Thanks for these tips. About feedback on rejection letters. I think the good practice is to offer a feedback on demand rather than giving it by default. Having to choose among hundred of talks is really time consuming and even with a transparent selection process, the reasons can take some time to be explained. At the end it might take at least a full week and a lot of organizers don't do it for a living.
Thanks for your feedback. I understand your point. On-demand feedback would be the miminum to provide.
Now think about the parallel with deployment. Deployment is hard, hence people tend to avoid it. Whereas it's counter-intuitive, but you should actually deploy more often.
I believe this is the same with feedback. If you change your selection process to be feedback-centric, it would be a no-brainer, and "free".
I've had at least one experience when notes from the program committee members were sent to me, without me asking. It was not a commercial conference.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
Thanks for these tips. About feedback on rejection letters. I think the good practice is to offer a feedback on demand rather than giving it by default. Having to choose among hundred of talks is really time consuming and even with a transparent selection process, the reasons can take some time to be explained. At the end it might take at least a full week and a lot of organizers don't do it for a living.
Thanks for your feedback. I understand your point. On-demand feedback would be the miminum to provide.
Now think about the parallel with deployment. Deployment is hard, hence people tend to avoid it. Whereas it's counter-intuitive, but you should actually deploy more often.
I believe this is the same with feedback. If you change your selection process to be feedback-centric, it would be a no-brainer, and "free".
I've had at least one experience when notes from the program committee members were sent to me, without me asking. It was not a commercial conference.