In general, Tom Morris’s email is spot on here.
Choice is always a good approach to take, so saying "£X of book vouchers of your
choice" would be good, although it would be best to set out a list of what their
choice is (a wiki page that can easily be linked to?) so they don’t ask for one that can’t
be provided.
Offering cash crosses a bit of a line into a possible perception of being paid to
contribute to the projects, so it’s better to avoid that. Plus, as Tom pointed out, it’s
likely that book vouchers will be spent on books that are then used as references on the
projects, so there’s extra benefit to the charity to offer them as prizes (this is why
Amazon vouchers were chosen in the past).
Thanks,
Mike
(who is replying from his work address since emails from my personal one still don’t make
it through to the list. These viewpoints are, of course, my own.)
On 30 Nov 2013, at 13:04, Katie Chan <ktc(a)ktchan.info> wrote:
On 30/11/2013 10:56, Deryck Chan wrote:
If ubiquity is a primary concern for us, why
don't we just give them a
cash price? (Practicality: Use PayPal or wire transfer if the winner
does not have a £ bank account)
There's also multi-business gift voucher such as bonusbond if enough people really
care that much.
KTC
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