MVP Nominations - What should NOT be added in the forms during nomination process?












13














I know that we have already many questions answering for "How to become an MVP" etc. But I see that it is not really clear what should NOT be added in the nomination forms.



Could you please share with me your experience and add here everything that in your opinion will NOT help people in the MVP nominations process?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Maybe off-topic, but the MVP 2019 nomination deadline has passed. twitter.com/sitecoremvp?lang=en
    – Joost
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:45








  • 6




    Yes, but all the answers will be valid also next year ;)
    – Łukasz Skowroński
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:47
















13














I know that we have already many questions answering for "How to become an MVP" etc. But I see that it is not really clear what should NOT be added in the nomination forms.



Could you please share with me your experience and add here everything that in your opinion will NOT help people in the MVP nominations process?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    Maybe off-topic, but the MVP 2019 nomination deadline has passed. twitter.com/sitecoremvp?lang=en
    – Joost
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:45








  • 6




    Yes, but all the answers will be valid also next year ;)
    – Łukasz Skowroński
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:47














13












13








13


1





I know that we have already many questions answering for "How to become an MVP" etc. But I see that it is not really clear what should NOT be added in the nomination forms.



Could you please share with me your experience and add here everything that in your opinion will NOT help people in the MVP nominations process?










share|improve this question















I know that we have already many questions answering for "How to become an MVP" etc. But I see that it is not really clear what should NOT be added in the nomination forms.



Could you please share with me your experience and add here everything that in your opinion will NOT help people in the MVP nominations process?







community mvp






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 13 '18 at 13:00









Tamas Varga Sitecore

2,81511055




2,81511055










asked Dec 13 '18 at 7:28









Łukasz SkowrońskiŁukasz Skowroński

348213




348213








  • 1




    Maybe off-topic, but the MVP 2019 nomination deadline has passed. twitter.com/sitecoremvp?lang=en
    – Joost
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:45








  • 6




    Yes, but all the answers will be valid also next year ;)
    – Łukasz Skowroński
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:47














  • 1




    Maybe off-topic, but the MVP 2019 nomination deadline has passed. twitter.com/sitecoremvp?lang=en
    – Joost
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:45








  • 6




    Yes, but all the answers will be valid also next year ;)
    – Łukasz Skowroński
    Dec 13 '18 at 7:47








1




1




Maybe off-topic, but the MVP 2019 nomination deadline has passed. twitter.com/sitecoremvp?lang=en
– Joost
Dec 13 '18 at 7:45






Maybe off-topic, but the MVP 2019 nomination deadline has passed. twitter.com/sitecoremvp?lang=en
– Joost
Dec 13 '18 at 7:45






6




6




Yes, but all the answers will be valid also next year ;)
– Łukasz Skowroński
Dec 13 '18 at 7:47




Yes, but all the answers will be valid also next year ;)
– Łukasz Skowroński
Dec 13 '18 at 7:47










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















15














Shortly put; "What you've done for the Sitecore Community".



Officially



This year, it was divided into 4 sections.



Motivation



What motivates you in your community work. And "I want to become MVP" is not going to impress anyone ;-)



Objectives (for next year)



What are your plans for community work next year. Regardless of MVP status.



Online Activities (this year)



A list of everything you've done, that we can track online. Open Source contributions, blogs, tweets, whatever it may be.



Offline Activities (this year)



And a list of what you've been up to, that isn't easily tracked online. User Group presentations, other offline activities.



And a few notes and considerations



The work you do in everyday life, working for your boss/employer - none of that needs to be part of your application. You don't get MVP for doing your job. It's fine you did a client workshop on SXA because a client asked for one; it's also fine that you built and delivered an Experience Awards winning site for another client. It's just not related to MVP status :-)



And scrambling onto every social media channel mid October when MVP season starts (but nothing going on for the entire year before October)... Good start - keep it up for the next round of nominations ;-)






share|improve this answer































    12














    Simply, what you did for the community not for your clients or your company.






    share|improve this answer





























      11














      Something else to add here is that it will depend on the type of MVP you are going for:



      Technology MVP



      All of the above. Doesn't matter how long you have been working with Sitecore or what your skill level is, a Technology MVP is all about contributing to the community.



