Transcript Document

Turning the AAVSO Mission
and Vision Into a
Strategic Plan
Mike Simonsen
April 2008
Why Bother?
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Fundraising
More than anyone in the organization, I need
to be able to explain clearly and concisely
what we do now and why it is important to
individuals, foundations, and corporations to
garner support
We need to establish priorities to decide
which new programs/activities to fund
Some foundations actually require a written
strategic plan in proposal documentation
Financial Decisions
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How can council decide how to allocate
funds, bequests, etc., responsibly and
realistically, if we don’t have a set of clear
priorities and a plan?
How will we decide what to keep, add or cut if
we don’t know where we are going and how
we will get there?
How do we know how well we are doing if we
don’t know what we are supposed to be
doing?
Because it’s our job
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“after thinking about it, I’d rather leave much of the generic longterm goals for the Council to decide without influence from me,
and instead give you short-term goals that I am currently
working towards. These are specifics, not general comments,
and so will be different than what you are considering. They will
be modified according to Council’s wishes.”
Arne Henden
Short-term AAVSO Vision and Goals, March 13, 2006
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We never did establish short-term, intermediate or long-range
goals to guide our decision making process and provide
guidance to the Director after our ‘Futures Session’.
So where do we start?
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Examine the mission and vision statements
and see if we are living up to either of them,
or if are they just words on our website.
Decide what the priorities of the organization
are for the future.
Set long range goals.
Weigh what we are doing against what we
should be doing.
Plan for now, next year and five years from
now.
The AAVSO Vision Statement
“The AAVSO seeks to be the world-recognized
leader in information and data on variable
stars.”
Three important parts:
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3.
World-recognized leader
Variable star Information
Variable star Data
Variable Star Information
(world recognized leader)
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VSX- International Variable Star Index
Does this mean VSX is a core project in our
mission; or should be?
Are we out to replace the GCVS as the prime
source (world recognized leader) for accurate
information on variable stars?
Then, should VSX be better supported,
staffed, funded, executed, prioritized,
publicized and promoted?
If not, why do it?
JAAVSO
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Does this mean JAAVSO should be THE place
to publish and find information on variable stars?
Then why don’t our Director, President, staff
PhD, and professional astronomer council
members publish anything in it?
How do we change the perception of the Journal
so it IS the leading variable star publication?
If we don’t, why spend all the money we spend
on staff time, editing, publishing and mailing?
AAVSO Newsletter
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AAVSO Newsletter
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Advertised as membership
benefit
Published infrequently
Black and white
No variable star information or
science news
Mailed to membership -very
expensive
Costs staff time to publish
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Astronomy Club
Newsletters
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Member benefit
Published monthly
Color, graphics
Science news, observing
notes, sky charts and more
99% pdf available onlineFREE!
Free writing content
Published and written by
volunteers- FREE!
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Observing Manuals
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Visual Manual
Updated in 2001
Many translations now
available
Needs chart references
and explanations
updated with VSP
information
Needs submission info
updated
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CCD Manual
Updated several times,
most recently 2004
Needs to be upgraded
to more instructive,
thorough manual
Online version only
Needs chart references
and explanations
updated with VSP
information
Needs submission info
updated
The LPV Bulletin
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Still published in outdated format
NEVER published on time
Expensive, time-sink to produce
Dubious methodology and results
We don’t even know if the predictions are
correct. In fact…
We claim not be able to predict the behavior
of almost half the stars (NMO list)
The real science by-product of this work,
Monographs, sits unpublished for 30+ years
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Should we re-consider our publishing
practices, priorities and investment
altogether?
“Rather than publishing CCD Views, Eyepiece Views, the twice-yearly
newsletter, many campaigns, etc., we might consider publishing a 6annual-issue magazine much like JRASC, Mercury, JBAA, etc. This
would be a definite membership benefit (don’t put it on the web), but
comes at significant cost. You could sell advertising for it, though. It
would be the only variable-star magazine in the world, and would
advertise the AAVSO just in itself. I have tasked Mike to find out the
cost of such a publication and may try a pilot issue to see the demand,
sometime in the next year or two.”
Arne Henden, March 2006
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What else do we need to do to be the worldrecognized leader in information?
Variable Star Data
(world recognized leader)
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Does this mean we should have all the data?
If not, then which data are the most important,
valuable, etc?
Historical data, survey data, other data like
spectroscopic data, FITS files?
How do we work with the surveys coming
online?
How do we fit into the NVO picture?
Is the comparison star DB valuable? Can it be
turned into a source of funding?
Mission Statement
“The AAVSO is an international non-profit
organization of variable star observers whose
mission is: to observe and analyze variable
stars; to collect and archive observations for
worldwide access; to forge strong collaborations
and mentoring between amateurs and
professionals that promote both scientific
research and education on variable sources;
and to promote international collaboration.”
“to observe and analyze variable stars”
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Should we provide guidance and direction as to
which stars to observe?
Should we provide more (different, better)
training for our observers?
Who is analyzing variable stars?
Where do they publish their results?
Should we be doing more analysis, research
and publishing? Wouldn’t this help improve the
perception of AAVSO and the Journal if we did?
Should we do workshops to teach our members
and others how to analyze variable star data?
“to collect and archive observations for worldwide
access”
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Who is accessing the data and for what?
Where do they publish their results?
Do we have the data people want?
What other data should we have?
How will we get it?
How does the world know we have data?
“to forge strong collaborations and mentoring between amateurs and
professionals that promote both scientific research and education on
variable sources”
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How are we forging these relationships?
Who is doing the work?
How do these collaborations promote research?
How will professionals help amateurs promote
education?
Do we have any programs in place that do any
of this?
Do we need to create new programs to do this?
“to promote international collaboration”
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Are we really invested in international
collaboration?
Didn’t we just have an international meeting?
How many of our council participated/attended?
In what ways do we (will we) collaborate with
other international groups or individuals?
What can we offer?
What will we get out of it?
Why is this important?
Education and Outreach
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Where does education fit into the AAVSO
mission?
Are we going to commit thought, time, energy,
staff or money to education now or in the future?
We need a clear mission and a plan. I don’t see
any professionals collaborating with amateurs to
promote anything.
Do we buy into the idea that outreach is a good
way to connect with the future generation of
observers, members and supporters?
What are we doing, and how are we supporting
outreach?
What next?
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Decide on our real vision and goals for the future
Prioritize the things we do that will help us get
there. Do them more and better.
Change, fix or eliminate the things that do not
help us get there.
Set short term goals.
Set intermediate goals.
Make a plan for achieving those goals.
Continuously evaluate the plan and our
performance, and make course corrections as
needed.
“Was that in the plan?”
end