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Establishing an Award

I'm tired of awards not counting crowdfunded projects.  I've seen all this before; it's the same old nonsense that went on when electronic publication began.  It wasn't "real" publishing and nobody wanted it in their awards, yada yada yada.  I don't feel like waiting around another ten or twelve years while people look for a clue machine and a quarter to put in it.
[EDIT 12/29/09: The Nebula officially accepts crowdfunded fiction. The Rhysling officially bans crowdfunded poems.]

What we need is an award of our own, focused on cyberfunded creativity.  I'm willing to do what I can to make that happen.  I need at least some help, though, to make it work optimally.

First, I propose that we start with four simple categories: Art, Fiction, Poetry, and Other Project.  (Other includes any cyberfunded creativity that isn't art, fiction, or poetry -- or that spans more than one category.)  Those are categories where I know projects are happening.  I'm willing to handle Art, Fiction, and Other.  I'm not willing to handle the Poetry category because that's the type of project I do.  If anyone else wants to manage another category, let me know.
[EDIT 12/30/09: A fifth category has been added, Patron, for people who contribute toward the financial success of crowdfunded projects.]
[EDIT 12/31/09: The categories and their current handlers are listed below.]
Art: [info]ysabetwordsmith
Fiction: [info]ysabetwordsmith
Poetry: [info]xjenavivex
Other Project: [info]ysabetwordsmith
Patron: [info]xjenavivex

I propose the following time parameters:
Nomination period January 1-January 31, 2010.
Voting period February 1-February 28, 2010.
This allows time to promote the award across a wide range of venues, and repeat the announcements so that plenty of people have time to hear them.  Everyone is encouraged to spread the word as far as possible whether you are a creator, a donor, or whatever.

I propose the following rules:

1) In order to be nominated, a project must be "cyberfunded creativity" aka "crowdfunding."  That means it must be creative material marketed directly to an audience online, with money involved somehow.  There are many variations of this business model; all are welcome; and if you're not sure a project qualifies, you may ask.

2) In order to be nominated, at least part of the project must be visible online without charge.  If the project is normally visible only to paying subscribers or the like, and the creator wishes for it to be eligible, then s/he may offer temporary or partial access for voting purposes.  (If the available material is partial and/or temporary, it needs to say that at the top of the screen, to avoid annoying visitors who might otherwise think they're about to see a complete piece.)

2.5) In order to be nominated, a patron must have contributed money to at least one cyberfunded project. This establishes the "crowdfunding" aspect and distinguishes patrons from audience members who are not putting money into this business model. However, financial contribution is not the only consideration for this category, so nominated patrons may be -- but are not required to be -- the most generous contributors to a project. Feedback, promotion, and other forms of enthusiasm may among the factors considered in nomination or voting. Note that many cyberfunded projects have an "honor wall" or some other form of acknowledgement for patrons, and some indicate which parts of a project were funded by whom, which helps show who might be eligible for this category and how great a patron they are.

3) This award will go by calendar years.  So in order to be eligible for the first round, a project or patron must have been active on or between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2009.

4) For this round, nominations will be made in comments on a nomination post in this community.  A nomination consists of the project title, creator name, award category, a link to the project page, and a sentence or few summarizing the project and its crowdfunding approach.  Example: "Awesome Content by A.J. Muse. http://awe.some.content.com  Other.  Awesome Content is a story about A.J. Muse's three ferrets, told in a combination of music and fiction, illustrated by photos; it is funded by a combination of donations and photo sales."  (Future rounds may use a more flexible nomination system if such becomes available.)

4) You may nominate a maximum of three projects per category.  You are not required to make that many nominations or to cover all the categories. You may not nominate your own project, nor yourself as a patron; that's tacky. You MAY nominate patrons for the Patron category who have contributed money to your project, or you may nominate patrons supporting someone else's project; but still only a total of three nominations for this category.

5) Nominations for each category will be collected by the person in charge of that category.

6) Voters are strongly encouraged to browse the nominees before making a final decision; that's what the links are for, and the purpose of this award is to promote the splendor of crowdfunded projects.

