The Collectives product is moving into a new stage of iteration and development. This post and the companion posts linked below are meant to offer a holistic view of Collectives, why it’s a focus for Stack Overflow, and how we’ll be working closely with the community on how it will keep evolving.
I’ll start by presenting the updated definition of Collectives on Stack Overflow:
Collectives™ on Stack Overflow are dedicated spaces where developers can find content that's organized around an area of technical practice or a technology provider's product suite. Defined by tags, a collective brings developers together to collaborate and learn from one another, as well as connect with subject matter experts from the community and the organizations that help build or maintain a technology product/service. Content includes questions and answers, as well as technical articles authored by Members of a collective, and Bulletins – timely, useful, and relevant updates published by Admins of a collective.
Collective Admins can also grant users specific permissions, such as posting and approving Articles within a collective, recommending answers that are associated with a collective, and having a user badge that highlights their role within the collective.
This update reflects that collectives are focused on an area of practice. The ones launched up to this point have been provider-specific collectives, focused on areas of practice defined by a provider’s suite of products.
In the coming weeks, we'll begin expanding Collectives into new areas of practice that aren't provider-specific. We expect these new collectives to soon become the typical experience of Collectives on Stack Overflow, with the community taking the lead in terms of defining each collective’s processes and curating the content.
These new collectives will look much the same as the collectives you see today, in terms of function and structure. We’ll be reaching out to subject matter experts in the community (based on their contributions in the topic areas) to form the initial groups that will help establish each collective. These groups will draft the initial set of processes around answer recommendation and article development.
There will be two new collectives initially launching, focused on:
The R programming language - defined by the tag r and a number of related tags such as tidyverse, shiny, tidyr, knitr, dplyr, and rstudio.
CI/CD – the methodology of continuous integration and continuous delivery/deployment – defined by the tags continuous-integration, continuous-delivery, continuous-deployment, cicd (and perhaps others)
We expect to launch these at the end of February or beginning of March, and will begin reaching out to potential community collaborators this week.
We recognize that the community will have many questions, and we’ve got lots of information. This post is being published concurrently with some supporting posts that focus on various aspects of collectives and their place on Stack Overflow and on the Stack Exchange network.
Collectives: Looking back – thoughts on what we’ve learned and how that informs where we’re headed
Collectives and sponsorship – a look at the commercial aspects of Collectives
Collectives features and community management – a review of Collectives features; details about who we’ll be reaching out to and how we’ll begin building these subcommunities together
How did we select the initial collective topics for launch? – a look at how we chose the two topics for these new collectives
If you’ve got questions or comments focused in one of those areas, please read the respective post and then add your thoughts on that page. If you have any general questions or comments that don’t fit any of the other posts, you can share that feedback below this post.