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Published:
2025-04-26 13:56:10 UTC
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Spotlight on Strategic Planning

The 2023-2026 Strategic Plan is intended to guide the Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) over the next several years and is based on the Vision Statement, which was published in July 2022. Since the Strategic Plan's approval by the Board of Directors and publication in July 2023, the Strategic Planning Committee has monitored and reported on the progress of the Strategic Plan. This one year update reports on our progress on the plan as of July 31, 2024. Only goals with current/expected progress during the first year of the Plan have been included in this review. A translation of this post will be available soon.

Diversifying Spaces

Diversity Consultant - Complete

The Board received a recommendation from the Diversity Consultant Research Officer to hire an external organization culture consultant firm. A firm was hired, which completed an audit of the OTW's internal culture, including surveying over 265 volunteers at all levels of the OTW. This firm presented to the Board recommendations for diversifying spaces within the OTW. The Board is responsible for the next steps and updates on the follow-up are covered under "Progress Report."

Progress Report - In progress

The OTW shared the Organizational Culture Consultant’s recommendations for diversifying spaces and improving the volunteer experience within the OTW for all volunteers. Summary highlights of the report were also shared with the public at the July Board meeting. A roadmap of work to be accomplished was written and shared with all OTW volunteers. Volunteers were asked to submit feedback on the Roadmap draft and revisions were made from there. Work began on the first goals in this OTW Organizational Culture Change roadmap.

Recruitment - Complete

Strategic Planning (SP) and Volunteer Committees researched, developed, and internally published a resource for inclusive recruiting practices in January 2024. This resource was shared with all committees including chairs and other volunteers.

Volunteer Coalitions - In progress/Delayed

Volunteer Coalitions were reprioritized as a lower priority than other organizational culture projects, as a result of the work by the external organization culture consultant firm. However, initial research for this goal is underway within Strategic Planning.

Internal Sustainability

Succession Planning - In progress/Delayed

Succession Planning work to reduce the impact of burnout and turnover by improving documentation and consistency across committees is slightly behind schedule, though early results from Organizational Culture Consultant’s work reaffirmed its necessity. Succession planning documentation is in progress.

Paid Staff

Paid Staff Transition Lead - Complete

The Paid Staff Transition Lead accomplished several aspects of the goal ahead of schedule, including selecting new Paid Staff Transition Co-Leads. The new leads will continue research on the paid staff transition to define next steps in this process, including feasibility research and a needs assessment.

Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity - In progress

Cybersecurity initial work is completed, with further steps ongoing.

AO3 Development

Note: Goals in this category are ongoing for the continuing health of the Organization.

Continued Maintenance and Support of AO3 - Ongoing

Conduct regular maintenance, upgrades, and support to ensure the AO3 site is stable, secure, and performant. Systems supplemented existing post-mortem practice with externally-facing incident analysis on the Archive and on Cloudflare’s case study collection. Public post-mortems (when appropriate) build stakeholder trust and contribute to the knowledge set of the systems and security industries.

Internationally-Accessible AO3 Interface - In progress

Finalize multi-language email notifications and pursue possible avenues for making additional user-facing text translatable. Progress on AO3's goal of email notifications being translated can be followed on the OTW Jira. As of July 31, 2024, the internationalization standards were largely established and documented, and implementation for emails was progressing well.


The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan-run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Published:
2023-08-27 15:12:24 UTC
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Five Things an OTW Volunteer Said

Every month or so the OTW will be doing a Q&A with one of its volunteers about their experiences in the organization. The posts express each volunteer's personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of the OTW or constitute OTW policy. Today's post is with Alex Johnson, who volunteers on our Strategic Planning committee.

How does what you do as a volunteer fit into what the OTW does?

As a volunteer on the Strategic Planning Committee, I help gather feedback and ideas from all areas of the Organization and incorporate it into our Vision Statement and Strategic Plan so that we have a guiding direction to move in as an organization. Part of my job is to have an awareness of what’s happening in every committee to some degree, and it’s great to be connected to the Organization in so many different ways.

What is a typical week like for you as a volunteer?

Our committee meets every Monday for a formal meeting where we check in on our latest communications with other committees and work on anything from drafting, to interpreting research, to publishing calls for feedback. We’ve also been meeting on Tuesdays for a study hall, where we work more independently on writing and information gathering in a collaborative space. Outside of our regular meetings, I also keep abreast of various public forums across the Org and occasionally work on editing!

What made you decide to volunteer?

