Hello, Brandon De Vore here, and I would like to get some information out about myself.
I am 21 years old, and a student at Clackamas Community College, studying business administration.
I recently moved from Eugene up to Oregon City, post a layoff at my last job.
I am currently running for the Director of Operations spot. I know that not very many people at Kumoricon know who I am, but I am very interested in doing this job.
A bit of related experience that I have:
- Worked as an Area Coordinator at Hynix Semiconductors from June of 2007 to June of 2008
- Worked as an Interim Supervisor at the end of June 2008, into the beginning of July when it was announced that Hynix would close.
The job of Area Coordinator, as well as the job of Supervisor (the two jobs are hard for me to differentiate, because my Supervisor started training me to do his job as soon as I was promoted to AC) were both very task oriented.
I was in charge of a team of 17-21, depending on attendance, and other factors, and we would work on keeping the tools in our department running and avoiding idle time.
A brief list of my duties:
- Assign different products to the tools my department ran
- Ensure that other departments were feeding me the processes we needed
- Predict the needs of other departments and feed them product accordingly
- Manage breaks for my team and coordinate job coverage
- Communicate with management and maintenance regarding the state of our tools
- Collaborate with engineering to ensure that product was being processed according to specification.
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My philosophy on running operations is pretty simple. Good communication can solve almost any problem. As long as the Yojimbo and the registration teams communicate their problems to the managers, and to the director, any obstacle can be overcome. This does of course go two ways as the director and the managers need to communicate back to the registration staff and Yojimbo and look for ways to help.
This is especially true during the convention, as many emergencies situations become emergencies because not enough information has been communicated. If elected, I will do my best to ensure that we can subvert this by making sure that as many people as possible are in the know.
One last thing before I hit the post message button, there have been a few questions posted in this thread and I’d love to take the time to answer them.
How will you make sure that Kumoricon has a system in place for recruiting volunteers for tasks in all the departments? How will you track volunteer hours and put a solid system in place to reward volunteers?
I feel the best way to go about rewarding the volunteers would be to award them vouchers to get ahead of the lines for some of our more crowded events. Having a pizza party at convention for the volunteers would be nice as well. I know the budget would need to be checked in advance for this, but I feel it would strengthen our volunteer base.
Of course, anything we do with the volunteers would have to be cataloged (Our Publicity Manager has shown me the power of google spreadsheets for this) and I think that would be a task best delegated to the volunteer coordinator.
Are you prepared to oversee the major logistical challenge which is registration, and make sure that the registration staff have everything they need to process pre-registration and to prepare for at-convention registration?
Registration has always been a big challenge for ops, just because of its size, and the inherent nature of it. Working with the registration team on getting badges mailed out, will be a constant activity, but I feel that with proper communication we can stay on track and make this the best registration year ever.
One thing I would like to see happen with registration, if not this year, then perhaps getting it setup for 2010, would be an SQL server and a system for inputting all of the at the door attendees’ information at the door, so that the information can be constantly accessed by the con managers and directors. From what I’ve seen, such a system wouldn’t be difficult to implement, as long as we maintain communication and strategy.
Many of the yojimbo policies and manuals are long out of date. How will you review these and make sure that all of our operating yojimbo policies are solid, address all our current needs especially as we grow, and consistent with the official convention policies as set by the board?
Handling this seems like it will be quite a task. I would set aside time to look over the policies and bylaws, and work with the assistant director to revamp all of the policies in a timely manner, and make sure that they are up to date and free of contradiction.
If there is any information that anyone needs from me regarding the Operations Director position, feel free to post in this thread asking questions, I will be back frequently to check. My email, and various messengers that I use are posted in my forum profile if you wish to contact me one on one.
Thank you for taking the time to read this, and I look forward to seeing everyone at the election meeting.