D1.4 Reachout Strategy Plan
D1.4 Reachout Strategy Plan
D1.4 Reachout Strategy Plan
Deliverable 1.4
Reachout Strategy Plan
The information in this document reects only the author's views and the European Commission is not liable for any use
that may be made of the information contained therein. The information in this document is provided "as is" without
guarantee or warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the tness of the information for a
particular purpose. The user thereof uses the information at his/ her sole risk and liability.
This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under
History
Version Date Reason Revised by
0.0 14/10/2016 First draft created Frank Salliau (iMEC)
0.1 28/10/2016 Draft revised Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo (InfAI)
0.2 20/01/2017 Final version created Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo (InfAI)
0.3 27/01/2017 Peer reviewed Nadine Jochimsen (InfAI)
1.0 27/01/2017 Updates and corrections Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo (InfAI)
1.0 31/01/2017 Final version submitted Nadine Jochimsen (InfAI)
Author List
Organization Name Contact Information
iMec Frank Salliau frank.salliau@ugent.be
InfAI Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo ngonga@informatik.uni-leipzig.de
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Executive Summary
This report describes the strategy and approaches that the Hobbit consortium will follow to
gather the members necessary to establish a self-sustaining Hobbit association. The association
will aim to establish itself as a vendor-independent entity responsible for specifying benchmarks and
benchmarking procedures, verifying and publishing results for software systems designed to manage
Big Linked Data. In essence, the reachout strategy plan comprises the following parts:
Survey contacts as well as relevant mailing lists to establish requirements for the HOBBIT asso-
ciation as well as to extend the HOBBIT community list.
Presence at conferences events (both academic and industrial) to present the HOBBIT results
and invite potential collaborators and members of the community.
Extension of the Hobbit platform with industry-relevant datasets to attract potential members
to the association.
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Contents
1 Introduction 6
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List of Tables
1 Dissemination channels of Hobbit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2 Summary of events attended by Hobbit in year 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3 Potential events to be attended by Hobbit in Year 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4 Preliminary membership fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
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List of Figures
1 Distribution of interests of survey participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2 Snapshot of Hobbit's Twitter account . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3 Distribution of roles of Hobbit contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4 GERBIL activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5 Twitter activity from October 2nd, 2016 to December 31st, 2016. Note that the peaks
in impressions often correspond to event participations. For example, the rst peak
corresponding to ISWC 2016, where we organized the BLINK workshop. During this
event, our tweets earned up to 4,000+ impressions per day. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
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1 Introduction
One of the core aims of theHobbit project is the establishment of aHobbit association, which will
continue the eorts commenced within Hobbit even after the termination of the project. To achieve
this goal, we regard the creation of an active community around Hobbit as of central importance for
the project. During the rst project year, we have hence tested and evaluated an array of reachout
strategies coupled with multi-channel dissemination strategies (see Table 1) to decide upon an eective
and ecient reachout plan for year 2. While the numbers generated by the dierent approaches were
limited by the content that could be oered by a project that was still at its beginning, we assume that
the trends discovered throughout the rst year res good indicators for the eectiveness of the strategies
chosen. We hence begin by a short summary of the eorts undertaken in the rst year, followed by the
strategy plan that we derived from this eort. This plan is contrasted with the goals of the Hobbit
association, which is the core target we aim to achieve in terms of reachout by the end of the project.
Channel Description
Mailing list Subscriptions to the HOBBIT mailing list
Survey Respondents to the survey sent out for requirements gathering
Flyers Distribution of yers at dierent events
Talks Presentations of the HOBBIT project
Workshops Organization of workshop at major conferences and events
Cooperations Cooperation with relevant H2020 and national projects
Challenges Organization of challenges at major conferences (ISWC, DEBS, ESWC)
Publications Scientic publications about the core technologies of HOBBIT. Upcom-
ing are publications which use the HOBBIT platform.
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Open surveys: The goal behind the open surveys was twofold. First, we wanted to make
potentially interested parties aware of the existence of the HOBBIT project. Hence, we targeted
mailing lists centered around Linked Data, Natural-Language Processing, Machine Learning and
Databases. In addition, we wanted to get requirements for the Hobbit project to ensure that
the outcome of Hobbit and therewith the tools, datasets and services underlying the Hobbit
association would address real needs of the clientele we target. For example, the distribution of
interest of survey participants shown in Figure 1 informed us pertaining to the importance that
each benchmark should be given but also how it should be pushed.