      Digital Strategist MVP



      Again this is about contributions, but sometimes with a strategy role, the work you do cannot be shared with the community due to NDA with clients etc... So with this type of MVP, you can detail in the nomination what you have done to help clients realize their digital strategy using Sitecore - but community involvement is still important if you can



      Commerce MVP



      Similar to Technology MVP but with a slant toward Commerce and also those that are using Sitecore Experience Commerce to deliver client solutions. Although, I would guess that those 2 things go together anyway :)



      Ambassador MVP



      This is less about community contributions and more about people who help provide Sitecore with feedback on the product and participate in panels setup by Sitecore for this purpose. They should still participate in community events, but will probably be doing more behind the scenes work to help Sitecore than other MVP types.



      tl/dr;



      Community, Community, Community - and the important thing to note here is that it is contributing to the community, not just watching community. Being on Slack or SSE isn't a contribution - actively participating, answering/asking questions, presenting, writing your own blog posts - that is the key and what should go on the form. Adding that you watched a video on Sitecore on YouTube! probably not!






      share|improve this answer





























        10














        Aside from what was already answered by Mark and Tamás, I see a lot of confusion in people thinking MVP status is about being experienced with Sitecore like "Developer A has been working with Sitecore for 8 years so he deserves an MVP status because he is a great developer and does great work". Again if Developer A is not active in community, social channels, slack, community forums, essentially does not contribute to the community in any way they are not eligible.



        Remember it's related to how much the community benefit from what you have been doing(not your clients or company).






        share|improve this answer



















        • 1




          Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
          – Chris Auer
          Dec 14 '18 at 13:10



















        2














        I think that I would add to all previous answers:




        • If publish all your blog posts on your company website, do not expect that they will be highly rated because they look like something that you have done at work (NOTE: think about it especially when they do NOT bring any unique knowledge or they are just useless for a Community)

        • If you have NOT done too much this year, do NOT write that you will do more next year, it will NOT help you






        share|improve this answer























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          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes








          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          15














          Shortly put; "What you've done for the Sitecore Community".



          Officially



          This year, it was divided into 4 sections.



          Motivation



          What motivates you in your community work. And "I want to become MVP" is not going to impress anyone ;-)



          Objectives (for next year)



          What are your plans for community work next year. Regardless of MVP status.



          Online Activities (this year)



          A list of everything you've done, that we can track online. Open Source contributions, blogs, tweets, whatever it may be.



          Offline Activities (this year)



          And a list of what you've been up to, that isn't easily tracked online. User Group presentations, other offline activities.



          And a few notes and considerations



          The work you do in everyday life, working for your boss/employer - none of that needs to be part of your application. You don't get MVP for doing your job. It's fine you did a client workshop on SXA because a client asked for one; it's also fine that you built and delivered an Experience Awards winning site for another client. It's just not related to MVP status :-)



          And scrambling onto every social media channel mid October when MVP season starts (but nothing going on for the entire year before October)... Good start - keep it up for the next round of nominations ;-)






          share|improve this answer




























            15














            Shortly put; "What you've done for the Sitecore Community".



            Officially



            This year, it was divided into 4 sections.



            Motivation



            What motivates you in your community work. And "I want to become MVP" is not going to impress anyone ;-)



            Objectives (for next year)



            What are your plans for community work next year. Regardless of MVP status.



            Online Activities (this year)



            A list of everything you've done, that we can track online. Open Source contributions, blogs, tweets, whatever it may be.



            Offline Activities (this year)



            And a list of what you've been up to, that isn't easily tracked online. User Group presentations, other offline activities.



            And a few notes and considerations



            The work you do in everyday life, working for your boss/employer - none of that needs to be part of your application. You don't get MVP for doing your job. It's fine you did a client workshop on SXA because a client asked for one; it's also fine that you built and delivered an Experience Awards winning site for another client. It's just not related to MVP status :-)



            And scrambling onto every social media channel mid October when MVP season starts (but nothing going on for the entire year before October)... Good start - keep it up for the next round of nominations ;-)






            share|improve this answer


























              15












              15








              15






              Shortly put; "What you've done for the Sitecore Community".



              Officially



              This year, it was divided into 4 sections.



