Hi folks,
I’m pleased to announce the following promotions and role changes in engineering, effective immediately.
* Rob Lanphier is the Director of Platform Engineering. * Tomasz Finc is the Director of Mobile and Special Projects. * Alolita Sharma is the acting Director of Features Engineering. Alolita has gracefully agreed to take on this role, for which we’re kicking off a full search process. * Mark Bergsma is now the Lead Operations Architect, reporting to CT. * Tim Starling is now the Lead Platform Architect, reporting to Rob.
I’ll explain a bit more what these roles mean below, but first, please join me in congratulating Rob, Tomasz, Alolita, Mark and Tim! :-)
Let me also take this opportunity to thank Danese Cooper for helping to build and professionalize the Wikimedia Foundation engineering organization as Wikimedia’s CTO. She also set these changes in motion, and our overall strategy is one that we’ve begun developing and socializing together in the last few months.
Here’s how these roles fit together. The engineering department is principally structured into four sub-departments, each headed by a director who is the functional manager of all people within that sub-department:
* Technical Operations - CT Woo: Keep Wikimedia Foundation sites and services running, increase uptime and performance, support code deployments, and ensure recoverability of data and services. * Platform Engineering - Rob Lanphier: Maintain and support the MediaWiki platform; ensure reliability, maintainability, and performance of our software; lead the release management process; grow and nurture the developer community and ecosystem. * Features Engineering - Alolita Sharma (Acting): Advance Wikimedia’s strategic priorities by focusing resources on specific feature projects such as the visual editor, or interventions designed to increase editor retention. * Mobile and Special Projects - Tomasz Finc: Advance Wikimedia’s mobile platform and ensure that mobile devices are fully considered across the engineering development process; execute projects with strong overlapping requirements (e.g. offline delivery of Wikimedia content).
We’re also recognizing the importance of architectural engineering leadership in the development of a mature engineering organization (which also represents an additional career path for our distinguished engineers beyond “become a manager”). The three architects - Tim, Mark and Brion - will work together as follows:
* Brion Vibber, as Lead Software Architect, has key architectural responsibility for getting MediaWiki ready to be the world’s leading tool for mass collaboration, by enabling the development of new technologies like the visual editor (his current priority), real-time collaboration, improved discussion systems, etc. This also includes architectural leadership to support bottom-up feature development. Brion reports directly to me. * Mark Bergsma, as Lead Operations Architect, is responsible for creating and communicating the vision and roadmap for the infrastructure needed to run all Wikimedia projects, for ensuring the design/implementation of our operating environment is reliable, scalable, supportable, secure and cost-effective, and for driving cross-functional alignment, especially with other engineering functions. * Tim Starling, as Lead Platform Architect, is responsible for the performance, stability, security and architectural cleanliness of the MediaWiki platform. Tim is leading potentially transformative engineering projects like the HipHop support in MediaWiki. He’s also a key mentor to all MediaWiki developers and is keeping us honest while we’re pursuing our feature dreams.
In addition, we’re considering the shape of product and project management outside the Director-level leadership in the department. Currently, Howie Fung (Senior Product Manager) and Dario Taraborelli (Senior Research Analyst) are continuing to support our feature development projects to ensure that 1) development is aligned with strategic priorities, 2) we’re focusing the development on the needs of the user, 3) we’re making data-driven decisions and working effectively with the global wiki research community, 4) we’re engaging with the Wikimedia editor and reader community on complex feature development projects.
I’m taking on the role of VP of Engineering and Product Development, on an interim basis for now. We’re not going to immediately hire either for that role or a CTO role. Thanks to Mark, Tim and Brion, we have very strong architectural leadership in the department. Moreover, we’ve got more than enough disruptive change as an engineering organization to absorb for now, so we’ve decided that it doesn’t make sense to immediately bring in a new person to lead the department.
We may decide that it’ll make sense for me to continue in this role, or that it’ll make sense to bring in a new person 6-12 months from now, possibly in conjunction with further structural change.
What this means, simply put, is that I’ll be organizing and supporting the work of the engineering department as a whole, with the directors, the product managers, Brion and Dario reporting to me, and that’ll be how we’ll be set up for the near future. My interest is to grow a strong, visible leadership team that’ll be on the lists and wikis and highly responsive to the community. I’ll be suspending most of my non-engineering-related work for the time being.
I’ll be posting more about process improvements, further discussions about intra-departmental structure, and so forth, in coming weeks. I’ll also be sharing an updated org chart soon for those who care about those kinds of things. ;-)
All the best, Erik
Congratulations, Rob, Tomasz, Alolita, Mark and Tim!
Now we have another reason to party this coming Friday. ;)
— Patrick
On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 5:58 PM, Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi folks,
I’m pleased to announce the following promotions and role changes in engineering, effective immediately.
- Rob Lanphier is the Director of Platform Engineering.
- Tomasz Finc is the Director of Mobile and Special Projects.
- Alolita Sharma is the acting Director of Features Engineering.
Alolita has gracefully agreed to take on this role, for which we’re kicking off a full search process.
