<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15327676#post15327676 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ZachB
It takes an entire year to organize a frag swap?
That depends on how much of it is planned, but to say it is a lot of work and that the work almost always falls on just a couple of people is not a stretch.
As was said, we talked about a lot of the stuff leading up to this years swap shortly after the last one. With a location already in tow, a date already picked, and everyone in the club having a good idea of the space we are working with (and all of the great resources that are available without having to spend a lot of time making arrangements), the amount of work and discussion for this years swap shouldn't be nearly as daunting to at least match what was done last year.
Contacting sponsors, inviting them to attend, arranging donations, advertising the swap, making a floor plan and adding folks to it, and other such truly time draining work is necessarily done much closer to the swap date. You contact most sponsors now and they'll say, "get in touch with me when it is closer." In fact, one of the hardest parts about organizing the swap is keeping everyone interested when you really need help because with Christmas so close, the last thing on most people's minds is a frag swap. It isn't until a couple of weeks have gone by that the boredom of winter sets in and people have recovered from Christmas craziness... and then the swap is there.
The nice thing about all of the big stuff being already handled is that leaves plenty of time for the planning of things that will really add to the swap, hopefully attract more people, and build on everything that has been done in the past. So, I'd reckon that's a great discussion to be having now.
I'd just recommend to the swap planners that you write down whoever suggests things... so that you can assign the planning of that aspect of the swap to them
