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Resource:How To Host A Hackathon Based on Community Needs

Revision as of 20:27, 21 January 2016 by Lauren Valley (talk | contribs)

Contents

INTRODUCTION

Hackathons are a great way to encourage students of all majors to work together and innovate. This wiki describes how to analyze your campus environment and create a hackathon tailored to your fit your school’s unique needs. The tips listed below describe how to seek out sponsors, find space for your event, and advertise to ensure as many students are informed as possible.

IDENTIFYING NEEDS IN THE COMMUNITY

FINDING A SPACE

The first step in finding an appropriate space for your hackathon is estimating the number of people you will have participating. An incentive for early preregistration will help get people committed to your event and help you plan your space needs.

The ideal space is somewhere very open with enough room to spread out between teams. Ideally, small breakout conference rooms will be nearby to give teams privacy, because it is, after all, a competition and teams will want to keep secrets. A large presentation room or banquet hall type space with widely separate tables would be ideal in lieu of many small study rooms such as those found in a library.


FINDING SPONSORS

EVENT MARKETING

Knowing whoto market your hackathon to is just as important as how you market. Computer science, communications, science, and business majors are all broad categories that make good foundations for targeting your promotional efforts. However, it is important to remember that innovation can occur in any department or school and you should never limit yourself to a narrow segment of your institution’s students.

To get people to pay attention, your marketing is going to need to be BIG. Human sized posters are a great attention getter when placed around campus and among students who your targeting reveals might be interested in a hackathon. Additionally, leveraging social media is vital to the success of your event; so set up a Facebook event, create a hashtag, and invite as many people to join as you can and tell them to tell their friends. Lastly, simply getting out and talking to people face to face about your hackathon is the best way to get people excited about participating and committed to the event.


PROJECT FOLLOW-UP

After the hackathon weekend is over, some teams might be interested in continuing to work in their venture. There are some grants available for student teams working in commercializing technologies by VentureWell, a high education nonprofit that runs the E-Team Program.

Selected applicants have the opportunity to receive early-stage support and funding of up to $25,000  for the first two stages of the program to further validate their idea as they work with faculty and mentors (https://venturewell.org/tudent-grants/).Some universities may have their own incubator or accelerator that student teams can apply to. Students can also obtain support from their university’s “office of technology transfer” or “office of research commercialization” to lean more about intellectual property and the commercialization roadmap and strategies.

A good idea is to ask hackathon alumni to talk about their experience going through the program in future info sessions. Student will be more motivated after hearing a success story! Alumni can also participate as mentors in future events.

ADDITIONAL TIPS