              Motivation



              What motivates you in your community work. And "I want to become MVP" is not going to impress anyone ;-)



              Objectives (for next year)



              What are your plans for community work next year. Regardless of MVP status.



              Online Activities (this year)



              A list of everything you've done, that we can track online. Open Source contributions, blogs, tweets, whatever it may be.



              Offline Activities (this year)



              And a list of what you've been up to, that isn't easily tracked online. User Group presentations, other offline activities.



              And a few notes and considerations



              The work you do in everyday life, working for your boss/employer - none of that needs to be part of your application. You don't get MVP for doing your job. It's fine you did a client workshop on SXA because a client asked for one; it's also fine that you built and delivered an Experience Awards winning site for another client. It's just not related to MVP status :-)



              And scrambling onto every social media channel mid October when MVP season starts (but nothing going on for the entire year before October)... Good start - keep it up for the next round of nominations ;-)






              share|improve this answer














              Shortly put; "What you've done for the Sitecore Community".



              Officially



              This year, it was divided into 4 sections.



              Motivation



              What motivates you in your community work. And "I want to become MVP" is not going to impress anyone ;-)



              Objectives (for next year)



              What are your plans for community work next year. Regardless of MVP status.



              Online Activities (this year)



              A list of everything you've done, that we can track online. Open Source contributions, blogs, tweets, whatever it may be.



              Offline Activities (this year)



              And a list of what you've been up to, that isn't easily tracked online. User Group presentations, other offline activities.



              And a few notes and considerations



              The work you do in everyday life, working for your boss/employer - none of that needs to be part of your application. You don't get MVP for doing your job. It's fine you did a client workshop on SXA because a client asked for one; it's also fine that you built and delivered an Experience Awards winning site for another client. It's just not related to MVP status :-)



              And scrambling onto every social media channel mid October when MVP season starts (but nothing going on for the entire year before October)... Good start - keep it up for the next round of nominations ;-)







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Dec 13 '18 at 12:59









              Tamas Varga Sitecore

              2,81511055




              2,81511055










              answered Dec 13 '18 at 8:59









              Mark CassidyMark Cassidy

              16.8k43280




              16.8k43280























                  12














                  Simply, what you did for the community not for your clients or your company.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    12














                    Simply, what you did for the community not for your clients or your company.






                    share|improve this answer
























                      12












                      12








                      12






                      Simply, what you did for the community not for your clients or your company.






                      share|improve this answer












                      Simply, what you did for the community not for your clients or your company.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Dec 13 '18 at 8:02









                      Tamás TárnokTamás Tárnok

                      2,6141622




                      2,6141622























                          11














                          Something else to add here is that it will depend on the type of MVP you are going for:



                          Technology MVP



                          All of the above. Doesn't matter how long you have been working with Sitecore or what your skill level is, a Technology MVP is all about contributing to the community.



                          Digital Strategist MVP



                          Again this is about contributions, but sometimes with a strategy role, the work you do cannot be shared with the community due to NDA with clients etc... So with this type of MVP, you can detail in the nomination what you have done to help clients realize their digital strategy using Sitecore - but community involvement is still important if you can



                          Commerce MVP



                          Similar to Technology MVP but with a slant toward Commerce and also those that are using Sitecore Experience Commerce to deliver client solutions. Although, I would guess that those 2 things go together anyway :)



                          Ambassador MVP



                          This is less about community contributions and more about people who help provide Sitecore with feedback on the product and participate in panels setup by Sitecore for this purpose. They should still participate in community events, but will probably be doing more behind the scenes work to help Sitecore than other MVP types.



                          tl/dr;



                          Community, Community, Community - and the important thing to note here is that it is contributing to the community, not just watching community. Being on Slack or SSE isn't a contribution - actively participating, answering/asking questions, presenting, writing your own blog posts - that is the key and what should go on the form. Adding that you watched a video on Sitecore on YouTube! probably not!






                          share|improve this answer


























                            11














                            Something else to add here is that it will depend on the type of MVP you are going for:



                            Technology MVP



                            All of the above. Doesn't matter how long you have been working with Sitecore or what your skill level is, a Technology MVP is all about contributing to the community.



