YAPC Conference Surveys Update
Last night I managed to get all the talk and tutorial feedback emails out to the speakers from YAPC::NA 2013. If you were a speaker at the event, and haven't received an email from me, first check your spam filters, and then contact me, and I can resend yours.
This year we had 351 talk evaluation responses, 29 course evaluation responses and 121 conference survey responses.
Quite a few talks had no responses, which is a shame, as I'm sure the speakers had several attendees for all their talks. Talk and tutorial feedback is exceptionally useful to speakers, especially first time speakers, as it gives them the opportunity to see what the audience thinks they need to improve on. Often a first time speaker might think they didn't go over well, only to find the feedback very positive. Most feedback is rarely negative, and where areas of the talk can be improved, the critique is given in way to help the speaker for the future. If you didn't give any talk feedback this year, please consider doing so in the future.
The responses for the conference survey was quite low compared to previous years. I had one private email simply say it was too much, which in part I think is due to the extra section this year. There has been a lot of controversy about the Code of Conduct this year, and the organisers wanted to find a way to get thoughts about anonymously from the attendees, the survey being the ideal way to do this. I shall be sending the results and comments to TPF this coming week, for them to consider what improvements can be made. If you didn't complete the section in the survey, and want to air your views, please send your thoughts to admin<@>yapcna.org.
The remaining parts of the conference survey will be online in the next week or so.
In other news both survey results for the last London and German Perl Workshops are now online. Apologies for taking so long to sort these out. I've had rather more distracts this year than normal, and getting them finished took much longer than anticipated. However, there has been some work in the survey software, particularly with regards to formatting the results, to speed up the process. It also helped that I had someone with an interest in survey software that wanted to use the code base for their workplace. The fruits of the changes will finally be making it to GitHub and CPAN over the summer.
While making the improvements, and getting the YAPC::NA 2013 survey online, some problems came to light that could be improved somewhat by allowing the Act conference software to talk to the conference survey software, and not just the other way around. Currently, the survey software can talk to an Act instance and retrieve the list of paid attendees and talks. However, it currently doesn't get the list of registered attendees (applicable to free conferences such as London Perl Workshop), or the list of courses and course attendees for large events (such as YAPCs). The latter is a little tricky to do, due to the way courses are stored, but I believe it can be done. As such, over the next year, I aim to provide some patches to allow the survey software to expose a little more of this data.
For several years I have also been asked if there is a way to integrate the survey into Act, as people forget their links and lose emails. In addition, I always receive a regular complaint from one attendee that I send spam, with the 3 emails I (usually) send for the survey. As such, I'm looking at writing further patches to firstly provide the survey link to the Act instance the attendee has signed up for, and secondly to provide an unsubscribe link, so those not wishing to take part in the survey at all, can decline further email reminders. Again I'll be aiming to work on this for next year's round of YAPCs.
If you have suggestions for further improvements to the survey, please let me know. Once I get the source code packaged and released, I'll organise a more formal method for submit ideas and questions.
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