daniel_the_smith wrote:Quick response, perhaps more later.
Bantari wrote:As it was stated, my impression was that AGA did not have any ideas, did not have any prior priorities, and there is nothing that needs to be carried over. There is no projects the board members have already set their heats on, which we can think over and come up with ideas of execution.
It appears to me that this is about 85-95% correct.
Bantari wrote:In short - in my opinion, AGA should be in a more advanced state than 'lets throw any general ideas in the wind and see what we like'.
This is what I referred to when I said "if that astonishes you, then be astonished." I agree it
should be in a more advanced state than it is. But it's
not. Astonishment on your part
won't change that.
Lol.
In spite of the fact that whatever I do or say won't change anything - I can still be astonished.
And so my advice as to the priorities - take my astonishment as a sad lesson, and try to do things better in the future.
Because unless you first root out the reasons for such astonishment, no ideas will go very far, I think. Ideas are cheap, talk is cheap, and I am sure there were plenty of talk and plenty of ideas in the past. The hard part is to create a system, a body, and an environment in which the ideas can be turned into reality and thrive. And for that, you need to fundamentally change the way things are approached, not just gather a new bunch of ideas to maybe be half-way realized in some undefined future.
I think you are doing a tremendous job here, and I see some of the other board members speaking up. I assume more are reading. And this is a great start!
I guess this is exactly what i was trying to suggest in my previous posts.
No amount of ideas will do any good unless you first create an environment in which these ideas can be properly handled.