I see where you are coming from, but I still can't lead myself to believe that we can compare VATUSA/VATSIM to other organizations carte blanche. I agree that we can determine effectiveness through comparison on some occasion and it is obvious that we all tap our professional experiences and apply (or used to apply) them to the network.
You can't compare VATSIM to a single organization. But over time, the other organizations you belong to (for-profit corporate, volunteer, non-profit corporate, hobbyist) become a frame of reference in aggregate and you learn to weigh them accordingly. After a certain time, you develop enough points of reference and when you get an outlier in terms of metrics and effectiveness, it doesn't matter how unique or different they are - there's a
prima facie case that the outlier is ineffective rather than the outlier is unique. It's rebuttable, of course. I've yet to see anything from VATSIM that does so. It has more levels of hierarchy and less results.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]However, companies have individuals who get paid and by virtue of the position can be fired.[/quote]
This is unfortunate, because as we like to point out, it's only a hobby. If someone gets removed as the ATM of some facility it's not going to affect their ability to put food on the table. In that sense it's easier to let someone go, because it's only a hobby. Unfortunately for some folks when that is the most significant accomplishment they can claim, it becomes very difficult. I know - 20 years ago a position in a virtual organization was the most significant thing I could claim. I've been there, and I was wrong then.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]Unfortunately, VATSIM doesn't take that stance and in some instances it seems it would rather defend the troll rather than support the staff who wants to allow them to seek other opportunities, which in turn would benefit the organization as well as the individual who is no longer performing their duties.[/quote]
I think any organization that over-formalizes "conflict resolution" policies is merely asking for trouble. It does nothing but encourage jailhouse lawyers.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I currently sit on the board of directors for a non-profit whose annual budget reaches into the latter half of the six figures. I've attempted to draw comparisons, but I simply can't find much common ground. Both include a bit of hobbyist mentality, involve donated resources (and we bring in income from our operations), and have a staff who are dedicated to improve the cause. Beyond this, I can't make the assertion that a certain number of staff should apply to both equally.[/quote]
That's fair, and perhaps I should qualify (and maybe even backtrack from!) my earlier statements just a little. I mention DVA because we have a lot of members, and the staff/member ratio is very high, much higher than VATUSA. I mention it because it makes the case that a volunteer organization (a volunteer aviation-based organization, no less) can operate successfully with a significantly different staff/member ratio. I don't know whether the right ratio for VATUSA is the same as ours. Probably not. But when I see a broadly similar organization operating with numbers significantly different from my own, I pay close attention.
Another anecdote - at my day job, I report to a Senior VP who reports to the CIO who reports to the CEO. For my team, there's three managers between them and the CEO - some other teams have four. Most other places I've worked at have been similar, some have been much less. (You can tell I've never worked for a truly giant conglomerate.) And here too when I see VATSIM with so many (parallel) levels of hierarchy for a volunteer organization, it's valid to compare it to what I've done professionally and at least suspect that somethings out of kilter.
VATSIM is IMO too often fat, dumb and happy. When pilots do that, they die. Organizations, I suspect, aren't much different except that it takes longer.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]One thing you should realize about VATUSA is that you need to see the division management as a different function than the ARTCC management.[/quote]
I've not quoted much of what you said here but I agree with a lot of it. This statement, less so - while they focus on different things at different levels, to me everyone from VATUSA1 down to the lowest Assistant Deputy Facility Advisory Board Vice-Chairman pro tempore should be considered part of the VATUSA staff, albeit at different levels, and VATUSA should be very interested in how its staff is being deployed across the country. I'll confess again that I'm a ruthless centralizer at times, and VATUSA needs some centralized oversight and allocation of people. You've decentralized a great deal to the facility level, and some parts make sense, others do not.
My thinking has been that if it's not different at the facility level, you centralize it. Something like the old Academy was fantastic because it let you get some standardized training out and then let the facilities round out the local procedures. If you don't have enough people to do it right at the facility level (like web stuff), you centralize it. If you can't centralize it effectively at the VATUSA level
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]With that said, ARTCCs each have their own flavor, or personality if you will. I say let them operate as needed with sufficient oversight by VATUSA to prevent malicious activity and favoritism, which tends to happen at that level more than others.[/quote]
Agreed, and I don't want the local facilities to lose local flavor. But again, local flavor needs to be things that are truly local, which is local policies and a local culture that comes from people working together over time. Centralization aids in avoiding favoritism since once you have the data in one place it becomes very easy to spot the outliers and start questioning what is going on. Local flavor shouldn't interfere with consistent division-wide results unless the variance is expected in advance.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I agree, but let me address your statement with a question. Doesn't this apply to the Board of Governors and Founders as well? [/quote]
Very much so. I have few friends at the latter level.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I didn't see anything that could be brought to the VATUSA level that we weren't already attempting to push voluntarily. Andrew did a lot of work as the webmaster to try and relieve those duties by the ARTCCs, but it was intended to be voluntary and some did use his services.[/quote]
I think it might have been an interesting exercise to make things not so voluntary. Interesting and valuable change is rarely voluntary.
[!--quoteo--][div class=\\\'quotetop\\\']QUOTE [/div][div class=\\\'quotemain\\\'][!--quotec--]I was actually driving through your area a day before the snow hit. However, your offer is enticing. [/quote]
I was in a (barely) warmer part of the US that day. Next time you're in Atlanta, give me a shout.
Cheers!
Luke