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#16
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Re: FIRST Five-Year Strategic Plan (2013-2017)
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Do foreign political figures not talk about wanting to win all the time? Quote:
Winning is awesome, but I think most of us would rather win in a situation where the bar has been raised to new heights than one where its sitting in the mud. I think it is absolutely FIRST's plan to elevate everyone, but I think they'd rather it slip under the radar at events since they seem to be heavily courting Uncle Sam. |
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#17
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Re: FIRST Five-Year Strategic Plan (2013-2017)
Good points Ian. thanks
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#18
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One of the issues I wish FIRST would focus on is the lack of a mentor base. Starting new teams everywhere is all fine and dandy, but those teams need mentors. I think a slower growth model, with a focus on getting both new mentors and FIRST alumni who have graduated college to join new teams, would be more beneficial in the long run. It creates a feedback loop, and I think it's important for rookies to see that FIRST has that kind of staying power in an individuals life. |
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#19
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Re: FIRST Five-Year Strategic Plan (2013-2017)
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* I put "district" in quotes because it really isn't a good term to describe the model. It is and always has been a system designed to cut costs and increase play time. There doesn't actually have to be anything location specific about it. Regards, Bryan |
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#20
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Huh. I never thought of it that way. Well, I hope that, if the district model becomes the standard, they'll allow travel like you stated.
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#21
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Re: FIRST Five-Year Strategic Plan (2013-2017)
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There was a lot of discussion between FiM and FIRST about how to deal with the money part of it, and what to do about robot shipping and drayage. Eventually it worked out that the large number of smaller/cheaper district events was a way to give teams nearly twice as much competition time for a single entry fee. The "bag & tag" experiment was a success and is now the standard for all of FRC. But the first information I heard about the Michigan region was based on the need to accommodate more teams, and the benefits of lower cost and more play time were listed as desireable outcomes of the plan rather than primary goals. |
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#22
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Re: FIRST Five-Year Strategic Plan (2013-2017)
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I am fairly knowledgeable on the topic as I have all my information firsthand from Jim Z but I am by no means an expert. Because I don't have an answer for you that I know is correct I am not going to speculate about exactly what FIM's goals were in the beginning. I'll only to say that it has become an engine to do what I described if it is allowed to be by FIRST. While I don't have all the answers about FIM I do know that Jim Zondag was going to release a paper about FIM: how it works, what it’s purpose is, etc. Unless things have changed that should be released sometime between now and kickoff. (but don't hold me to it) Regards, Bryan |
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#23
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Re: FIRST Five-Year Strategic Plan (2013-2017)
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The primary motivation behind FiM was financial. It was a financial consideration on several fronts, but trust me, the reason it happened when it did, the way it did was because the traditional system would have likely bankrupted FRC in our region in 2009 if we had not done this. The District System saves money for teams and the regional committees in several ways: reduced travel costs, lower entry fees, lower cost per match, no shipping, 2 day events; but the really, really big item is lower event production costs. The low cost events as we piloted them in 2008-2009 can often be run for less than 10% of traditional FRC event costs. In 2012, the annual savings from doing this in our State is nearly one Million Dollars! Per Year! This is huge because we can still raise much of this money from the sponsoring companies, but instead of blowing it all on lights, AV, and roadies from the East coast, we can use this money to fund teams and new local growth. All of the competitive restructuring we did at the same time was related to other goals and motivations we had desired for years, so we included all of this in the system we proposed in 2008 and are much better for it. We want to increase opportunity and availablity of events for our teams, and increase the competitive level of the sport, so we did. Increasing the Return on Investment of FRC is one of our primary goals at FiM. To increase ROI, you can reduce costs, you can improve returns, or ideally you do both. The District system does both very effectively. Our hope is that as more regions migrate, that collectively we can discover even better ways of operating. FRC is filled with some of the smartest people on Earth, and together we can make anything better than it is today. FRC in its traditional form is simply too expensive. We took a big first step toward reducing the price point of participation, but there are many more opportunitites for futher improvement. 100 years ago Henry Ford, one of the great innovators of the modern age, was viewed as a genius with his revolutionary business model to lower a product's cost and the company's profit margin in exchange for increased sales volume. The result made the automobile available to many, many more people instead of just the rich, made Ford Motor Co. very wealthy, and changed the culture of our society. Win, Win, Win, This century old idea applies well to FIRST: We want FRC available to everyone, just as Henry Ford did. We want to change our society, just as Henry Ford did. He dramatically reduced consumer costs to achieve the accessability needed to achieve this goal. FIRST should do the same if they ever want to achieve the results Dean envisions. High costs are a deterent to growth, and rounding up grants from big companies is not the same as systemic cost reduction. Some of the statements in the 5 year plan give me hope that the leadership of FIRST have finally realized this, but we will have to wait an see. BJC is right, I have been writing a District description paper with some of this back history and justification on and off for a while. Life keeps getting in the way, and every time I pick it back up, I feel the need to rewrite it all over again. I will complete and post this someday soon. |
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