I really believe in the OTW’s mission and appreciate the variety of archival and advocacy work that we do for fandom. As a fanfiction reader and writer, and as a humanities researcher and teacher, I wanted to give back to a community that is so important to me and share my skills to help guide the Organization forward.

What has been your biggest challenge doing work for the OTW?

My first volunteer experience with the OTW was with the Strategic Planning Committee, so it was a ton of information and new norms to get acquainted with all at once when I first joined. However, it’s been great to become more involved and comfortable with the Org, and see the ways (both good and difficult) that our organization culture mirrors fandom culture at large.

What fannish things do you like to do?

I love to read and write fanfiction. My favorite thing is to dig into a multiple-novel-length fanfic over the course of several days and just immerse myself in the world with the author (commenting all along the way, of course!). I also attend conventions and do group cosplays with my family; we just did three generations of JoJo characters together and it was a blast.


Now that our volunteer’s said five things about what they do, it’s your turn to ask one more thing! Feel free to ask about their work in the comments. Or if you'd like, you can check out earlier Five Things posts.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Published:
2023-07-24 15:18:09 UTC
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Telescope pointed at an OTW logo made of stars with the words 'Spotlight on Strategic Planning'

The Strategic Planning Committee and the Board of Directors would like to announce that revisions to the 2023-2026 Strategic Plan are complete. After the end of the 2017-2020 Strategic Plan, we underwent a rigorous research and drafting process to determine the OTW’s priorities and goals, as well as the steps we would need to take to accomplish them over the next three years. The plan does not limit the organization to these goals or projects, but rather provides guidance and direction on a general path forward.

The Strategic Plan is a document intended to guide the progress of the Organization's work over the next several years, and is based on the Vision Statement, which has been public since July 2022. The Strategic Planning Committee received and implemented lots of great responses during several rounds of volunteer and chair feedback.

Strategic Planning would like to thank the OTW’s volunteers, donors, supporters, users, and broader community for their patience and engagement. The support of our community continues to make it possible for this organization to be proactive about our role in fandom and beyond, and continue to serve fans.

Implementation of the plan begins July 2023. The Strategic Planning Committee will use an implementation support plan to outline the ways that our committee and the OTW are committed to the success of this plan.

We invite the public to check out the Strategic Plan Visual Timeline (with alt text here) or the text-only version of the plan available below to learn about the future of the OTW and its projects.

2023-2026 Strategic Plan

Each goal of the plan fits within a larger theme goal. The plan responds to themes from the Vision Statement and beyond, including Diversifying Spaces, Internal Stability, Paid Staff, Governance Development, AO3 Development, Cybersecurity, Diversification of Fundraising, and External Communication.

3 months:

  • Strategic Planning Committee begins Implementation Monitoring support to ensure progress on goals.
  • Diversifying Spaces - Diversity Consultant Research Officer: Diversity Consultant Research Officer (DCRO) provides their first report to the Board.

6 months:

  • Diversifying Spaces - Recruitment: Each committee will have reviewed research on and taken action to improve diversity and decrease bias in candidate selection processes.
  • Paid Staff - Paid Staff Transition Officer: Paid Staff Transition Officer (PSTO) is selected and begins research.

9 months:

  • Cybersecurity: Initial steps for cybersecurity goals are complete, and continuing sequence is begun.

12 months:

  • Diversifying Spaces - Volunteer Coalitions: Research into volunteer coalitions is completed and initial volunteer coalitions start being formed.
  • Internal Sustainability - Succession Planning: Committees and workgroups will have a plan in place to handle the planned or unexpected loss of an essential volunteer.

15 months:

  • Paid Staff - Feasibility Research & Needs Assessment: Paid Staff research on feasibility and need is complete, and final findings are presented by PSTO.
  • Governance Development - Governance Research Governance research from prior plan finishes being presented to Board and members.
  • Internal Sustainability - Retention: Organization retention data and research is internally published.

18 months:

  • Internal Sustainability - Documentation: Committees finalize processes for reviewing documentation.
  • Paid Staff - Paid Staff Transition: A decision is made on incorporating paid staff, and transition begins.
  • Diversification of Fundraising - Research on Fundraising Methods: Review of the current fundraising model, its internal and external impact, and potential fundraising methods is underway.
  • External Communication - Strengthen Overall Communications Strategy: International and multilingual external communications strategy is clarified and further developed.
  • External Communication - Strengthen Consistency and Reach of Public Messaging: Clear guidance for consistency across our platforms to support raising awareness of the OTW mission is developed.

