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Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios www.dreamwidth.org Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0 CC-BY-SA

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Page 1: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci

Dreamwidth Studios

www.dreamwidth.org

Build Your Own Contributors,One Part At A Time

Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0 CC-BY-SA

Page 2: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Dreamwidth Studios:

Founded in 2008 Code fork of LiveJournal.com 65+ contributors 40-50 commits per week 75% female 60% beginners to Perl or to programming 100% dedicated to the project

Page 3: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Define “Success”:

Lines of code?

Number of commits?

Frequency of releases?

Longevity of project?

Commercial applications?

Page 4: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Define “Success”:

Lines of code?

Number of commits?

Frequency of releases?

Longevity of project?

Commercial applications?

Page 5: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

People.

People.<blink>PEOPLE.</blink>

Page 6: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

People.

People.<span style=‘text-decoration:

blink’>PEOPLE.</span>

Page 7: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Five things that drive newcomers away:

Unnecessary barriers to entry No clear expectations Glacial processes Development hierarchy (real or perceived) No respect for your developers

Page 8: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

In their own words:

"I have tried getting into other projects, but found the entrance very difficult - and not only do I code almost every day, but I am the kind of person that attends hacker conferences. If I find it hard to find information on how to claim bugs, submit patches, and what programming style the project prefers, I shudder to think what programming beginners must think."

Page 9: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Lower the barriers to entry: Document your coding styles & conventions If you have to explain something more than

twice, your documentation needs fixing Log bugs for everything, no matter how small Keep a prominent public changelog Provide hosted developer environments Have clearly defined channels for coding help Put your project through the “typo test”

Page 10: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

In their own words:

“I think my favorite aspect of the Dreamwidth project culture is that every contribution is welcomed, even if it’s incomplete or flawed. There is a sense that we want to help developers improve instead of rejecting them for not meeting some sort of standard of quality.”

Page 11: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Set clear expectations:

Document, document, document Uphold a “Code of Conduct” or Diversity

Statement (dreamwidth.org/legal/diversity) Give people goals to work towards Create a culture where teaching is expected Foster a sense of social reward for

collaboration, not competition

Page 12: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

In their own words:

"I'm also enjoying the aspect of contributing to something I use and care about; I wrote a patch! It's live on Dreamwidth now, I can go and see what I did, if I want."

Page 13: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Keep it moving:

People have short attention spans. Really. Work in steps and iterate: break tasks down Manage your review queue: don’t let patches

rot, even if this means you get less coding time Shut down bikeshed arguments quickly Be as available as you possibly can

Page 14: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

In their own words:

“I like that everybody cooperates and that it's really supportive, and that if you have a crisis of feeling like you're fucking everything up for a day, or that you've had a really crappy day and everything you've done has exploded, or what have you, you won't be laughed at.”

Page 15: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

“Teambuilding” is not a dirty word:

Everyone is allowed to make mistakes Bug tickets are not flaws; they are chances to

improve your product Keep process open: no mysterious inner circle “Code ownership” is dangerous! Don’t value ‘big’ patches over little ones; place

equal values on feature development, cleanup, refactoring, documentation, training

Page 16: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

In their own words:

“I recall one moment in IRC when someone submitted a patch to a much-wanted bug, there was massive cheering, and the dev said wistfully that this was why he was wanting to submit patches here and not at the day job, because while the day job paid, it did not provide a cheering squad, much less a genuinely enthusiastic one.”

Page 17: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Which brings us to …

THE single, solitary, individual, exclusive, lone, uttermost,

paramount, most important thing to do and have if you want to build

your own contributors…

Page 18: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

R-E-S-P-E-C-T:

People thrive on being in the loop Never reject a patch without explaining Never reject only for style reasons Fire toxic people and moderate social channels Never say no without a reason & an alternative Keep asking yourself: “Is this answer bullshit?”

Page 19: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

In their own words:

“I think I've found a new home. S'kinda cool.”

Page 20: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

Three things to start right now:

Freshman orientation: appoint a “welcomer” and laud newcomers’ first contributions

Ping? Pong! Stop timing out on communication when people need responses from you

Problem Child: Have words with “that person” and let them know their behavior is not okay

Page 21: Mark Smith & Denise Paolucci Dreamwidth Studios  Build Your Own Contributors, One Part At A Time Licensed under Creative Commons 3.0

For more information:

dreamwidth.org/create (Code: LCA2010) dw-dev.dreamwidth.org wiki.dwscoalition.org

Denise Paolucci <[email protected]>

Mark Smith <[email protected]>