Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Typical Guildmaster Work Day, 3-shot

I started blogging about a week's worth of activity, but I think that would take a lot of words. I think the three-day segment I record here is fairly representative of the spikes of activity that I have to do in order to stay on top of everything.

Sunday, 9/14
Perfunctory message checking in 1-5 minute intervals throughout the day—always

Morning: I publish schedule after consulting with raid leaders on last-minute executive decisions (45 mins)
Morning/Lunch: Realizing that Aisthesis could use some conquest points, I do a flashpoint, queue crafting, and announce that I won't be ready in time to go out for lunch (60 minutes)
Evening (6 pm): Full Guild Meeting. After guild meeting, I have to discuss an upsetting matter with a guildie.
6:30 pm: I start to queue for PVP for conquests, as scheduled, while still in conversation.
8ish pm: I'm one win away from the ten match objective (and having a lot of fun) when someone whispers me asking about recruitment. They get in mumble and we talk, hitting the usual points (schedule, characters, previous experience, personal life situations that could affect guild, guild character preferences, guild situation, Aisthesis expectations and requirements). After making sure that it's a good fit, I extend a guild invite.
9 pm: I cut the interview short to make dinner, since it's now very late.
9:30 pm: We eat dinner and requeue. I've now missed the guild queuing period. I play a few more matches.
10:30 pm: After answering a message, I realize it's late and start working on other tasks.

Monday, 9/15
7am-1pm: Showering, eating breakfast and lunch, and, oh yeah, dealing with a crisis that forces me to reschedule four international hotels, two separate international flight reservations, and the very relaxing appointment I had today to get needles shoved in my pressure points.
1pm-5:15pm: I hoof it to paid work.
6:30 pm: The Monday/Wednesday team raid begins.
10 pm: We stop raiding. Then we spend a half hour talking about strategies and conquests.
10:30 pm: I spend the rest of my night feeling tired, then go to sleep.

Tuesday, 9/16:
7:15am: I stumble awake only to realize that it's a conquest day.
8:30-10:30: I park the guild ship and spend time doing conquests. I'm rather happy that I'm being 'forced' to do dailies, as many of my raiding toons are lacking in funds right now and I hate sending them subsidies.
10:55: I go to paid work.
11:17: I realize that I told a guildie I would make them augments, so I log into swtor from paid work and begin a round of crafting.
5:15: I return from paid work and head to the grocery store to get food.
5:30: I meet with one of our raid teams to discuss some things.
6:00: We decide to do conquest activities, including Dreadtooth, base invasions, and operations. I make dinner after all of this activity, which means we eat very late.
10:00: I start to work on other things.

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Social Needs in the Digital Era

A very simple argument for why a guild is fulfilling

In the old days, we would have had a town, or a city, and some favorite hangout places in that city, and we would have had a job somewhere in the city and some people that we knew there and some people that we knew elsewhere and called on the phone.

If we needed services, we had a big yellow book that we thumbed through, trying not to smudge the ink as we looked it up. Same with friends and family whose phone numbers we didn't know.

And then the Internet came along and shattered all of that.

For many of us, myself included, we remember this past. But, as I look back to what I had ten years ago, twenty years ago, I think to myself: How did I live?

How did I live without a smartphone?

How did I live without the Internet?

How did I live without books websites?

How did I live without a laptop?

Now, the important question is not any of these. That's surprising, because if you think about how you lived five years ago, or two years ago if you're a technology person, you've learned new things and incorporated them into your everyday life.

The important question is: How do I live now?

I guarantee you someone your age plays Star Wars: the Old Republic. The most common age bracket I've seen is people in their twenties, an age when parental restrictions and complications have been lifted, and college gives some freedom with time. (That's an experience statistic, not a research statistic, though). If someone your age plays Swtor, then someone your age definitely plays WoW.

So, how do you live now? If you can find a group of like-minded people and get over age gaps and maturity gaps (not necessarily caused by age gaps), you may find a place online that suits you.

It's harder to meet people these days. Everyone has smartphones and they'd rather text their circle of friends than pay attention to you.

It's easier to find services, even in your area.

It's harder to find places to hangout.

Imagine a hangout you can bring with you on your back, like a turtle. It's attached to your smartphone or ipad. If you have a laptop, it's everywhere you are and the Internet is. And the Internet is in a lot of places these days.

Imagine logging in every day to a community of people who know you, care about you, and want to share in your everyday life. And oh yeah, it's not awkward to initiate contact, because you're in a place designed to initiate contact. So it's not like calling someone on the phone. New people come into the community. Others may move on, but by then you've had a chance to build a contact, a friendship.

And oh yeah, you can do incredibly fun things with these people online in the game that you play. It's not just about talking. You do things.

That's right. You don't have to be alone anymore.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Hello World!

I'm Ajantis, the Guildmaster of <Aisthesis>, a guild in Star Wars: the Old Republic (Swtor).

I'm blogging because I think people inside of MMOs, not just Swtor, would enjoy reading about and perhaps learning about some of the issues with running a guild. <Aisthesis> started two years ago in August. I had been doing some leadership roles before that, not with a guild but with a loosely-connected alliance of people, and I founded the guild to bring my friends together. It had seven people and about twelve characters back then:

Ajantis
Aceofthesky
Ys'chian
Darian
Woozy
Azucena
Vedista

Now, at nearly the two-year mark, I've grown the guild (a completely voluntary activity group) into an organization of 100+ people across both factions of Swtor. We have an assistance fund for guild members in financial hardship. We have a thriving community. And we're having our very first real-life meetup next month!

I've helped some people with leadership advice and I'd be glad to help out anyone who reads this blog. I'd also like it to be a place where I can share the good and bad of leading a guild and stories from other people in <Aisthesis>.

But I would also like to reach people who don't play video games, much less MMOs, and describe to them not only what a guild is and what real-world skills it takes to run one, but also the fact that we're so much more than a bunch of twenty-something nerds living in our parents' basements.

So, posts will describe the business, the personal, and the interpersonal side of things, all interwoven together. It's what makes <Aisthesis> great.

Please comment, share, and participate! And if you're interested in playing Swtor, we're always recruiting!

Here's our official guild website.

I will be updating this blog at least once per week, so check back!