24 months:

  • Internal Sustainability - Conflict Management: Procedures for dealing with personnel conflict are drafted, approved, and put into practice.
  • Diversification of Fundraising - Fundraising Planning Report: Research findings of the internal review and external research on fundraising methods and other non-profit fundraising is compiled and shared.

30 months:

  • Diversification of Fundraising - Review and Implementation: Fundraising research is assessed and a decision on implementation is made.

33 months:

  • Governance Development - Governance Proposal: Governance proposal(s) are shared by the Board for feedback.

36 months:

  • Governance Development - Governance Implementation: Governance proposal feedback is gathered and the Board decides on implementation.

Ongoing Work:

  • AO3 Development - Continued Maintenance and Support of AO3: Regular maintenance and support to ensure the AO3 site is stable, secure, and performant.
  • AO3 Development - Privacy and Compliance: Review and overhaul of cookies & cookie policy to meet the requirements of privacy laws.
  • AO3 Development - Internationally-Accessible AO3 Interface: Finalize multi-language email notifications and pursue possible avenues for making additional user-facing text translatable.

Every 3 months:

  • Diversifying Spaces- Progress Report & Diversity Consultant: DCRO provides report and update on latest findings. This report will be shared both internally as well as externally to users.
  • Paid Staff - Paid Staff Transition Officer: PSTO provides report and update on latest findings.

Every 6 months:

  • Diversifying Spaces - Volunteer Coalitions: DCRO/Consultant checks in with Volunteer Coalition leaders.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Telescope pointed at an OTW logo made of stars with the words 'Spotlight on Strategic Planning'

The Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) is pleased to share with you our vision statement. The document below will be the framework for our new strategic plan. (You can find out more about our previous strategic plan in the linked 2020 post.) During the next 12 months or so we will be finalizing specific goals and action plans to make these items happen. While our final plan will need to be flexible and adapt to changes around us, this vision statement is the foundation of what we want to work towards to improve the OTW and help it continue providing services to fans.

Mission Statement

The Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) is a nonprofit organization established by fans to serve the interests of fans by providing access to and preserving the history of fanworks and fan culture in its myriad forms. We believe that fanworks are transformative and that transformative works are legitimate.

The OTW represents a practice of transformative fanwork historically rooted in a primarily female culture. The OTW will preserve the record of that history as we pursue our mission while encouraging new and non-mainstream expressions of cultural identity within fandom.

Strategic Vision

Our vision for the OTW of three years from now is a stable, consistent, connected, and continually growing organization that is proactive about its role in fandom and beyond, and continues to serve fans.

The OTW will use this strategic plan to create key internal improvements that will help support and retain current volunteers, attract new ones, and encourage transparency and the OTW's capacity to adequately serve diverse groups of fans worldwide.

Priorities & Challenges

Visioning discussions within the OTW have determined six main priorities and five major challenges to focus on within the next three years:

Priorities:

  • AO3 Development
  • Internal Sustainability
  • Governance Development
  • Paid Staff
  • External Communication
  • Diversification of Fundraising

Challenges:

  • Siloing
  • Retention and Recruitment
  • Diversifying Spaces
  • Legal Challenges
  • Public Narrative

These priorities and challenges, laid out in further detail below, will be used to shape our strategic plan.

Priorities

Visioning discussions within the OTW have determined our six priorities for the next three years.

AO3 Development
We will continue to develop the Archive's infrastructure. This will include exploring the development of tools to prevent and combat harassment, help users create a self-managed experience, make the interface accessible to non-English-speaking users, and expand our multimedia support. These new features align with AO3's development roadmap, and will not come at the expense of existing coding priorities and ongoing maintenance.

Internal Sustainability
The OTW will improve the sustainability of our internal committees by focusing on succession planning, diverse recruitment, delegation, retention, documentation, conflict management, and internal communication.

Governance Development
We will continue to revise and carry forward the proposals for re-envisioning our leadership models that were developed during the 2017-2020 strategic plan.

Paid Staff
We will explore models for incorporating into our structure a limited number of paid staff positions that will not replace volunteer roles, but instead provide necessary infrastructure to keep our work sustainable within a majority-volunteer organization. A Paid Staff Officer will be appointed by the Board to manage next steps towards incorporating paid staff.

External Communication
We will remodel our external communication to increase awareness of our mission, strengthen the consistency and reach of our public messaging, and improve public relations by increasing transparency with both members and non-members about the OTW as a whole.