7) Voting will take place via LiveJournal polling in this community, open to all.  You may cast one vote per category.  (There may need to be more than one poll question per category, and runoffs, if the number of nominees is high.)  You may not vote for your own project, nor yourself as a patron; that's tacky.  (Future rounds may use a more flexible voting system if such becomes available.)

8) Winners will be announced after the polling is completed.


So far, there is no rendition of the award, just a concept for honoring creative talent and business ingenuity.  It doesn't have a name; you can make suggestions if you wish.  I rather like "Smoking Hat" ... a reference to the sassy remark, "Put that in your hat and smoke it!" (which derives from two others, "Put that in your PIPE and smoke it" and "Put that in your hat and WEAR it.").
[EDIT 12/30/09: Everyone seems to love "Rose and Bay" as a name for this award. Also, a request has been made for a tangible format. I could probably produce certificates. If you want custom art or a sculpted award, someone with more artistic talent will have to step up and provide such.]

Feedback is welcome.

Comments

To note: it's been established via my Fairyland project that crowdfunded projects are eligible for the Nebula award.

Yay!

I am delighted to hear that. Thank you for sharing; I will add a mention of this to the crowdfunding award post.

The Rhysling Award for speculative poetry remains adamantly opposed to including crowdfunded poems. Other people have complained about various other awards refusing crowdfunded projects. It would be helpful to have a list of those that have made official statements, for and against.

My two cents

I would bump the dates from Jan/Feb to Feb/March; people are still recovering from the holidays in January and you'll probably get a lot better turn out if you bump the dates to the less holiday-affected months.

I feel as though "Smoking Hat" is a bit too reactionary; it might be apt now, but I think, in establishing an award, an eye to the long term is beneficial.

Crowdfunding revives, in a modern way, the concept of patronage. A "Patron Award" would be more appropriate for someone who has done the funding (and might be a nice parallel award at some point), but perhaps working along those lines might lead to a good name for the award.

I think it would be nice, also, to have a tangible form of the award, even just a certificate. If this is to be done, let's do it right.

Re: My two cents

>>I would bump the dates from Jan/Feb to Feb/March; people are still recovering from the holidays in January and you'll probably get a lot better turn out if you bump the dates to the less holiday-affected months.<<

I'm willing to consider that, if enough people feel that it would help. I tend to prefer awards whose timing is easy to remember, and that generate findings promptly. I figured that allowing a month apiece for nomination and judging would be sufficient.

>> Crowdfunding revives, in a modern way, the concept of patronage. A "Patron Award" would be more appropriate for someone who has done the funding (and might be a nice parallel award at some point), <<

I like the idea of an award for crowdfunding patrons. Perhaps we could add this as a category in this award? It could be spun off later if people desire.

>>I think it would be nice, also, to have a tangible form of the award, even just a certificate.<<

I could do certificates.
The "Rose and Bay" Award: rose petals to represent the crowd, a crown of bay leaves (laurels) for the winners.

Ooo...

I like that imagery!
VERY NICE.
I love that--for the imagery, the meaning, and the fact that it sounds super literary and official ;)
I worry about "Smoking Hat" only because of the existing indie RPG producer/distributor, Evil Hat Productions, who are imminently bringing out the Dresden Files game. One can wear a lot of hats at once, but how many can one publish?
I like [info]jenny_evergreen's idea of a Patron Award in addition to the awards for Art, Fiction, etc. It might be nice for the creators of crowdfunded projects to nominate patrons and vote in this category, as an extra little "thank you" to the people who support them. Because to my mind, just being nominated by your favorite creator(s) would be almost as thrilling as winning the award itself.

Just a thought!

Yes...

... now that you mention it, I'd be pretty excited if someone nominated me for a Patron award. I got a supporter (for frequent comments) perk this week and was totally filled with squee.

I'll go ahead and add this to the categories.

Is there someone willing to handle the Patron category who has NOT donated money to a crowdfunded project during 2009?

Re: Yes...

What's involved in handling the award? Just collecting names and sending them out for voting? If so, I can do it (I'll exclude myself from the running even though I donate money to projects).
I will help you any way I can. You just let me know.