Presence at events: Again, the goal here was twofold. We rst aimed to make HOBBIT known
to companies and academia. We hence reached out to companies and researchers in more than
35 occasions (see Table 2) and were able to confront thousands of people directly. As with the
surveys, the second goal was also to establish whether our purposes were aligned with those of
our potential clientele.
The results of the open survey and of our other dissemination activities suggested that the topic
of benchmarking is of high interest for both academics and industry (see Figure 3). 62.2% of the
participants regarded themselves as non-academic and showed interest in exploiting the results of
Hobbit .
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Figure 5: Twitter activity from October 2nd, 2016 to December 31st, 2016. Note that the peaks in
impressions often correspond to event participations. For example, the rst peak corresponding to
ISWC 2016, where we organized the BLINK workshop. During this event, our tweets earned up to
4,000+ impressions per day.
parties. Through the establishment of a social media network with participants from other projects,
we already achieve signicant interaction rates (for example, more than 1000 impressions for each of
our tweets, see Figure 5).
Overall, these results show that the foundation upon which we build our outreach strategy seem
to perform well and to allow for HOBBIT to be known and parties to engage with the project. During
the rst project year, we were already able to gather 1,000 Euro for the challenges organized by
the HOBBIT project through our companies contacts. While this sum is insucient for running the
association, it shows that there is already commercial interest in the results of the project. Interestingly,
the companies from which the funds were gathered have also already indicated their intention to be
members of the HOBBIT association. We regard this rst success as a very important step towards
building the association, as it clearly shows that companies are beginning to understand the advantages
that the membership in the association can bring.
Overall, we currently have 228 contacts, from which 63 can be regarded as having reached the
maximal engagement currently possible in the project. We expect approximately 10-20% of such
entities to be willing and able to join the association and hence think that the association will consist
of 10-20 members by the end of the project. How we aim to achieve these numbers is detailed in the
section below.
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1. Periodic surveys and opinion polls: We aim to create at least 2 surveys/opinion polls during
the rest of the project. With these surveys and opinion polls, we will target more potentially
interested parties with the aim of ensuring that the degree of ownership felt by the community
increases. We will hence continue to target the Hobbit mailing list rst as well as mailing lists
centered around Linked Data, Machine Learning, Natural-Language Processing and Databases
with the aim of gaining more community members. In addition, we will use the mailing lists
above as well as the digital dissemination channels below to issue calls for membership, in which
we will make the advantages of being a member of the community (see section 4) clear and aim
to attract members in this way.
2. Presence at events: We established that events allow us to reach out to large numbers of people
and to interact with them directly in an ecient way. We have thus compiled a preliminary list of
events (see Table 3) that we aim to attend in the second project year. The events selected in this
list are both academic and commercial in nature, hence making dierent types of dissemination
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possible. In contrast to last year, we will make the Hobbit association central within the second
year and ask for potentially interested parties to state their interest in the association. Therewith,
we will be able to adjust deadlines and costs so as optimize the entry into the association for
as many potential members as possible. The presence in events will include the organisation
of challenges, which will be opened to run as means of digital dissemination. In particular, a
community meeting is foreseen for approximately project month 22 at a major Semantic Web
conference.
3. Digital dissemination: Here, we will continue our multi-channel approach to gain more follow-
ing and expose our results continuously. Our social media channels seem to support the digital
dissemination of results in the best way. We will thus mainly continue along the line of micro-
posting and sharing project results via means such as Twitter, Slideshare and Bibsonomy. We
will also continue publishing blog posts and longer content through our other channels. These
activities will however be announced continuously through our social media channels to ensure
that the potential members o the association are made aware of our activities. In addition, we
will update our website to contain more technical content (challenge results, platform specica-
tion and architecture, scientic publications, benchmarking reports, specication of generators,
links to datasets, etc.) so as to attract ever more users.
4. Liaison with other projects: An important source of use cases and feedback were the project
were are associated with (see also deliverable D1.1.1).1 We will hence continue with gathering
information from running projects to dene use cases. We will be especially interested in gaining
more popularity across potential users by making our solutions easy to use and pushing for their
use beyond the consortium.
5. Mailing list: In this second year, we will push towards growing the Hobbit mailing list by
providing goodies such as early access to results and reports and the possibility of joining technical
HOBBIT groups and discussions to have more inuence (and therewith also more ownership) of
the results of HOBBIT. Therewith, we aim to bind the members of the mailing list even tighter
to the project, making them prime potential members of the Hobbit association.
This strategy plan is aligned with the vision of the association described below.
1
https://project-hobbit.eu/about/deliverables/
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