all involve objective data that are available. An additional approach is a variation on something that is already done: Currently, some participants are queried for schedule conflicts within the IETF week. That could be extended to "venue conflicts" which would prevent them from attending at all. And the primary point behind my making these suggests is to point out that it is easy to give up on pursuing criteria that are not trivial to enforce, but that that is not always warranted... _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf