Starting a Maker Space

From makernexuswiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Resources for Creating A New Space

Use Maker Nexus Documents

Part of the Maker Nexus mission is to help other non-profit makerspaces. This wiki of information is one example. We also release all of our documents under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license. You can see the material we have released at this public repository. We usually keep our documents in our members-only share while we develop them and move them into the public space when they are pretty much complete. If you want some kind of document not in the public repository, please send an email to info@makernexus.org and we'll see if we can help.

What to do first

If you are thinking of starting a makerspace, here are some of the very first things you should do - like right now. This list came from what Maker Nexus did to get started and, frankly, includes a few things we didn't do right away but I came to wish that we had.

  1. Gather contacts. You will be talking about your idea with a lot of people. Every single time you talk to anyone, get their contact information. Email and phone number (and name). If someone was interested enough to hear your idea, ask them if you can keep in touch. Building a makerspace (or any local consumer based business) is about building community.
  2. Pick a temporary name. This is just a place holder so people can remember you. Use your location. Maybe "iowamakers" or "rapidcitymakers", descriptive is good. It does not have to be fancy. Maker Nexus used bayareamakers at first.
  3. Setup Gmail. Get a new GMail account with your temporary name. iowamakers@gmail.com will be a great place for people to send you email. You won't confuse email with your day job or personal email and you can search it to find those things you forget when you get busy. As things pick up you can have someone else handle this email account too.
  4. One page website. You need this so you can give people your URL. This does not have to be fancy, or reflect what you actually do long term. Don't wait. Wix provides free web sites that are super easy to create. Get a site with your temp name like iowamakers.wix.com and put up one page with your contact information. As your vision becomes more clear you can update this. If you're willing to pay Wix a $100 you can get your own domain for a year like www.iowamakers.com Your own domain looks more official, but isn't strictly necessary until you pick a real name in a few months.
  5. Facebook. If you aren't already on Facebook, create an account. Then create a "group" with your temp name, Iowa Makers. As you meet people and talk about your ideas, ask them to join your group on Facebook. This helps you build community.
  6. Cheap business cards. Many places on the web will make you 500 business cards for $20. iPrint is one. Get your website URL, your Facebook group, and your email on it. You may not need 500 cards, but let's hope you do! Every time you talk with someone about your idea, give them 10 cards and ask them to hand them to other people. You want to get people hooked into your growing community. You should always have a couple of cards in your wallet; so should everyone on your core team. Have some fun with it; challenge each other - "hey Tom, nice to see you. Can you show me an Iowa Makers business card?"
  7. Mailchimp is an online mass email service that is free until you have over 1,000 contacts. Get an account and enter all your contacts into Mailchimp. This is your first CRM (Customer Relationship Management) system. Once you have more than a handful of contacts it will be difficult to send updates to everyone through your personal email account. Mailchimp has some very sophisticated email features that you can grow into. Once you have 100 contacts, start sending out a short newsletter every 6 weeks. Let people know what you're thinking, what you're doing, and solicit their advice and help.
  8. Core team meetings. By now you should have 2 or 3 other people who are excited and passionate about creating a makerspace. If you really want to do it you need to meet once a week for an hour. Establish a regular meeting time and place. MN met every Sunday evening at 7PM for 18 months before we opened the doors. This may sound like a lot of work, because it is a lot of work. If your team isn't ready to start meeting every week, you might want to seriously think about whether you will be successful.

Great Examples

Organizing

Infrastucture

Suites

These solutions cover several functions you might need.

Tools

Fixtures

Education

Links to several kinds of education:

  • Basic Operation Safety Standard (BOSS) - Use a piece of equipment safely.
  • Skill Improvement - Projects aimed at improving a particular maker skill. Dovetail joints, Laser Cutter use of color, 3D printer wall thickness, anything you can think of.
  • Project Classes - Classes where the students build some specific thing. Personalized 3D printed key fob, book case, bird feeder, purse, etc.
  • Merit Badges - Classes for scouts that help them earn a specific merit badge.
  • Other