If it was an unofficial event then I don't see the point of removing the tags. However, I also wouldn't count it as official hours afterwards. I think it's quite good that members of the community are thinking of ideas and getting involved and things being unofficial gives these things a sense of freedom (The Mole, being another example).
As for multiple events at the same time, I believe it's the next step and was something I wanted to try out so the department heading in that direction would be an interesting experiment.
With regards to suggestions and management being stuck in their ways, I genuinely believe this is not the case for the vast majority of managers but especially the events department. I can say that Smurfed- takes every bit of critique as a personal insult and does his best to implement any suggestions. I know (cos I've seen it with my own eyes) that Alex and Martin are constantly batting ideas - and ideas suggested to them - around and striving to improve the department in any way they can even with a barrage of 20 questions from me just to constantly evaluate and see if there's an alternative path. That is what every manager does.
If a manager says no to your idea, it is simply because it is them who has to implement it and put a theoretical idea into a practical system. It is all very well saying, "I've got an idea, we should do x, y, z" but it is then up to the managers to evaluate how to do x,y and z while still maintaining all sorts of other factors - is this idea going to impact on staff morale? has this idea got a solid basis in fact? is this idea stable long term? will this idea change the rules and turn the department into a dictatorship/no-go zone when they're actually volunteers and can leave any time? - that the person suggesting hasn't considered. If a manager says no to your idea, it is not because they're dictators, determined to stick to their comfort zone and refusing to accept any new ideas other than their own system. It is simply because it is not good enough.
If someone has lots of ideas brimming away inside their head then naturally, they're going to get a few duds but none of that matters if there's a treasure of an idea amongst all the ****. When I was AGM, creativity was the biggest thing I looked for in a person. You want to be a senior/head? You want to be management? You need - well past tense now lol needed - to show to me that you could think outside the box when you're not a manager or you're never going to think outside the box when you are a manager - and quite frankly, never going to get there to even prove me otherwise. So suggest away. I disagree with you laura here. I think the vast majority of the time, staff don't suggest ideas they have not because they're scared of rejection but because there seems to be a mentality at Habbox that "you're the manager, that's your job, not mine" and it's sad really. I also think people say they have more ideas than they actually do and their 'suggestions' are more of a rant about what is wrong with the department rather than any constructive solutions to fixing those problems.
There are however a small minority (often the ones who are the next managers before they even get there) who do have ideas and are perhaps too scared to admit it so perhaps there is some merit in the suggestion to open up the system and show that it's been discussed while still maintaining that 'we've discussed it and decided no, let's move onto the next idea' because I think some people get attached to their ideas and take it personally when they are rejected when actually it's the idea under discussion not the person.
As for the idea of guest manager, if general management don't trust their managers then quite frankly, they need to be rid of. This is a stupid idea (FlyingJesus has already put it succinctly so I can be blunt). If managers aren't implementing every single suggestion, it means they're a good manager not a terrible one because they have some sort of plan/vision for their department and can consequently organise ideas into a pile of good and bad.








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. And what I mean by that is like, person A books event for 12PM. Person B who doesn't get along well with person A decides to also host an event at 12PM but hosts a more exciting event in order to get the people in that slot away from person As event.


