Community keynote

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Transcript of Community keynote

COMMUNITY: THE FAQ

ME

@ponnappa

github.com/kaiwren

C42 Engineering & TrustedRishta.com

MEFounding moderator: BRUG

!Founding organizer : RubyConf India

!Founding member: Devcamp India

!Member: Barcamp Bangalore, BangPypers, etc.

!!!

WHY TALK COMMUNITY?

WHY TALK COMMUNITY?

Good tech communities create immense value.

Community is a decisive factor in the success of a technology. !

(or philosophy)

An excellent example is the global Ruby community.

This doesn’t happen “automatically.”

This conference is an example.

Creating a valuable community takes commitment.

Creating a valuable community takes resources.

Most importantly, it takes time. Years.

UNDERSTANDING

Understanding how valuable tech communities were built help us replicate those successes.

CAVEAT: IMHO

CREATING VALUE

CREATING VALUE

Why, how and for whom?

WHY

WHY

Entertainment.

Money.

Effort.

Time.

Somewhere, a hacker creates something valuable.

Somewhere, another hacker has the same problem.

Even if it’s boredom.

Somewhere, a customer is willing to pay for something valuable.

This, and everyone in-between, is the community.

COMMUNITY == ECOSYSTEM

ECOSYSTEM MEMBERS

Hackers.

ECOSYSTEM MEMBERS

Businesses.

ECOSYSTEM MEMBERS

Customers.

HOW: MOVING VALUE

Hackers

Customers

Businesses

Fun, Learning, Contracts, Employment.

Hackers

Businesses

Hackers

Customers

Businesses

Recruiting, Tools, Products, Partnerships, Revenue.

Customers

Hackers

Businesses

Contractors, Tools, Products.

EXCHANGING VALUE

A valuable community facilitates bartering value.

FACILITATING BARTERING

BARTERING

Bartering depends on trust. Trust depends on reputation.

REPUTATION

A valuable community facilitates tracking reputation of its members.

DIGITAL REPUTATION

PERSONAL REPUTATION

What opinion do we have of each-other?

These two contribute to the reputation of the community as a whole, attempting to answer the question:

!

What is this community good at?

FOR EXAMPLE

Math

Web apps

Scientific computing

BUILDING COMMUNITY

GETTING STARTED

STEP #1

Solve a stakeholder’s problem.

For a new community, it’s easy: Focus on education.

STEP #2

Dedicate time. Be systematic.

Regular meetups. Active lists. !

Keeping to a regular schedule is critical.

STEP #3

Identify and promote contributors.

Remember, it’s about reputation and value.

Hackers that educate. OSS contributors.

Businesses that contribute money or meet up space. Customers that swear by your technology.

TAKING OFF

STEP #4

Identify the value chain.

Who are the stakeholders? How do they benefit?

STEP #5

Marketing.

Stakeholders don’t always realise how much they can benefit from actively participating.

!Help them understand. Bring them into the fold.

STEP #6

Facilitate bartering value.

Help members of the ecosystem work together. Reputation and transitive trust is critical.

STEP #7

Encourage face-to-face interaction.

The internet is nice, but meeting people is great for trust.

BE WILLING TO PASS ON THE BATON

STEP #8

A NOTE ON PATIENCE

Communities are never perfect.

Ecosystems naturally seek…

Systems in equilibrium change slowly.

Therefore, communities change slowly.

Most successful communities take years to build.

A NOTE ON CULTURE

The most visible examples are the ones that are followed.

Rude people beget rude communities.

Elitists beget elitist communities.

Nice people beget nice communities.

Personal favourite: MINSWAN

Matz is nice, so we are nice.

Nice people make the best value transfer facilitators, IMO.

The larger the community, the more entrenched the culture.

There is no superuser.

xkcd.com/149

Be flexible. Avoid ego-trips.

Set the right example, early.

A NOTE ON MARKETING

“Build it and they will come” is a fallacy.

Constantly strive to understand stakeholder problems.

Maybe they don’t have learning resources. Maybe they can’t hire.

Maybe they can’t find customers.

Express how these problems can be solved. Clearly. Concisely.

Rails’ scaffolding demo from 2005.

IN CONCLUSION

Communities exist for and because of stakeholders.

Businesses and customers are a part of the community too.

Communities facilitate the barter of value among stakeholders.

Effective facilitation depends on creating trust.

Trust depends on reputation.

Building a reputation takes time. !

(and marketing)

QUESTIONS

@ponnappa

github.com/kaiwren