- Mark Bergsma is now the Lead Operations Architect, reporting to CT.
- Tim Starling is now the Lead Platform Architect, reporting to Rob.
I’ll explain a bit more what these roles mean below, but first, please join me in congratulating Rob, Tomasz, Alolita, Mark and Tim! :-)
Let me also take this opportunity to thank Danese Cooper for helping to build and professionalize the Wikimedia Foundation engineering organization as Wikimedia’s CTO. She also set these changes in motion, and our overall strategy is one that we’ve begun developing and socializing together in the last few months.
Here’s how these roles fit together. The engineering department is principally structured into four sub-departments, each headed by a director who is the functional manager of all people within that sub-department:
- Technical Operations - CT Woo: Keep Wikimedia Foundation sites and
services running, increase uptime and performance, support code deployments, and ensure recoverability of data and services.
- Platform Engineering - Rob Lanphier: Maintain and support the
MediaWiki platform; ensure reliability, maintainability, and performance of our software; lead the release management process; grow and nurture the developer community and ecosystem.
- Features Engineering - Alolita Sharma (Acting): Advance Wikimedia’s
strategic priorities by focusing resources on specific feature projects such as the visual editor, or interventions designed to increase editor retention.
- Mobile and Special Projects - Tomasz Finc: Advance Wikimedia’s
mobile platform and ensure that mobile devices are fully considered across the engineering development process; execute projects with strong overlapping requirements (e.g. offline delivery of Wikimedia content).
We’re also recognizing the importance of architectural engineering leadership in the development of a mature engineering organization (which also represents an additional career path for our distinguished engineers beyond “become a manager”). The three architects - Tim, Mark and Brion - will work together as follows:
- Brion Vibber, as Lead Software Architect, has key architectural
responsibility for getting MediaWiki ready to be the world’s leading tool for mass collaboration, by enabling the development of new technologies like the visual editor (his current priority), real-time collaboration, improved discussion systems, etc. This also includes architectural leadership to support bottom-up feature development. Brion reports directly to me.
- Mark Bergsma, as Lead Operations Architect, is responsible for
creating and communicating the vision and roadmap for the infrastructure needed to run all Wikimedia projects, for ensuring the design/implementation of our operating environment is reliable, scalable, supportable, secure and cost-effective, and for driving cross-functional alignment, especially with other engineering functions.
- Tim Starling, as Lead Platform Architect, is responsible for the
performance, stability, security and architectural cleanliness of the MediaWiki platform. Tim is leading potentially transformative engineering projects like the HipHop support in MediaWiki. He’s also a key mentor to all MediaWiki developers and is keeping us honest while we’re pursuing our feature dreams.
In addition, we’re considering the shape of product and project management outside the Director-level leadership in the department. Currently, Howie Fung (Senior Product Manager) and Dario Taraborelli (Senior Research Analyst) are continuing to support our feature development projects to ensure that 1) development is aligned with strategic priorities, 2) we’re focusing the development on the needs of the user, 3) we’re making data-driven decisions and working effectively with the global wiki research community, 4) we’re engaging with the Wikimedia editor and reader community on complex feature development projects.
I’m taking on the role of VP of Engineering and Product Development, on an interim basis for now. We’re not going to immediately hire either for that role or a CTO role. Thanks to Mark, Tim and Brion, we have very strong architectural leadership in the department. Moreover, we’ve got more than enough disruptive change as an engineering organization to absorb for now, so we’ve decided that it doesn’t make sense to immediately bring in a new person to lead the department.
We may decide that it’ll make sense for me to continue in this role, or that it’ll make sense to bring in a new person 6-12 months from now, possibly in conjunction with further structural change.
What this means, simply put, is that I’ll be organizing and supporting the work of the engineering department as a whole, with the directors, the product managers, Brion and Dario reporting to me, and that’ll be how we’ll be set up for the near future. My interest is to grow a strong, visible leadership team that’ll be on the lists and wikis and highly responsive to the community. I’ll be suspending most of my non-engineering-related work for the time being.
I’ll be posting more about process improvements, further discussions about intra-departmental structure, and so forth, in coming weeks. I’ll also be sharing an updated org chart soon for those who care about those kinds of things. ;-)
All the best, Erik -- Erik Möller Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation
Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate
Wikitech-l mailing list Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l
I am not exactly sure which list to reply to, so I'll reply here. Yes!: congratulations to Robla, Alolita, Tomasz, Mark and Tim :-)
This is good news. It's been in the works for quite a while, and I'm glad to see it happen. It's a good structure for the team, and it'll pave the way to getting good work done as we move into 2011-12 -- including lots of new hiring. Thanks to Danese and Erik for making it happen, and congratulations to the folks with new roles :-)
Thanks, Sue On Jun 20, 2011 5:59 PM, "Erik Moeller" erik@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi folks,
I’m pleased to announce the following promotions and role changes in engineering, effective immediately.
- Rob Lanphier is the Director of Platform Engineering.
- Tomasz Finc is the Director of Mobile and Special Projects.
