Update: Apparently I can't write, or get a point across from the
comments and a few emails, so I have edited this to hopefully make it
clearer.
The pre/post conference sessions came out today for the 2010 SQL PASS
Summit. And to my surprise the list of
sessions wasn’t quite what I expected.
I know I complained last year about the selections, and a few people
said that I should get involved if I didn’t like the way things were
done. So I did. I volunteered and wound up on the Pre/Post Con and
Spotlight committee. I spent quite a few hours of my time reviewing
abstracts, emailing with the speakers to get more information, and then
rating sessions. I got on a conference call, with all that prep work,
and debated the choices with the others and think we had a great list of
sessions. We, the three members of the committee, sent our decisions
over to PASS over a week ago. Actually I think two weeks ago.
Only the sessions I the committee I was on had picked
aren’t the same ones as the ones PASS published.
<insert four letter words here>
______-_______ _______ ________ ______ ______
</four letter words rant>
I understand that PASS needs to make money from these sessions, and
there are marketing issues involved. However the instructions I had
stated that my committee “Make decisions with regard to all
Program aspects of PASS Community Summit.” (emphasis mine)
Apparently that’s not the case. I’m not going to disclose which session I
picked that didn’t make it, and which one got picked instead. That’s
not fair to either speaker, and not the point.
If marketing, money, other issues are the important ones, that’s fine.
If you ask others to pick sessions, and supposedly decide on what the
community wants to see and what is good for PASS, then let the committee
do that. I can't speak for the rest of my committee, but we were
caught off guard and not happy with this decision. I'm upset because I
wanted to make a difference to this process, try to do a good job,
defend the decisions of the committee and take the flack for those
decisions. I was also trying to ensure that PASS wasn't choosing people
because they're a part of some "old speakers network". I feel I've
failed there since I didn't make a difference, and the old speaker's
club reigned.
If that's the way PASS wants to work, let some non-SQL, non-DBA,
non-volunteer honk just rank everyone and pick the sessions they think
are important. Publish the rules and guidelines and make it happen.
Just don’t waste my time as a volunteer.
To be clear: My committee sent selections to PASS some time ago. We were
not informed, queried, or told of any changes. One of our pre-con
sessions was demoted to an alternate. One we picked as an alternate, not
sure it was one we wanted to see, was moved to a regular session.
Nothing in the comments below seems to give a good reason for this.