                            Digital Strategist MVP



                            Again this is about contributions, but sometimes with a strategy role, the work you do cannot be shared with the community due to NDA with clients etc... So with this type of MVP, you can detail in the nomination what you have done to help clients realize their digital strategy using Sitecore - but community involvement is still important if you can



                            Commerce MVP



                            Similar to Technology MVP but with a slant toward Commerce and also those that are using Sitecore Experience Commerce to deliver client solutions. Although, I would guess that those 2 things go together anyway :)



                            Ambassador MVP



                            This is less about community contributions and more about people who help provide Sitecore with feedback on the product and participate in panels setup by Sitecore for this purpose. They should still participate in community events, but will probably be doing more behind the scenes work to help Sitecore than other MVP types.



                            tl/dr;



                            Community, Community, Community - and the important thing to note here is that it is contributing to the community, not just watching community. Being on Slack or SSE isn't a contribution - actively participating, answering/asking questions, presenting, writing your own blog posts - that is the key and what should go on the form. Adding that you watched a video on Sitecore on YouTube! probably not!






                            share|improve this answer
























                              11












                              11








                              11






                              Something else to add here is that it will depend on the type of MVP you are going for:



                              Technology MVP



                              All of the above. Doesn't matter how long you have been working with Sitecore or what your skill level is, a Technology MVP is all about contributing to the community.



                              Digital Strategist MVP



                              Again this is about contributions, but sometimes with a strategy role, the work you do cannot be shared with the community due to NDA with clients etc... So with this type of MVP, you can detail in the nomination what you have done to help clients realize their digital strategy using Sitecore - but community involvement is still important if you can



                              Commerce MVP



                              Similar to Technology MVP but with a slant toward Commerce and also those that are using Sitecore Experience Commerce to deliver client solutions. Although, I would guess that those 2 things go together anyway :)



                              Ambassador MVP



                              This is less about community contributions and more about people who help provide Sitecore with feedback on the product and participate in panels setup by Sitecore for this purpose. They should still participate in community events, but will probably be doing more behind the scenes work to help Sitecore than other MVP types.



                              tl/dr;



                              Community, Community, Community - and the important thing to note here is that it is contributing to the community, not just watching community. Being on Slack or SSE isn't a contribution - actively participating, answering/asking questions, presenting, writing your own blog posts - that is the key and what should go on the form. Adding that you watched a video on Sitecore on YouTube! probably not!






                              share|improve this answer












                              Something else to add here is that it will depend on the type of MVP you are going for:



                              Technology MVP



                              All of the above. Doesn't matter how long you have been working with Sitecore or what your skill level is, a Technology MVP is all about contributing to the community.



                              Digital Strategist MVP



                              Again this is about contributions, but sometimes with a strategy role, the work you do cannot be shared with the community due to NDA with clients etc... So with this type of MVP, you can detail in the nomination what you have done to help clients realize their digital strategy using Sitecore - but community involvement is still important if you can



                              Commerce MVP



                              Similar to Technology MVP but with a slant toward Commerce and also those that are using Sitecore Experience Commerce to deliver client solutions. Although, I would guess that those 2 things go together anyway :)



                              Ambassador MVP



                              This is less about community contributions and more about people who help provide Sitecore with feedback on the product and participate in panels setup by Sitecore for this purpose. They should still participate in community events, but will probably be doing more behind the scenes work to help Sitecore than other MVP types.



                              tl/dr;



                              Community, Community, Community - and the important thing to note here is that it is contributing to the community, not just watching community. Being on Slack or SSE isn't a contribution - actively participating, answering/asking questions, presenting, writing your own blog posts - that is the key and what should go on the form. Adding that you watched a video on Sitecore on YouTube! probably not!







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Dec 13 '18 at 13:39









                              Richard SealRichard Seal

                              13.6k32560




                              13.6k32560























                                  10














                                  Aside from what was already answered by Mark and Tamás, I see a lot of confusion in people thinking MVP status is about being experienced with Sitecore like "Developer A has been working with Sitecore for 8 years so he deserves an MVP status because he is a great developer and does great work". Again if Developer A is not active in community, social channels, slack, community forums, essentially does not contribute to the community in any way they are not eligible.



                                  Remember it's related to how much the community benefit from what you have been doing(not your clients or company).






