MetaGuild
| Noisebridge | About | Visit | 272 | Manual | Contact | Guilds | Stuff | Events | Projects | Meetings | Donate | E |
| Guilds (Volunteer) | Maintainers | Meta | Code | Electronics | Fabrication | Games | Sewing | Music | AI | Neuro | Philosophy | Funding | Art | Security | Ham | WGs | E |
| MetaGuild | Recruiting Guilds | Volunteer | Documentation | Outreach | Working Groups | CommunityWG | Badges | E |
|
MetaGuild is a library of patterns for starting and sustaining guilds at Noisebridge. For discussion, find us on #metaguild on Discord. In the tradition of the FractalWorkingGroup and the Philosophy Guild. |
Philosophy
The guild model draws from anarcho-syndicalism: Noisebridge as federation, guilds as syndicates. Everyone who uses a guild's resources is implicitly a member of the syndicate — with both the benefits and the responsibilities that come with that.
See also: User:Nthmost/Guilds_and_AnarchoSyndicalism
A note on language: "Maintainer" on this page refers to people who tend this wiki page. A guild is a living social organism — it has organizers, practitioners, and members.
Patterns
Create More Masters
The more people trained who can train others, the more eyes on the guild continuously, the less entropy you'll need to deal with over time.
Encourage people to learn how to run and maintain the tools and practices of your guild. Get a recognition matrix going. Give credit generously and publicly to people who help clean, fix, and train. The goal is multiplication, not concentration.
The Watering Hole
Hold a regular meeting time every week, even if it seems like there's nothing to discuss or work on. Just having that consistent gathering creates community. The Infra meetup is a good example: everyone now knows they can find someone on Monday nights.
The meeting doesn't need an agenda to be valuable. Showing up is the agenda.
Avoid the Bottleneck
Watch for these warning signs:
- "I'm tired of running trainings" → no one gets trained
- "X is the only person who can fix Y" → Y stays broken when X leaves
- Fewer than 5 people can answer a question in the guild's chat → next biggest problem to solve
Distributed intelligence works well for anarchists. Find a way to track who knows what, and actively work to spread that knowledge around.
Succession Thinking
If you as an organizer don't feel like you can step away without everything coming to a halt, that's your first problem to solve.
If you start showing up a lot, in a way that people come to rely on you being there, be actively working on distributing that capacity — rather than letting people see you as the central node.
Only add more of your own time if you are actively also looking for people to help you share the load.
Avoid All-or-Nothing Thinking
"Well, they only know how to fix one of the machines" is not a reason to discount someone's contribution. Partial knowledge distributed across many people is more resilient than complete knowledge held by one person.
Find a way to track who knows what. Celebrate incremental skill-building.
Badges
A fun mechanism from the Badges concept: collaborate to create DIY badges that require learning a guild skill to make. For a sewing guild, that might mean sew-your-own badges where making the badge *is* the skill demonstration.
Badges serve double duty: recognition for the person earning them, and a visible signal to the community that this guild has a golden path worth walking.
The Participation Spiral
Picture a spiral. The core is "master of the guild." The outer ring is the newcomer story: walked in off the street, made something in 10 minutes.
- The outer ring is easy — Noisebridge is good at welcoming newcomers.
- The core takes care of itself — deeply committed people find their way there.
- The middle of the spiral is where guilds most often fail.
The middle is populated by people who have shown up more than once, want to do their part, and don't know how. Their good intentions get wasted by the absence of a golden path: visible next steps from "first time I made something here" all the way through to trusted and highly skilled. This path doesn't require bureaucracy — only culture: words, deeds, examples, expectations, and recognition when things go well.
Communications Channels
Give your guild a home on Discord. A dedicated channel means people can find each other, ask questions, and stay connected between meetups.
Resource Discovery & Networking
Guilds might discover ways to leverage resources outside of Noisebridge in ways that befit their interests — generating organic linkages between Noisebridge and other communities.
Growing Into Their Own Things
It could also be that an individual guild outgrows Noisebridge and decides to fill another space somewhere.
See Also
- Guilds — the full guild directory and philosophy
- FractalWorkingGroup — predecessor model
- Philosophy Guild
- Badges