Hi,
Le lundi 7 mars 2016, 13:40:20 Brion Vibber a écrit :
Third, what happens when the "unicorn" retires and we transition again?
I think we're going to need to think harder about structural remedies: communications channels, reporting infrastructures, "escape valves" for miscommunications or squashed communications in the reporting chain, etc.
I agree. I think it's going to be critical for us to rebuild the organization in a way that is more resilient to the shortcomings of any single individual.
This reminds me of this quote: "As a leader, your goal should always be to build structures and processes that don't depend on you and ideally don't need you."
It's from an article I shared with Lila and Boryana in December due to the context then:
http://firstround.com/review/the-keys-to-scaling-yourself-as-a-technology-le...
These were my thoughts on the topic back then:
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I think a key point here is that the key to an efficient and resilient organization is distributed processes and documentation. The article notably mentions Conway's Law, whose application is unusual in the context of the WMF.
The law states that organizations model their products after their own structures and processes. Because the WMF was created /after/ its products, the opposite happened: the WMF modeled itself after the open, collaborative wiki model, and stayed that way for a while. During that initial period, there was little conflict between the WMF and our communities.
As the WMF grew and professionalized, we started drifting from that model. The risk of alienating our values and identity (and as a consequence our communities) was identified early on.
At Sue Gardner's request, the theme of the 2010 all-staff meeting was "How do we grow our organization but stay who we are" (paraphrased). One of the all- staff exercises was to "list the things we cherish"; One prominent item on this list was "The Casey Browns of this world" ( https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:WMF_All-staff_meeting_2010_-_Things_... ), after the name of one of our most engaged volunteers involved in many support functions for the WMF. I found this so insightful that I took that picture :)
Despite that early caution, we /have/ more or less abandoned the wiki model gradually (due to many different factors), and I see this reflected in the results of the Engagement survey.
I feel that many of the issues the organization is facing right now (both internally, and externally with our communities) are related to this conflict between our original model and the one we've drifted towards.
My impression, based on my personal experience and 6 years of being at the WMF, is that the most successful WMF initiatives have been those led by people who followed the wiki model as closely as possible (regardless of whether they were originally hired from the communities). I'm happy to discuss this further and share my experience in this area, if you're interested.
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