Subject: PPC Survey Responses
Author:
Posted on: 2011-07-02 09:05:00 UTC

So, the Survey has dropped off the front page, I've compiled all the data, and now it's time to see what's what. Your response, my fellow PPCers, was overwhelming - 50 people replied, which is incredible. Whatever happens, at least we know the PPC spoke together.

Since this is a summary, not all the details you wrote will find their way in. I think that's a real shame - some of your responses were truly heartfelt - but that's the way it is. This was an anonymous survey, and I'm afraid someone who's around more often than I am could probably identify a lot of you from what you wrote.

I'm not going to be using graphs, I'm afraid - multiple-choice questions don't lend themselves to that end very well. I'll give a brief summary of each table at the end of its section.

1. Roles of the PPC

What role do you think a) the whole PPC, b) the PPC Board, c) the PPC IRC, d) the PPC Wiki should fulfil?

Whole PPC: Killing & mocking badfic (26), social interaction/fun (12), concrit for us (9), concrit for badfic authors (8), community feeling (6), sharing fanfic (5), none (1).

I've compressed a heck of a lot into 'social interaction' up there, but hopefully it gets the point across.

PPC Board: Social interaction/fun (27), bulletin board (23), answering questions (6), the 'Home' of the PPC (6), community feeling (5), organised changes to the PPC (5), sharing fanfic (3), games (3), concrit for us (2), collective knowledge (1), making things official (1).

'bulletin board' refers to mission updates, introductions, and giving permission, and anything else of that ilk.

IRC: Social interaction/fun (32), rapid responses (11), I don't use it (10), games (4), community feeling (2), mocking badfic (1).

The IRC just wins out over the Board as a host for social interaction. On the other hand, one in five people went out of their way to say they don't use it.

Wiki: Collective knowledge (47), answering questions (3), making things official (2).

... so we know what a Wiki is, then? :P

A lot of people had fairly strong opinions here, specifically about how the Board should only be used for bulletins while all the real social stuff goes on in the IRC. That clearly isn't the case, since more than half of the group think the Board is also a social hub. Perhaps we need to work on that, though, since a fair number of us don't seem to see that. ... oh, and no, I did not spell 'fulfil' wrong, thank you very much. One L is English, two is a foolish colonial corruption.

2. What would you change?

What changes, if any, would you make to a) the whole PPC, b) the Board, c) the IRC, d) the Wiki?

('None', by the way, is only people who specifically said 'none'. Not replying doesn't count)

Whole PPC: None (13), more fun (6), more respect (4), changes to Permission (3), emphasis on teaching (3), less bound by precedent (2), more collaborations (2), more missions by oldbies (1), more initial information (1), no flaming writers (1), less possessiveness (1), less drama (1), avoid mega-crossovers (1), more whole-group decisions (1).

Someone specifically wanted more collab missions, because how likely is it that our agents never bump into each other? Which is a good point. Filed under 'teaching' is my favourite suggestion of the entire survey: a writing workshop. I have no idea how it would be done, but I think it's a fantastic idea.

The Board: Change the layout (28), none (13), more fun (2), no serious issues discussed (1).

Yeah, this was always going to be the difficult one. Turns out two thirds of the PPC want to leave the old Board in one way or another. I'll emphasise that this covers everything from sticky threads to subforums to logging in (which you already can - not that it does anything), to no adverts. Several of them even said "I don't want to leave this one, except for...". But yeah. I see an old debate coming up again...

IRC: None (15), less drama (11), more controlled (5), less controlled (3), more respect (3), more fun (2), more initial information (1), no serious issues (1).

So how can you make the IRC both more and less controlled by authorities? Beats me. The 'initial information' here, by the way, is referring essentially to the stuff given to new arrivals - the rules of the IRC, and the Links people are given on-Board. I also think it's worrying that both here and under 'whole PPC', people said they didn't feel they were being respected as equals. That is wrong, ladies and gentlefish, just wrong.

Wiki: None (20), more comprehensive (11), more fun (2), less bound by precedent (2), less complicated to update (2), easier to browse (1), no ads (1).

A couple of people mentioned the precedent thing; one person referred to it as 'the altar of our history'. Their point was that the PPC is supposed to be a fun, creative exercise - you shouldn't end up checking every decision you make in a mission against the Wiki. I happen to agree.

The three main issues to come out of this section were: 1) the format of the Board, 2) the IRC drama, and 3) the lack of organisation and complete information on the Wiki. That last is, I suspect, part of the nature of a Wiki.

3. Permission

How do you think Permission should be given?

My table for this question has mysteriously vanished, due I suspect to tiny hands and a shiny 'Off' button. However, from memory, most people said Permission was fine the way it is. A fair number wanted a shorter wait, or at least flexibility (someone mentioned that people can be told no-one knows who they are, when in fact they've been massively active in the IRC). Additionally, a few people mentioned that more emphasis should be placed on the writing sample.

How should Permission Givers be chosen?

General election (18), based on writing quality (11), based on time with the PPC (10), everyone who passed a certain point (6), based on community knowledge (5), current PGs select (4), more needed (2).

A few points here. The general election is how we currently do it, and we do take their writing quality and time with the PPC (and their community participation) into account. Six people said everyone who has reached a certain stage (years in the PPC, number of missions, whatever) should be a PG automatically. The number saying we need more is low, but several people mentioned it in the hats question, so it's probably worth looking into.

One thing that came up in all three Permission questions (we'll get to the hats later) was getting more than one response. One person suggested massive numbers of new PGs, but there was another response which caught my eye. The suggestion was that anyone can comment on whether a request should be granted Permission. Then, if four non-PGs say it should, it has Permission - unless a PG gives a reason otherwise. Since we manage to get four responses to most requests, this would make it easier to get Permission if the PGs are busy - but we can still pop in and check if we feel the need. Again, it was just an idea someone had.

4. Personal Responses

What do you hope to get out of the PPC?

Community (30), fun (20), write missions (15), reading material (14), improve writing (12), concrit (9)

... Protectors, you bring warm fuzzy feelings to my heart. You seriously do. This is why I joined the PPC to begin with - to read the missions, to write, and most of all for the community feeling. It's fun, it's friendly - the PPC is a community I'm proud to be a part of, and a canon I'm proud to be able to contribute to.

How do you think you can get the most out of the PPC?

Participate (21), write missions (20), read missions (12), concrit (7), the IRC (6), have fun (3), cooperative writing (1).

This is where the old guard need to pay attention: for some people, the IRC is how they interact with the PPC. Just like how we're all (still!) stuck thinking 'PPC Mission' means 'Killing 'Sues', we sometimes get to thinking 'PPC' means 'PPC Board'. It doesn't. The IRC is part of the community too - not one we all visit, nor have to (I don't), but it's there, and it's why the Board isn't as social as it used to be.

I think this has been a truly informative survey. It may or may not lead to action, but it's certainly taught me a heck of a lot. Thank you all very much for participating. Let's do it again in another eight years.

h[BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP!]

What do you mean, there's still a question left?

5. Those Darned Hats


The Hat Question

:P

hS

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