This post is the raw output of an LLM
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Most groups want more engagement. Fewer people showing up late and leaving early, more people taking on tasks, more people actually caring. But the usual responses — sending another reminder, asking nicely, hoping — don't address the underlying problem.
Participation isn't just a matter of motivation. It's a matter of design.
In this session, we'll look at what actually drives people to show up, contribute, and keep coming back — and how small structural changes can make a big difference.
What We'll Do:
- Explore why excitement matters — not as a trick to get people in the door, but as a signal that something worth engaging with is happening
- Collect real examples that successfully built conditions for participation
- Work through five concrete transformations you can apply:
- Turn vague motivation into tangible incentives — e.g., contributors who summarize a paper get listed in a shared doc
- Replace persuasion with genuinely attractive events — e.g., good food, a clear agenda, something people actually want to come to
- Swap ad-hoc initiative for a standard schedule — e.g., a recurring content series people can plan around
- Make progress visible to generate momentum — e.g., publishing insights from reading groups, so outsiders can see what's happening
- Distribute ownership across multiple roles — e.g., a rotating moderator, so the group doesn't depend on one person to function
- Work in small groups to identify which of these apply to your own context
- Share findings and leave with concrete next steps
No prior attendance at any earlier session is required — this one stands on its own.
This is hosted by Effective Altruism Hamburg — a group focused on using evidence and reason to figure out how to do the most good. New faces are always welcome!
Please drop us a line below (or via pm or email) if you want to participate and have not been in contact with us before.