Diversify Fundraising
We will work to strengthen the financial stability of the OTW by exploring areas such as additional non-commercial/non-advertising fundraising methods and low-risk investment opportunities. We will continue working to ensure that our financial practices are in keeping with the best practices for nonprofit organizations.

Challenges

Our leadership and volunteers have worked throughout the visioning process to articulate the challenges they see the OTW currently facing, or facing in the next three years. We are committed to facing these challenges as we work for our organization's future, and to sharing our work transparently with our stakeholders.

Siloing
The OTW's structure tends to be siloed, with different parts of the organization not frequently informed and engaged with work that doesn't directly touch on their purview.

This impacts organization-wide projects and initiatives, internal communication, transparency, volunteer retention, and committee sustainability—it is hard to work together when mechanisms to do so don't exist. When we cannot share resources and support between different parts of the organization, each committee is left to manage on their own in case of emergency leadership transition, reactionary workload, etc.

  • In order to move towards sustainability, we will improve our internal communication and our consistency across the organization.
  • Future models for governance and staffing structures will address siloing.

Retention and Recruitment
Many of our OTW committees have high rates of turnover, and fall into a cycle of recruitment, training, and loss of new recruits, meaning that they must soon begin recruiting again. A connected concern is recruitment cycles that do not yield enough, or sometimes any, new recruits to fit a committee's needs.

This impacts burnout and workload distribution for long-time volunteers and knowledge-holders ("linchpins"), who rarely have their workload burden eased by new recruits. It also impacts overall committee capacity, as recruitment and training take time away from other work.

  • In order to move towards sustainability, we will improve our yield of quality recruits that fit a committee’s needs, our retention of new recruits, and our ability to move new recruits into positions of responsibility previously held by linchpins.
  • Paid staff positions, if created, will be designed to relieve linchpin workload burdens.

Diversifying Spaces
The OTW has received valid criticism as to its failure to prioritize creating a space that is welcoming to all groups, especially Black fans and fans of color. Because of this inaction, the tools, goals, and strategies for prioritizing diversity are not in place across all parts of the OTW, resulting in many fans and volunteers feeling unwelcome on the Archive and in the Organization.

We will work on the implementation of processes to increase diversity and inclusion within the OTW, allowing the incorporation of policies to establish a system in which volunteers are actively welcomed within the Organization, and fully assisted when faced with discrimination of any kind.

We will develop additional resources to document and evaluate shortcomings in the OTW, and new mechanisms to proactively discover problems we may have overlooked. These efforts will be guided by, and involve at all levels, volunteers from non-American, non-Western backgrounds as well as those who are ethnic minorities in the United States and other Western countries. Avenues that we will consider and plan for addressing diversity and inclusion include:

  • Contracting with an individual or organization to consult on issues of racial bias and inequality within the Organization and its projects. Options for this will be researched by a dedicated Diversity Consultant Research Officer, appointed by the Board of Directors.
  • Using the Organization’s current resources to address diversity by starting volunteer resource groups. The implementation of volunteer resource groups would be integrated into our current workflow, for example, by creating spaces for volunteers of different groups, who may suggest, advise, be consulted on, or provide information for OTW policies that may affect their experience within the OTW and its projects.
  • Expanding our recruitment sources to diversify the set of candidates considered for our roles, such as by posting advertisements for OTW volunteer opportunities to non-OTW websites.
  • Creating a more welcoming environment by continuing to develop the features to provide individual users with more control over their experiences, such as blocking, permanent-filtering, or other customization features. These features will preserve users’ freedom of expression on the Archive while enabling each individual to self-manage how they interact with content and users.

Legal Challenges
The OTW has observed and weathered many legal challenges in the landscape of transformative works, both in the form of new legislation that threatens to shift that landscape, and attacks under existing legislation. We anticipate that these legal challenges will continue into our future.

Though our Legal Advocacy is on the front lines of dealing with these challenges, they impact all parts of the organization when they necessitate shifts in our projects' Terms of Service, revisions of our internal practices as a nonprofit organization, or other large-scale changes.

  • Our sustainability efforts will ensure the continued capability of our strong Legal committee.
  • Our future models for governance and staffing will ensure that our organization is agile and flexible, able to consistently adapt to the rapidly-changing landscape that we exist within.

Public Narrative
Though the Archive of Our Own has strong name recognition in many fandom communities, the OTW itself is less well-known and our history, purpose, and structure are not widely understood. We often confront public relations challenges regarding misinformation within our main constituencies.

