# Blog Post: Community Outreach Revamp Update - June 2021 It has been almost a year since the Fedora Community Outreach Revamp started, and some pretty nice events have occurred since the last Revamp update. Now that the Trello board with the Revamp’s tasks and notes has been retired, all the Revamp notes are publically available on a HackMD file. In the past months, the Revamp team has worked on: With the experience we gained from conducting our community outreach survey in December 2020, we were asked to give our input on the list of questions the Fedora Council was preparing for the annual Contributor Engagement Survey. Now, the survey is public for the Fedora contributors to fill out and will be until June 30th 2021. Additionally, while having Marie Nordin the FCAIC help us out and support the Outreach Revamp, we gave our input on the organizational chart she prepared in order to visualize the Fedora Community’s organizational structure. A place where ambassadors’ related topics are discussed is the Mindshare repository on Pagure. A few weeks ago, the Community Outreach Revamp team started going through the open tickets there that are within the scope of this initiative and clean up those tickets. Tickets were either closed because they had been already resolved or commented with a proposed solution on the ticket’s topic. The Fedora Project has been part of many mentorship programs for years now, and one of the most popular programs Fedora has been part of is Outreachy. Among the 3 interns that will be working for the summer cohort of 2021 in Fedora projects, we have one intern help us visualize our progress withing the Revamp. We will have Dhairya Chaudhary working on creating artworks for the different outreach teams and other community related swag. We expect to show off some of Dhairya’s work during Nest 2021. Over the past months, the Community Outreach Revamp has drawn quite some attention, and we have presented in several community online events! We started with the Fedora Linux 34 release party in May and continued with Community Central and openSUSE virtual conference 2021. We are thrilled to have presented our “Fedora work” to non “Fedora-centric” audiences, hence sharing our experience on this year-long initiative adds more value to the notion of community efforts and contributions.