Possible addition to the Online Platforms section: email lists. I know Boston has one, NYC has one. Finding them might be tricky if you aren't already on them and there aren't any previous organizers in your city, but if someone is going down a list making sure to announce it everywhere email lists are another place to announce at.
Thank you for writing this up!
This weekend I've participated in a retreat in Berkeley for organizers of prior ACX meetups, with around 50 meetup organizers attending. This post serves to write down my learnings from the sessions on the basic logistics of meetups and hopefully provide a reference document for future. This is an addition to the canonical meetup organizer guide from 2012, trying to integrate some new lessons over the past decade.
I'm not an organizer but want to run a new meetup in city [X]. Can I do this?
Yes, you can. Anyone can become an organizer right now or cease being an organizer at any moment of time. There's no authority or gate keeper bestowing the honor on would-be organizers. Just try to follow some basic common sense rules and hopefully your event will turn out fine. If there are already organizers in your city, you can check in with them on potentially co-hosting something, but you can also just go ahead and create a new meetup.
Where to announce the event?
The key to event announcements is to be mindful of the fact that no single platform is visited by all Rationality fans and that no platform is necessarily the place where people go looking for meetups. Just because you or I read LessWrong doesn't mean that every person reading LessWrong will necessarily visit the Events section to check out upcoming events in their city. They might not know about the Events tab, never check it because it almost never has events in their city, not interested in checking it because it doesn't integrate well with their favorite calendar, etc. So you want to advertise your event on every relevant platform that allows for such announcements.
Online platforms
If there's a platform I haven't mentioned, please add a link in the comments.
Offline locations
How to announce the event
A lot of Rationality meetups (including my own in the past) are very brief and don't explain much to people who aren't deep into the terminology. For example:
This is fine if you're just inviting your core group of friends who all know each other but its not optimal if your goal is to attract new members. Therefore your announcement should at a minimum include:
Choice of venue
Mingyuan did a nice writeup last year on finding a great meetup venue. If you don't have a great venue in your city yet, check out her post for ideas on how to find one. My only comment would be to try and checkout existing events on Meetup.com to see which venues they're using in your city - often times these would be the best venues for Rationality meetups as well.
Choice of activities
Every event should have more structure than just "stand around and hangout", so that participants have something to fallback to in case their conversations go stale. Ideally the activity should have something to do with "Rationality" but this is not a pre-requisite. Examples of activities you can include for the meetup include:
You can find more examples in the organizers handbook. If there's an activity you've had particular success with at your meetups, please share it in the comments.
Being inclusive
It's always a good idea to try and make the event more appealing to women and members of other groups who are underrepresented in the Rationality community. Some tips I've got include:
Running the event
People generally expect the organizer to uphold the structure of the meeting and give guidance on what happens next. This means you can't sit timidly in the corner and talk to people - you have to be cognizant of what's happening and remember to manage the event where necessary:
After the meetup
I'm just an amateur event organizer myself so I'm sure there's things I forgot about or things others might disagree with. Feel free to post corrections/suggestions in the comments.