Update: Y'all should really be looking at how GitHub does this: https://github.com/github/roadmap
Just a brilliant bit of information design. Each task follows a consistent format:
- Summary - a succinct, clear description of the task.
- Intended Outcome - the expected result of the task's successful completion.
- How will it work? - a detailed description of what the task involves.
Textual and visual metadata is then used to indicate the progress of each task and what it pertains to. The resulting roadmap can be quickly scanned and parsed for relevant information. I cannot recommend this highly enough!
Original answer
Nineteen tasks for this quarter, eh? That's... Ambitious...
I published my thoughts on the last two quarters' tasks a bit ago, and while they sparked some good discussion at least one person got pretty salty about some of the assumptions I'd made about the nature of the tasks. So in the interest of transparency, I figured I'd post my assumptions up front this time.
Notes on and assumed purpose of the 2020 3rd quarter roadmap tasks
This is how I've interpreted the tasks laid out for the current quarter:
Training Launch (Platform / Conflict resolution course)
An employee clarified in the comments that this was completed earlier this month.
Assumed test for success: Platform is re-used for D&I stuff mentioned in later task.
Moderator Quarterly Survey
Hooray! Please publish results. Surveys are like the Doomsday Machine in that Dr. Strangelove movie: they're only effective if folks know about them. I've seen what happens when you do regular surveys and don't publish the results or do anything in response to them: folks stop taking the survey.
Assumed test for success: results are published somewhere.
Moderator Council: Governance
This sounds useful. Also useful: giving them something useful to do.
Assumed test for success: moderator council figures out why they exist.
New Moderator Agreement
This is done-ish, unless too many moderators refuse to sign it. In which case, you'd better hope that the "Election Automation" task further down moves from "discovery" to "implementation" very quickly.
Assumed test for success: there are still enough moderators come September.
Lavender Letter Follow Up
Good. I'm epically tardy with responding to letters, but 10 months is impressive even to me.
Assumed test for success: a response emerges that isn't, "there will be a response".
Review Queue: Reviewer Suspend Experience
This is already underway!
Assumed test for success: fewer repeat suspensions, same number of people reviewing (or more), meta is not attacked by mobs of reviewers with torches and hay forks upset about their suspensions.
SME Content Strategy & Content Release
So... Subject matter experts are going to do something, somewhere?
Assumed test for success: subject matter experts do something, somewhere.
Downvotes Research
Another survey! Gonna just re-use what I wrote for the last one:
Hooray! Please publish results. Surveys are like the Doomsday Machine in that Dr. Strangelove movie: they're only effective if folks know about them. I've seen what happens when you do regular surveys and don't publish the results or do anything in response to them: folks stop taking the survey.
Assumed test for success: results are published somewhere.
Reactions Test Analysis
This is good. There was a LOT of feedback, both on meta and spread across the 'Net. Looking forward to an epic report here - don't forget that you can ask a dev to increase the maximum post length on meta!
Assumed test for success: a report is published that covers the outcome of the test in detail, summarizes all the responses, and lays out next steps.
Moderator D&I Training
This is a good idea. But... It was a good idea a year ago too - actually finding or creating useful training turned out to be much more difficult. A big part of the problem was that moderators don't stand to benefit much from the standard "D&I" courses that most new employees have to sit through these days (y'know. The ones where an animation slowly explains that fraud and harassment are bad, bad things) - what they actually need is the training that the folks giving D&I training get. And that turned out to be harder to line up than a Flash animation.
Assumed test for success: moderators report receiving training that is actually useful and relevant to what they do as moderators.
New User Email Series v2
The lessons of the last attempt here should be:
- Don't send people scary insulting emails
- Don't send people irrelevant emails
Those are... some pretty low bars to clear, but... They should've been the first time too.
Assumed test for success: nobody reports receiving irrelevant, insulting, or scary emails.
Internationalization - Discovery
I hope this means the international versions of Stack Overflow are going to get more support.
Assumed test for success: a new era of first-class support for languages and cultures other than English / Western. Failing that, Aki gets access to CM tools so that she can finally just edit the Japanese help center articles.
Election Automation - Discovery
I first asked for this in 2012. If it actually gets done before 2022, I'll cheer.
Assumed test for success: literally anything happens with election tooling.
Teachers Lounge Moderation Tools for Community Managers
I assume this means the TL is still sitting in that hack of a room I put together on MSE after certain people did the textual equivalent of throwing Molotov cocktails into the old TL, repeatedly, for weeks. Sad. I hate to say it, but this isn't going to work unless there are TL moderation tools for moderators as well - there are only four CMs left, and while they probably can still manage 24/7 coverage if need-be... It's sort of cruel to ask for that. It was pretty cruel already last year.
Assumed test for success: next time someone sets off a bomb in the TL, it doesn't burn for days.
Interaction Modeling / Engaged User Satisfaction
Complicated title for something that there's no description of. I am going to guess... Another survey?
My copypasta key is wearing out; please see notes under "Moderator Quarterly Survey" and "Downvotes Research".
Area 51: The Way Forward - Discovery
Big, if true.
Assumed test for success: any sort of plan or analysis of Area 51 is published. Ideally one that doesn't just badly reinvent something Robert proposed 6 years ago.
New Editor
Please, please, please just steal one from a site that already has a good Markdown editor. SO's editor was best-in-class 12 years ago, but it's been lapped many times now; heck, https://stackedit.io started with SO's editor and has long ago left it in the dust. Y'all don't have to try for something world-changing here, just aim for parity with what's already winning: take the one from GitHub, or StackEdit, or Visual Studio Code, or innumerable other places that've actually spent serious time making good editors over the past decade. Then use the time you save to beef up support for pasting in code - that's the big failure-scenario for new SO users.
P.S. Please don't steal Reddit's; it sucks.
Assumed test for success: an editor that rivals the one in Visual Studio Code. Or is the one in Visual Studio Code.
GDPR Consent Management v2
Well, that sounds vaguely ominous. But, legal things generally do.
Assumed test for success: Stack Overflow complies with all relevant European laws regarding the privacy and retention of personal information.
That's it! If there are errors or inaccuracies in any of the above, feel free to edit, or just post corrections to the blog.