                                  share|improve this answer



















                                  • 1




                                    Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
                                    – Chris Auer
                                    Dec 14 '18 at 13:10
















                                  10














                                  Aside from what was already answered by Mark and Tamás, I see a lot of confusion in people thinking MVP status is about being experienced with Sitecore like "Developer A has been working with Sitecore for 8 years so he deserves an MVP status because he is a great developer and does great work". Again if Developer A is not active in community, social channels, slack, community forums, essentially does not contribute to the community in any way they are not eligible.



                                  Remember it's related to how much the community benefit from what you have been doing(not your clients or company).






                                  share|improve this answer



















                                  • 1




                                    Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
                                    – Chris Auer
                                    Dec 14 '18 at 13:10














                                  10












                                  10








                                  10






                                  Aside from what was already answered by Mark and Tamás, I see a lot of confusion in people thinking MVP status is about being experienced with Sitecore like "Developer A has been working with Sitecore for 8 years so he deserves an MVP status because he is a great developer and does great work". Again if Developer A is not active in community, social channels, slack, community forums, essentially does not contribute to the community in any way they are not eligible.



                                  Remember it's related to how much the community benefit from what you have been doing(not your clients or company).






                                  share|improve this answer














                                  Aside from what was already answered by Mark and Tamás, I see a lot of confusion in people thinking MVP status is about being experienced with Sitecore like "Developer A has been working with Sitecore for 8 years so he deserves an MVP status because he is a great developer and does great work". Again if Developer A is not active in community, social channels, slack, community forums, essentially does not contribute to the community in any way they are not eligible.



                                  Remember it's related to how much the community benefit from what you have been doing(not your clients or company).







                                  share|improve this answer














                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer








                                  edited Dec 13 '18 at 13:32

























                                  answered Dec 13 '18 at 13:12









                                  DiegoDiego

                                  4,0711941




                                  4,0711941








                                  • 1




                                    Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
                                    – Chris Auer
                                    Dec 14 '18 at 13:10














                                  • 1




                                    Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
                                    – Chris Auer
                                    Dec 14 '18 at 13:10








                                  1




                                  1




                                  Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
                                  – Chris Auer
                                  Dec 14 '18 at 13:10




                                  Bingo. If you write the sweetest Sitecore code has no affect on your MVP nomination, if you are help the community move forward and grow, that matters. A lower level dev who does a lot to help the community has a much better chance than the super dev who does nothing outside of work.
                                  – Chris Auer
                                  Dec 14 '18 at 13:10











                                  2














                                  I think that I would add to all previous answers:




                                  • If publish all your blog posts on your company website, do not expect that they will be highly rated because they look like something that you have done at work (NOTE: think about it especially when they do NOT bring any unique knowledge or they are just useless for a Community)

                                  • If you have NOT done too much this year, do NOT write that you will do more next year, it will NOT help you






                                  share|improve this answer




























                                    2














                                    I think that I would add to all previous answers:




                                    • If publish all your blog posts on your company website, do not expect that they will be highly rated because they look like something that you have done at work (NOTE: think about it especially when they do NOT bring any unique knowledge or they are just useless for a Community)

                                    • If you have NOT done too much this year, do NOT write that you will do more next year, it will NOT help you






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      2












                                      2








                                      2






                                      I think that I would add to all previous answers:




                                      • If publish all your blog posts on your company website, do not expect that they will be highly rated because they look like something that you have done at work (NOTE: think about it especially when they do NOT bring any unique knowledge or they are just useless for a Community)

                                      • If you have NOT done too much this year, do NOT write that you will do more next year, it will NOT help you






                                      share|improve this answer














                                      I think that I would add to all previous answers:




                                      • If publish all your blog posts on your company website, do not expect that they will be highly rated because they look like something that you have done at work (NOTE: think about it especially when they do NOT bring any unique knowledge or they are just useless for a Community)

                                      • If you have NOT done too much this year, do NOT write that you will do more next year, it will NOT help you







                                      share|improve this answer














                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer








                                      edited Dec 14 '18 at 12:12

























                                      answered Dec 14 '18 at 6:40









                                      Łukasz SkowrońskiŁukasz Skowroński

                                      348213




                                      348213






























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