Update: Channels are now called: stack-overflow-for-teams.
When you use Stack Overflow to solve some of your problems, you begin wanting to use it for everything. We've often said that Stack Overflow isn't a place for everything that programmers want to do and talk about, but we've always wished that we could make it easier for teams of engineers to better support one another on the same site where they give so much to the public interests of programming.
It has always been difficult to accommodate folks that want to collaborate more closely in a manner that prevents them from clashing with what we've built as conventional public Q&A; there are many kinds of questions that simply don't work well in our shared body of knowledge.
Doing surgery with Git to resolve a common problem is generally on-topic as a question on Stack Overflow. Asking how any particular software company uses Git in their workflow isn't the best question to ask on Stack Overflow because it's not really related to a programming problem someone outside of that company would face.
Supporting your coworkers on Stack Overflow has always been a little daunting, to say the least.
What teams keep telling us they need is a place where teammates can support each others' private questions on the same site where they already get help with their public ones. Since the earliest days of the site, devs asked for ways to use SO for questions about code or practices that needed to stay private. And since we've launched SO Enterprise, we've had a ton of inquiries from companies too small for a local install, but who want to pay for a private space on SO.
We're happy to announce that we've come up a way to provide those places, and we're calling them:
Stack Overflow Channels
What we're calling channels can be summed up as:
tl;dr;
Channels are a means for organizations to provide a quiet space for their engineering teams to collaborate pretty much unrestricted and unstructured apart from public Q&A on Stack Overflow through a more private means that we're calling a channel. Channels are for organizations both large and small and do not in any way affect public Q&A.
This allows for a stronger kind of engagement without asking more from our seasoned users, because ownership stays entirely with the owners and administrators of the channels.
If you stop reading now, there are two important and essential things you should know about channels:
- They work just like regular Q&A, but their content as well as access to privileges to moderate their content are confined to the folks participating within the channel. What happens in a channel, including any rep or privileges earned, stays in a channel sort of like what happens in Vegas.
- Channels in no way affect standard public Q&A, they just have access to the same features and tools. Each channel is free to set its own moderation policy, define what is on-topic, etc. It is entirely up to channel owners and administrators to review and maintain their content.
We eventually plan to charge for some tiers of channels, but we're not yet sure how much that's going to be or when we're going to begin. Rest assured, there will be plenty of notice prior to that happening; our main interest right now is building the platform to be as useful as it can possibly be. One of the things we really love about Channels is that it will better align part of our monetization strategy with Q&A, which we think will help us be able to continue to invest in improvements to our flagship product.
Allowing developers to centralize where they find technical solutions in a single place has been a huge task over the years. We've struggled with ways to attack it before, but channels will bring us a lot closer to making it a reality.
Wait, how are these things going to work?
Think of a channel as a sort of private repository. It has an owner that can approve other users to join, and give some of those users additional privileges to do things.
When you operate within a channel, all of the privileges you earn (including reputation, etc.) remain specific to that channel, where your ability to contribute will grow over time, depending on how the channel is configured.
Folks that belong to channels will be able to search content from a single location, but reputation, privileges and moderation access within a channel won't carry over to public Q&A.
Is this part of Enterprise? Will there be a public version for open source?
No. Enterprise is a full-blown private site that is set up specifically for an organization to use. The two are completely separate products.
Channels are for teams that want to use a single resource, but need a more private and quiet place to do it, and should be useful for teams way too small for Enterprise to be a good solution.
We're not too concerned about fragmentation, because an asker with questions that would serve the public interest is better off asking them there. (Who's going to ask their twelve teammates a question when they can ask the full Stack Overflow community?)
Any plans to offer these for product support, or other public channels?
Mayprobably? Because so many devs have asked for it and the fact that it's the one we think can monetize easily, we're starting with a focus on Private Channels targeting development teams. But assuming that works, we would definitely consider expanding to public channels serving different use cases. (Especially if we think those channels could actually help Q&A, by addressing some needs that the community can help with, but which cause problems when mixed in with "traditional" Q&A.)
However, it's way too early to tell if that's a direction that channels will go, or how a less private scheme might work.
What do you want / need us to do now? How do we get started?
We need to see how product teams both large and small are going to use what we've put together as an initial offering, and gauge how much interest folks have in trying / using Channels as it matures.
Head over here, have a quick read, and tell us about your organization. We'll then be in touch to get any additional information required and get you set up once we're ready to go!
We also invite you to use the answers below to ask any questions that you have about how things are going to work, directions we plan to take or similar questions. This is a big step for us, there's lots of information, and it's impossible to include all of the most exciting details in a single post.
We want to get your input as early as possible, which is why we're
Working on opening channels up for testing now, before we're even quite ready to share an early viable product.
Asking for any suggestions or asks for possible features now - please post them below.
We really want to know how channels can help you and your team get your jobs done and what we can do to make sure it fits the many different types of teams that we envision using it.
We're also quite happy to answer any questions about technical details on how the system works, so please don't be shy about asking.