Thank you!

First, I need someone to take over two of the categories, Poetry and Patron. It needs to be someone who did NOT participate in that category's activity during 2009, which is why I don't want to manage those two myself. Did you post any crowdfunded poetry and/or donate to any crowdfunded project(s) during 2009? If not, you're eligible to manage, and I could sure use your help there!

Second, you can help with promotion. I want to spread the word about this award as far as possible, especially once the details are nailed down and nomination opens.

Third, you can watch for the "nomination" posts to appear, and make nominations. So you might want to browse around and remind yourself of cool projects and enthusiastic patrons.

Fourth, you can vote!

musing on categories

I suspect that in the long run, having things like music (individual tracks or albums) included in the same category as more obscure "other" things (like One Card Draws) will mean that the other odd things don't get showcased properly.

I don't know if that means we might want to have a separate music category this year, but I'd definitely suggest one for next year.

Stuff like "free icon day" would qualify as an art project, not "other". What other "other" types of projects have you seen?

Re: musing on categories

>>I suspect that in the long run, having things like music (individual tracks or albums) included in the same category as more obscure "other" things (like One Card Draws) will mean that the other odd things don't get showcased properly. <<

I deliberately kept the list of categories short this year, so that it would not be too difficult to handle. I understand that this creates a number of "apples and oranges" comparisons -- for instance, "Fiction" covers everything from flash to novels. If people are enthusiastic about this award, then it has plenty of room to grow. The categories that get the most nominations this year would be most logical to subdivide next year. How much growth occurs will depend on how many people participate this year and how many volunteers we get next year.

>>What other "other" types of projects have you seen?<<

I've seen at least two projects that merged jewelry and fiction. One was an old project that [info]shadesong did. The other is currently being run by Holly Lisle and her daughter; TalysMana isn't taking donations but has released the first piece of jewelry for sale.

Webcomics would count as "other" because they cross two categories, fiction and art.

Divination is "other."

Movies or other video would be "other."

This award and the wider community

I tweeted about this award, linking to my post in my journal about it.

This leads me to wonder if people who are not LJ members can post comments to this community (and thus nominate their favorite projects)?

Re: This award and the wider community

>>I tweeted about this award, linking to my post in my journal about it.<<

Thanks everso!

>>This leads me to wonder if people who are not LJ members can post comments to this community (and thus nominate their favorite projects)?<<

This community is currently set to allow comments from anyone, so yes, they can. Anonymous commenters will see a CAPTCHA display to cut down on spam.

Icon?

<src="http://i995.photobucket.com/albums/af71/valdary/iconroseandbay2.jpg?t=1262540498">

Original is 1000 by 1000 pixels so you can have other sizes if needed

Re: Icon?



Original is 1000 by 1000 pixels so you can have other sizes if needed

Re: Icon?

Okay, this is pretty. I'll mention it on the other post where [info]haikujaguar just offered a logo design.

The standard for LJ icons is 100x100 pixels; I think this would work if you downsized to that.

Rose and Bay

I have a friend who is part owner in a Trophy Shop in Toronto who is willing to donate plaques or trophies for the Award.

His company is 'Ace Awards'.

Ace Awards 194A Carlton Street Toronto, Ontario M5A 2K8 tel:
416.927.7328 fax: 416.927.8398

Wow!

>>I have a friend who is part owner in a Trophy Shop in Toronto who is willing to donate plaques or trophies for the Award.<<

I was not expecting anything like that! This has great potential.

>>His company is 'Ace Awards'.

Ace Awards 194A Carlton Street Toronto, Ontario M5A 2K8 tel:
416.927.7328 fax: 416.927.8398<<

Okay ... on previous award-shopping occasions, I went into a little shop and looked at their samples and catalog.

Does he have a website or catalog or something we could browse for options? Or did he have something particular in mind?

Is he able to ship things to ... well, wherever the winners live? There's no telling what country that will be; we've already got nominations for people in Canada and the United States.

Re: Wow!

One of my readers blogged about the awards!