We will work to improve public relations by increasing transparency with both members and non-members about what the OTW is and does. This will positively impact our ability to share our message and mission with our key constituents, and will reduce complications in fundraising due to a lack of public clarity about the role of the OTW. Avenues that we will consider and plan for expanding and streamlining our public narrative include:

  • Increasing exposure of the OTW’s goals and missions to constituents—fanwork creators, readers, donors, scholars, and the general public—via new formats. For instance, sharing the OTW’s history, purpose, structure and other related contents in infographics.
  • Encouraging committees to explore the possibility of creating publicly-facing video content to explain the work that they do, and how it fits into the OTW as a whole. This could include tutorials, explainers, short news updates, and similar content, which may be more accessible to some users than our traditional text-centric communication approach.
  • Remodeling our communication strategy to improve our transparency and increase the visibility of the OTW, and to ensure that we are communicating our mission and narrative effectively.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Published:
2022-04-20 16:57:42 UTC
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Five Things an OTW Volunteer Said

Every month or so the OTW will be doing a Q&A with one of its volunteers about their experiences in the organization. The posts express each volunteer's personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of the OTW or constitute OTW policy. Today's post is with Juliane Cassidy, who volunteers on our Strategic Planning Committee.

How does what you do as a volunteer fit into what the OTW does?

I volunteer with the Strategic Planning Committee. We draft the strategic plan, a document of goals that will guide the OTW over a three year period. Working with committees throughout the organization, we select goals that will help make the OTW stronger internally and more impactful with fans, volunteers, academics, and more. In the three years between plans, we help committees complete the steps within the strategic plan so the OTW can reach our goals.

What is a typical week like for you as a volunteer?

Right now, we are drafting the next strategic plan, and a week will usually involve a meeting with the rest of the team to check in on our progress and plan next steps. Throughout the week, I might have tasks like research, talking with other committees, drafting sections of the plan, or editing.

What made you decide to volunteer?

When I first started volunteering, I was working in nonprofits, so I was very familiar with creating strategic plans. I also was an avid fanfic reader on AO3. When I logged on one day and saw the recruitment ad, it felt like a good fit. I was not really aware of all the amazing work the OTW was doing beyond AO3 at that time, and it has been wonderful to learn more about all the ways the OTW supports its mission.

What has been your biggest challenge doing work for the OTW?

I’ve always loved the brainstorming and ideas that can come from a group of people, but prior to working with the OTW, I had only ever done that in person and synchronously. The communication styles are vastly different in a volunteer-run organization that has volunteers spread throughout the world. Learning how to connect with members of my committee and other volunteers across the organization, figuring out the best communication styles, and how to collaborate so that everyone can contribute was a challenge, and definitely one I’m still working on.

What fannish things do you like to do?

I’ve written a few fics here and there, but mostly I’m reading fanfiction. While I am in school, fanfic is about the only reading I can stand to do outside of schoolwork and I always have half a dozen fics saved on my e-reader. I also cosplay and have done a lot of Disney, Doctor Who, Star Wars, and period drama cosplays over the years.


Now that our volunteer’s said five things about what they do, it’s your turn to ask one more thing! Feel free to ask about their work in the comments. Or if you'd like, you can check out earlier Five Things posts.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Five Things an OTW Volunteer Said

Every month or so the OTW will be doing a Q&A with one of its volunteers about their experiences in the organization. The posts express each volunteer's personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of the OTW or constitute OTW policy. Today's post is with Kate Sanders, who volunteers as a staffer for the Strategic Planning Committee.

How does what you do as a volunteer fit into what the OTW does?

I have volunteered for several years with the Strategic Planning Committee. Our work has been to synthesize the needs of the OTW as best possible into the first strategic plan to guide some internal improvements, then to help implement the goals from that plan by working with committees across the OTW, and now to draft a second strategic plan to continue setting goals for the OTW to aspire to and achieve collectively.

What is a typical week like for you as a volunteer?

As a volunteer, I will have a to-do (or a few) assigned during the week to accomplish and our meeting each Saturday. These to-dos could be simple updates to wiki pages or drafting goals or somewhere in-between.

What made you decide to volunteer?

I have been an avid reader of fanfic since college, and several years back, I found myself between school and jobs, needing an outlet for my time and wanting to give back to the fanfic community I lurked in. I applied for the Strategic Planning Committee and found both people and a mission that I have enjoyed supporting since.

What has been your biggest challenge doing work for the OTW?

