What is circuit riding
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What is circuit riding and why should you care?
- TLDR: Model for doing tech capacity building for organizations
- What do you think of
- Finding the right tools for your mission
- If you don’t have the “right” people, turning the people you have into the right people
- How will tech further the mission
- Not necessarily the biggest, shiniest tools
- What is most appropriate for your needs
- What are good elements/practices/methods for good tech capacity building?
- Free/low cost
- Will the people/tech do the things the org needs
- Do we have an implementation plan?
- Articulated, shared, strategic goals
- Evaluation models, using data in retrospective processes
- Can they pass skills on?
- How sustainable is it?
- Transparency & communication practices – on how we get stuff done
- Capacity – power to do or understand something
- Tech capacity building – work done to help an org achieve its mission and understand how tech can or can’t further that mission
- Circuit riding experience
- Quest – how can low income communities build power for themselves
- Accidental techie
- Job description – traveling, training technology use to use welfare better
- Get organizing groups online for better communication, countering silos
- Model: 19th century ministers traveling on a circuit, traveling judges
- 19s nonprofits – resistant to technology, not well resourced
- Requirement was to be a problem solver, not necessarily having the tech skills in advance
- Problem: reinforcing existing power dynamics
- Personal background – used to connect with the communities
- Building an email list – but not a priority for the users
- Wanted better ways to connect with and build members – databases
- One of many circuit riders – different riders working on different issues
- Learning strategies from different circuit riders
- Circuit rider roundup
- Does anything like circuit riders exist now?
- 1998 was an early circuit rider roundup – 30 people there
- Grew exponentially for a while
- Circuit rider term didn’t resonate as well internationally – change name to eRiding
- Riding – a shared resource, helping people achieve their missions, connector, developing a network
- Similar but not called circuit riding? Engine Room, School of Data
- Building networks to help specialize
- How did the community groups access your services? Get integrated into the circuit rider model
- Circuit rider org got to choose/identify community groups
- Looking for building coalitions, potential impact
- Who is open to working with you?
- Initial work helped build reputation, open doors
- Built networks that are still strong now, years later
- Where could this model be applied now?
- By issue area?
- By existing networks?
- What happened with circuit riders?
- Funders wanted work to be self funding
- Direction to fees for service, but not a good fit for the mission
- Sliding scale
- eRiders set up with funding models in mind, set up as social enterprises
- Commercial work to fund the nonprofit work
- Range of capabilities and resources
- How similar were the organizations you were working with?
- Common thread – everyone wanted a database, but specific needs may vary
- Coalitions had more communication needs
- Some mapping needs – especially for pressuring elected officials
- Approach each group uniquely, doing assessments, unique path forward
- Organizations want to be unique
- Peer to peer facilitation – sharing information about how they tacked tech problems
- Important not to other marginalized communities
- Let the community be the guide to building relationships, sharing their needs
- Some cases, need to acknowledge that you don’t have the same experience/don’t know their context, but still want to support them
- You own your knowledge, how can I help you unlock that power
- Honoring the differences