Published
2010-04-13 22:15
Heading back from NTEN's national conference in Atlanta Saturday evening - both tired and stimulated. I was one of 1,500 non-profit "tech" folks (they come in all shapes and sizes btw). CiviCRM (and open source in generally) are clearly more on the radar at NTC each year - despite the bombardment of logos, banners and booths by the large commercial closed source vendors.
My week started with a side-trip to NYC. Combining a family visit with work - I spent a fun and productive day with Kyle Jaster and the rayogram gang working out some of the transition issues for the upcoming layout and style changes for 3.2 (blog on this coming soon - but you can preview work in progress on the sandbox site).
User Training
Then off to Atlanta to conduct a pre-conference full-day CiviCRM User Training session. We had a fully booked session - with a pretty wide range of experience - so I was thrilled to have Gregory Heller from CivicActions there to co-teach, hand-hold and provide some super useful teaching points. Gregory added a rich perspective based on his extensive experience with online advocacy and client engagements. (During the conference I also got to enjoy Gregory's "big room" talents as he presented a passionate "Ignite" session on web strategy.) Interesting to see the mix of organizations for this training - which was dominated by faith-based non-profits. I did another revision cycle on the User Trainingagenda and slide-deck - adding more details and fleshing out the teaching points. Overall the curriculum worked well and folks were pleased - but there's really too much material to cover in 1 day when the participants want to cover all the main components. Folks were a bit cross-eyed by the end of the day. We probably need to break the user training up into 2 days.CiviCRM Affinity Group
On Thursday, we held a CiviCRM "Affinity Group/ Meetup" which was part of the official conference schedule. I kicked things off with a brief 'state of the project' report (slide deck here). Then we had four case study presentations - designed to give folks new to Civ a taste of the wide range of organizations and use-cases:- Gregory Heller (CivicActions) - demonstrated their CiviCRM implementations for Amnesty International and EcoTuesday.
- TJ Cook (- - presented work they've done for Faith Comes by Hearing and several other clients.
- Allan Burstyn (see3 communications) - described how they implemented a complex training application using Drupal + CiviCRM which allows Friends of the Family to provide education and training programs for staff, parents and children. You can see Allan's slidedeck (along with several other interesting see3 sessions) here.
- Joseph Lacy (rayogram) - gave a demo of some of the cool new features coming in 3.2 along with the customized 'case-focussed' UI they're developing for a state government project.