Perhaps a challenge for me has been remembering that everyone volunteers differently: people have different amounts of time to contribute, varied interests and commitments, different ways of participating especially in a chat-based medium, etc. It is wonderful that so much is accomplished with everyone contributing in different ways.

What fannish things do you like to do?

While I enjoy perusing Transformative Works and Cultures, my first and deepest love is burying my nose in a wide swath of fanfics on AO3. I read whatever appeals to me and the well never runs dry. I truly appreciate all the wonderful authors out there!


Now that our volunteer’s said five things about what they do, it’s your turn to ask one more thing! Feel free to ask about their work in comments. Or if you'd like, you can check out earlier Five Things posts.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Five Things an OTW Volunteer Said

Every month or so the OTW will be doing a Q&A with one of its volunteers about their experiences in the organization. The posts express each volunteer's personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of the OTW or constitute OTW policy. Today's post is with Kate Sanders, who volunteers as a staffer for the Strategic Planning Committee.

How does what you do as a volunteer fit into what the OTW does?

I have volunteered for several years with the Strategic Planning Committee. Our work has been to synthesize the needs of the OTW as best possible into the first strategic plan to guide some internal improvements, then to help implement the goals from that plan by working with committees across the OTW, and now to draft a second strategic plan to continue setting goals for the OTW to aspire to and achieve collectively.

What is a typical week like for you as a volunteer?

As a volunteer, I will have a to-do (or a few) assigned during the week to accomplish and our meeting each Saturday. These to-dos could be simple updates to wiki pages or drafting goals or somewhere in-between.

What made you decide to volunteer?

I have been an avid reader of fanfic since college, and several years back, I found myself between school and jobs, needing an outlet for my time and wanting to give back to the fanfic community I lurked in. I applied for the Strategic Planning Committee and found both people and a mission that I have enjoyed supporting since.

What has been your biggest challenge doing work for the OTW?

Perhaps a challenge for me has been remembering that everyone volunteers differently: people have different amounts of time to contribute, varied interests and commitments, different ways of participating especially in a chat-based medium, etc. It is wonderful that so much is accomplished with everyone contributing in different ways.

What fannish things do you like to do?

While I enjoy perusing Transformative Works and Cultures, my first and deepest love is burying my nose in a wide swath of fanfics on AO3. I read whatever appeals to me and the well never runs dry. I truly appreciate all the wonderful authors out there!


Now that our volunteer’s said five things about what they do, it’s your turn to ask one more thing! Feel free to ask about their work in comments. Or if you'd like, you can check out earlier Five Things posts.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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Published:
2019-05-17 14:29:43 UTC
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Five Things an OTW Volunteer Said

Every month or so the OTW will be doing a Q&A with one of its volunteers about their experiences in the organization. The posts express each volunteer's personal views and do not necessarily reflect the views of the OTW or constitute OTW policy. Today's post is with Arly Guevara, who volunteers with the Strategic Planning Committee.

How does what you do as a volunteer fit into what the OTW does?

I work on implementation monitoring, where we try to support other committees in reaching the goals proposed by our current Strategic Plan. In an organization founded by and for fans, it's very important for us to make sure the plan follows the same principles, tailored to our needs so the OTW can keep being a place where we feel safe and validated.

What is a typical week like for you as a volunteer?

I meet on Saturdays with the other members of Strategic Planning, and the rest of the week I work on any assignments I might have. If there are any projects where I'm involved, I might meet during the week to work on that.

What made you decide to volunteer?

I saw a post on the main page of the OTW website! I've been a fan of the OTW for many years now so I decided to take part in it. I was also encouraged by the fact that the job description aligned with the things I was learning at Vocational School at the time.

What's the most fun thing to you about volunteering for the OTW?

I really like working with my teammates! It's great to meet people outside of my home country, learn about their own experiences and points of view. Besides that, it also feels great to be part of an organization I've admired for so long.

What fannish things do you like to do?

I. Read. Fanfiction. A lot of it. I really like to be involved with fanfic writers and be part of discussions/analysis, too. Besides that, I looove attending conventions and I'm trying my hand for the first time in cosplay (though I usually only do characters that have the same hair color as me, sorry, I'm lazy).


Now that our volunteer’s said five things about what they do, it’s your turn to ask one more thing! Feel free to ask about their work in comments. Or if you'd like, you can check out earlier Five Things posts.

The Organization for Transformative Works is the non-profit parent organization of multiple projects including Archive of Our Own, Fanlore, Open Doors, Transformative Works and Cultures, and OTW Legal Advocacy. We are a fan run, entirely donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers. Find out more about us on our website.

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