Note for context: this post is part of a series about Collectives on Stack Overflow. To read the full series, begin at this primary post.
In this post, we’ll be:
Doing a brief review of Collectives features.
Detailing updates to articles that will arrive with the next release.
Outlining how the initial groups of subject matter experts will collaborate and what they’ll focus on as the collectives are formed and launched.
Feature overview
Features specific to a collective are:
The Recognized Member (RM) user role – A collective Member with additional permissioning to recommend answers and review articles.
Recommended answers – Answers that Recognized Members choose to designate as being endorsed by the collective.
Articles – Long-form knowledge content that is written by collective Members and reviewed/published by Recognized Members.
The Leaderboard – Ranks collective Members based on reputation earned in the collective’s tags.
The Actions For You page – Lists areas where Recognized Members might focus their efforts, such as articles that need review, questions without answers, and top-viewed questions that might benefit from answer recommendations.
The Admin user role – In the near term, Admins of these new collectives will be Stack Overflow Community Managers, managing user permissions and other settings.
Bulletins – In these new collectives, we expect to use bulletins to document policies and processes, in addition to the one-way messaging function they perform in provider collectives.
Upcoming feature updates to articles
With the release that accompanies the launch of the next two collectives, we’ll begin adding the standard moderation functions to articles, most notably flagging and its associated flows in moderation tools. This will make it possible for anyone in the community to signal to moderators that something about an article should be assessed.
Additionally, collective Members with 2000 or more reputation points will be able to edit articles. Up to this point, editing has only been available to the original author, the collective’s Admins and Recognized Members, and moderators.
This expansion of editing will be added to articles that were previously associated with decommissioned provider collectives. At this time, it will not be added to articles within existing provider collective, though it will be possible to enable on a per-collective basis.
Collective members with less than 2000 reputation points can still provide feedback via public comments and private feedback to the author. These options will remain for articles in all collectives.
Launching a collective and subject matter experts
As noted here, two new collectives will take shape over the coming weeks, focused on the R programming language and CI/CD.
We’ll begin inviting network subject matter experts in these two areas of practice to do the foundational collaboration ahead of the launch. We’ve selected users who've contributed in these tags and subject areas, looking specifically at: overall reputation, amount of posts in the subject areas, scores on those posts, recency of the posts, the number of posts that were answers, and amount of problematic flags.
This collaboration will initially take place on a private Team, to allow for focus, and open ideation. Stack Overflow mods, as well as mods from topic-relevant Stack Exchange communities, will be invited to participate in that pre-launch space as well, to help the collective take shape in a way that does not negatively affect the systems and processes that keep the network running smoothly.
We imagine these subject matter experts as a group that makes consensus-based decisions as they establish the initial policies and processes for each collective, keeping community health and content health at the forefront. Their focus will be on the tools and content specific to the collective, defining how the collective does things like:
Determine how an answer is deemed to be the one that the collective recommends
Determine how articles (in accordance with the established guidelines) get vetted, published and maintained
Determine the criteria and process for adding new Recognized Members after the collective launches
Depending on the collective’s topic, there may be other areas of collaboration to explore. Many participants in each pre-launch group will likely become the initial set of Recognized Members for the respective collective. However, participation in the pre-launch group does not oblige someone to become a Recognized Member, nor does it guarantee that they will.
As the individual collectives launch, their respective groups of Recognized Members will shift their conversations to another venue, with the specifics determined by them. They will (if they wish) remain part of the Team, so that they can:
Offer support to other groups of potential Recognized Members working on pre-launch collaboration for new collectives
Engage with our research and design teams as we look ahead to further development of collectives
There is much to be defined and determined, and we believe that these new collectives can only succeed if the community takes the lead on those efforts. Community Managers will be involved to start and guide discussions, providing the framework for building out these new spaces.
What questions do you have about how the new collectives will be launched and guided?