Accept registrations
In brief
You can use the THATCamp Registrations plugin or a Google form to accept applications or registrations for your THATCamp. Expect a 15% cancellation rate. Be sure to make all participants user accounts with Author privileges on your site.
Applications or registrations?
One decision you’ll need to make is whether to pick and choose who you’d like to attend your THATCamp (i.e., accept applications) or whether to accept everyone on a first-come first-served basis (i.e., accept registrations). That decision is up to you, but in general, we recommend that you set a quota based on how many people you can accommodate (for instance, 75 people) and then accept everyone who applies as long as you have space for them. This is more in line with THATCamp’s principles of openness, and it simplifies logistical decisions such as meal planning. Moreover, most THATCamps don’t fill up, and even those that are oversubscribed don’t usually have to disappoint more than 10-20 people. (There are plenty of THATCamps these days for people to attend!)
Cancellations
Our experience shows that about 15% of registrants will cancel or simply won’t show up. After all, THATCamp is usually free, or nearly so, so there’s less of a commitment, and of course emergencies and conflicts will inevitably crop up. Running a wait list takes a good bit of oversight, and most cancellations will happen in the last few days before the THATCamp takes place, so the best way to manage cancellations is probably to overbook by 10%-15%, depending on what you can accommodate. If, for instance, you have space for 100 people, you could accept 110 or 115 people, whatever you’re comfortable with.
Website registration forms
There are two ways to create a registration form on your website: use the THATCamp Registration plugin or use a Google form. The former makes it easier to create users with full profiles on your site, while the latter is currently more customizable. See our page on building a THATCamp website for detailed instructions on both options.
Creating user accounts for participants
At THATCamp, we give all participants user accounts on the site so that they can propose session ideas using the blog. If you use the THATCamp Registrations plugin, an applicant will be made a user account on the site when you approve their registration. If you use a Google form for registrations, you can import the user information. What you’ll need to do is make sure that your spreadsheet has the exact same column headers as those in this sample file, then make sure to save it as a CSV file. You’ll also need to make sure that the “user_login” field and the “user_pass” field have something in the cell, so you’ll need to make up user names and passwords for your users.
Once your file is properly formatted, go to Users –> Import From CSV in your thatcamp.org site and import the file. Be sure to check both the checkboxes so that the system will email users and will nag them to change their passwords when they first log in. (If you are running a WordPress site on another domain, download and install the Import Users From CSV plugin to enable this functionality.) By default, users will be imported as Subscribers. Go to All Users and click on “Subscriber” to show all the Subscribers, select the checkbox next to Username to select all users, and do “Change role to Author” in the dropdown.
All the THATCamp Users should have a user account with “Author” privileges so that they can post session ideas, session notes, and other items to the blog. And be sure to let them know that they should fill out their user profile and should begin contributing to the blog!