- Alolita Sharma is the acting Director of Features Engineering.
Alolita has gracefully agreed to take on this role, for which we’re kicking off a full search process.
- Mark Bergsma is now the Lead Operations Architect, reporting to CT.
- Tim Starling is now the Lead Platform Architect, reporting to Rob.
I’ll explain a bit more what these roles mean below, but first, please join me in congratulating Rob, Tomasz, Alolita, Mark and Tim! :-)
Let me also take this opportunity to thank Danese Cooper for helping to build and professionalize the Wikimedia Foundation engineering organization as Wikimedia’s CTO. She also set these changes in motion, and our overall strategy is one that we’ve begun developing and socializing together in the last few months.
Here’s how these roles fit together. The engineering department is principally structured into four sub-departments, each headed by a director who is the functional manager of all people within that sub-department:
- Technical Operations - CT Woo: Keep Wikimedia Foundation sites and
services running, increase uptime and performance, support code deployments, and ensure recoverability of data and services.
- Platform Engineering - Rob Lanphier: Maintain and support the
MediaWiki platform; ensure reliability, maintainability, and performance of our software; lead the release management process; grow and nurture the developer community and ecosystem.
- Features Engineering - Alolita Sharma (Acting): Advance Wikimedia’s
strategic priorities by focusing resources on specific feature projects such as the visual editor, or interventions designed to increase editor retention.
- Mobile and Special Projects - Tomasz Finc: Advance Wikimedia’s
mobile platform and ensure that mobile devices are fully considered across the engineering development process; execute projects with strong overlapping requirements (e.g. offline delivery of Wikimedia content).
We’re also recognizing the importance of architectural engineering leadership in the development of a mature engineering organization (which also represents an additional career path for our distinguished engineers beyond “become a manager”). The three architects - Tim, Mark and Brion - will work together as follows:
- Brion Vibber, as Lead Software Architect, has key architectural
responsibility for getting MediaWiki ready to be the world’s leading tool for mass collaboration, by enabling the development of new technologies like the visual editor (his current priority), real-time collaboration, improved discussion systems, etc. This also includes architectural leadership to support bottom-up feature development. Brion reports directly to me.
- Mark Bergsma, as Lead Operations Architect, is responsible for
creating and communicating the vision and roadmap for the infrastructure needed to run all Wikimedia projects, for ensuring the design/implementation of our operating environment is reliable, scalable, supportable, secure and cost-effective, and for driving cross-functional alignment, especially with other engineering functions.
- Tim Starling, as Lead Platform Architect, is responsible for the
performance, stability, security and architectural cleanliness of the MediaWiki platform. Tim is leading potentially transformative engineering projects like the HipHop support in MediaWiki. He’s also a key mentor to all MediaWiki developers and is keeping us honest while we’re pursuing our feature dreams.
In addition, we’re considering the shape of product and project management outside the Director-level leadership in the department. Currently, Howie Fung (Senior Product Manager) and Dario Taraborelli (Senior Research Analyst) are continuing to support our feature development projects to ensure that 1) development is aligned with strategic priorities, 2) we’re focusing the development on the needs of the user, 3) we’re making data-driven decisions and working effectively with the global wiki research community, 4) we’re engaging with the Wikimedia editor and reader community on complex feature development projects.
I’m taking on the role of VP of Engineering and Product Development, on an interim basis for now. We’re not going to immediately hire either for that role or a CTO role. Thanks to Mark, Tim and Brion, we have very strong architectural leadership in the department. Moreover, we’ve got more than enough disruptive change as an engineering organization to absorb for now, so we’ve decided that it doesn’t make sense to immediately bring in a new person to lead the department.
We may decide that it’ll make sense for me to continue in this role, or that it’ll make sense to bring in a new person 6-12 months from now, possibly in conjunction with further structural change.
What this means, simply put, is that I’ll be organizing and supporting the work of the engineering department as a whole, with the directors, the product managers, Brion and Dario reporting to me, and that’ll be how we’ll be set up for the near future. My interest is to grow a strong, visible leadership team that’ll be on the lists and wikis and highly responsive to the community. I’ll be suspending most of my non-engineering-related work for the time being.
I’ll be posting more about process improvements, further discussions about intra-departmental structure, and so forth, in coming weeks. I’ll also be sharing an updated org chart soon for those who care about those kinds of things. ;-)
All the best, Erik -- Erik Möller Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation
Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate
Wikitech-l mailing list Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l
Congrats all...I'm proud of you. I know you're all going to be great in your new leadership roles!
<3, Danese
On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 5:58 PM, Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi folks,
I’m pleased to announce the following promotions and role changes in engineering, effective immediately.
- Rob Lanphier is the Director of Platform Engineering.
- Tomasz Finc is the Director of Mobile and Special Projects.
- Alolita Sharma is the acting Director of Features Engineering.
Alolita has gracefully agreed to take on this role, for which we’re kicking off a full search process.
- Mark Bergsma is now the Lead Operations Architect, reporting to CT.
- Tim Starling is now the Lead Platform Architect, reporting to Rob.
wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org