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A couple more things for the company in question.

  1. Do not rely on crowdsourcing alone. Have your engineers and tech people provide answers as well. Just mark those answers to let us know those are your employees answering those questions (so we know we're not competing with them in the contest).
  1. Interested users sign up to participate in the event via a separate mini-site.
  2. They try out the product via a free sandbox (optional - users can participate without doing this).
  1. Allow us to play with the free sandbox even without needing to register/login to access it. I realize this may not be possible with every piece of functionality, but if just part of the sandbox was accessible without needing a login, that would go a long way, even if that sandbox got wiped and rebuilt on an hourly schedule. And I also realize that Tech Evangelists are heavily judged based on the number of sign ups they can generate, but as users, we do not have the same perspective as they do. As new users, we just want to know if something is worth our while, before we invest too much energy into it.

  2. Documentation. Allow us to access your documentation without needing to login, or without needing to download a set of pdf documents. Please do tell us if your documentation is missing something, or if it is glossing over a feature which is not completely finished yet. Having developer documentation not hidden beyond a login wall would also make it easier for us to link to the relevant documentation (in addition to quoting it) and thus possibly increasing the page rank of your own site as well.

  3. Use github to disseminate your code samples and tutorials (and no, I have no affiliation with github in case you were wondering). It wouldn't hurt to turn on its builtin issue tracker and its builtin wiki for documentation as well. The StackOverflow format can only get you so far by itself. While I'm at it, please give us access to your main bug tracker as well, if you're not already giving it to us.

  4. Clarify who qualifies for the raffle/contest. Which countries? Age limit(s)? Former employees? Employees of a company the company running the contest partially owns? Etc.

  5. Create different categories and different ways prizes will be judged, or raffled away. This way, if the raffle goes horribly wrong, or gets gamed in some way, there is an alternative way of participating in the contest.

  6. Do not make your prizes too big. It's better to have many smaller prizes instead of having too few larger prizes.