Greetings! I have to admit, your campaign is so solid I had a hard time coming up with questions after Katie asked hers, but nonetheless...
1) There are so many aspects and platforms and things we're doing and parts of Wintreath that I'm sure it can be hard for new people to understand what's going on. Besides the government/op division aspect, what one thing do you think all Wintreans should be versed in once they become a member of the region? Once they become a Citizen?
2) As I've pointed out a few times, Wintreath's biggest success stories are usually people who originally came from other regions, not so much people who start here. Do you have any thoughts on why that may be besides a lack of integration in general? Do you think there's specific things they're doing that we're not?
3) You have been deeply involved in what's going on in the community for quite some time now, and you've also said that you easily burn out after a few months. Do you think that serving in this role will burn you out after all you've already been involved with and been through?
1. Oh, things like a forum guide (I can't believe I'm going to tell people RTFM), where to find the laws and other rules that guide the community, our regional culture (as best that can be defined), what we most value from our community and its members, etc etc. There's a lot.
2. This one is tricky. When I think back to my own NS history, I do recall Aura Hyperia and its various knowledge sources being incredibly useful. They taught me things like how the R/D meta game worked, who the major players were, how it all tied into the WA, and how and why forums and IRC were so essential for the functioning of the region's operations. Indirectly, I think they taught me a method of thinking, not just mere knowledge. If you take a look at people who consistently get things done around here, it is people who all got exposed to R/D in some way.
I don't think it's as simple as just that, mind you. Experience is also a great teacher, and odds are that those who came here from other regions were also exposed to many other regions and their ways of doing things before they came here. This exposure to so many different communities allows us not to reinvent the wheel constantly. This is especially true of regions that have extensive FA departments and regions that are very active in R/D, through the inherent alliances that sprout from that meta game.
And the final factor I can think of right off the bat is that if they came here from smaller regions, they were probably forced into governance in some way or another just because those regions needed everyone to do a bit of everything just to function. If they came from bigger regions where the political landscape is a lot more politicky and competitive, then there was probably constant change in the mad scramble for power, giving a lot more people a chance to show what they're made of. Our system is stable, sure, but it also leads to some people (like you, Wintermoot, and myself to an extent) to becoming central to the region's functioning. This is great for our own development, but it all crumbles when we suddenly need to hand the reins over to successors, unless those successors themselves came from other regions. This is why I've personally been pushing Tau to get involved in a lot more than I suspect he's ever been completely comfortable with.
So if you're asking for a solution: encourage the noobs to take part in more than just this region, so they may gain the exposure we got. I am not particularly fond of making our system more politicky and unstable just to accomplish that. Back in the day it was my hope that guilds might lead to more avenues for people to get involved, but we saw how that turned out.
EDIT: I believe there may actually be a few parallels between us and a big corporation. It is generally believed that big companies don't produce innovation and train talent, they acquire it from smaller companies. More info can be found
here. (This is really more of an interesting aside).
3. I won't lie, it might. I've been feeling the wear for a few months now. That said, I plan on taking a long break from all governmental affairs once I'm done with this term. I just wouldn't feel happy leaving the region in such a precarious situation as it is right now. I wouldn't be able to rest.