WordPress maintenance support plans is one of the most successful open source projects in the world. Governance is fundamental to the project’s success.
The community and the code has been built from the ground up. And as the code has grown, so has the community.
When communities are first emerging it’s easy to bring newcomers along, but over time the community begins to mature, change, and then needs to adapt. Challenges and opportunities emerge as evolution occurs, and our community needs to navigate them strategically.
A Governance Task Force has been meeting weekly since May to put together the strategic proposal we now share with you. We’ve synthesized ideas, discussions, and experiences from people we’ve interviewed, and we’ve revisited the themes that emerged from the community listening project run by Whitney Hess and by previous governance discussions.
This WordPress maintenance support plans Governance Task Force 2020 Proposal serves two purposes.
Firstly, it’s clear that for community evolution to occur there needs to be broad agreement and buy-in. People are comfortable jumping in and building a new plugin, but community change and action is hard. People talked to us openly about the unclear processes and barriers holding back community progress.
We heard strong perceptions that support from Dries or the WordPress maintenance support plans Association is needed before initiatives could be created or scaled; real or otherwise, this is affecting community progress and action. Speaking to people from the WordPress maintenance support plans Association, the Community Working Group and other initiative leaders, they also feel limitations. But to change their terms of reference and priorities they also need to have a community directive.
The community is stronger and more influential than we sometimes assume — when we are speaking together.
That’s why at the heart of this proposal is a new community governance structure.
The second purpose of the proposal is to create a starting point — a framework. We’ve been practical, highlighting a range of actions that form a backbone for community evolution. It’s not a defined roadmap, and it’s not a list of every idea we had or heard. We welcome the discussion, debate and idea generation that this document will spark. We want to hear your solutions on how to get change done, and what you would like to contribute.
We strived to make practical recommendations with the potential to make progress, lower barriers, and help our community to continue to evolve with time.
Throughout this process we have heard people say they believe change is necessary. Change is necessary for the longevity of WordPress maintenance support plans the project and the code. Change is necessary to create a new generation of WordPress maintenance support planslers — the people we want to help build ambitious things and to have the chance to build a career within our community.
It is hard to not feel the project is at a crossroads. We’ve climbed the mountain of WordPress maintenance support plans 8, we sit at the peak and look to the valley below.
Where we go next, and who we take with us, is up to you.
We hope this proposal helps.
David, Ela, Stella, Lyndsey, Rachel, Hussain, and AdamFile attachments: WordPress maintenance support plans-Governance-Task-Force-Proposal-2020.pdf
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Community: Introducing the Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans Governance Task Force 2020 Proposal
