EP41 – Community of collaboration, not competition – July 1 2013
July 1, 2013, 4:07 p.m. (11 years, 4 months ago)
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On this weeks episode we will be discussing our community of collaboration and how it isn't a competition.
You're benefiting the community by collaborating and not being cutthroat. Instead you're able to share secrets and better the whole industry as a result. By collaborating with the community, you sharpen the industry as a whole.
Carrie will be talking on collaboration at WCSF after having been burned by someone in the community that wasn't even technically her competition. This has lead to some very educational blog posts on her website. Check them out carriedils.com
So why is the WordPress community so open to collaboration as opposed to the tech community in general?
* It could be due to WordPress's open source nature.
* It's a lot more common in open source communities to share things rather than hold on to it and not give it away.
* WP is so popular there are loads of meet ups and so everyone is always out there helping each other.
* Without the Foundation maintaining the hard line to ensure it remains open source, it would probably become competitive and capitalistic.
* The focus isn't just on the open source software but on the openness of the community. There isn't much kept secret. Anyone can jump right in and get involved and find the support they need.
Competition is motivation.
On the other hand, competition doesn't have to be the bad guy. It drives innovation. It's only when you're looking at what someone else is doing that you can say I think we can do this better. The key is to figure out how to collaborate and compete.
The WP community “iterates.” They see something someone has done and want to make it better.
“Co-Opetition” – WP isn't really one or the other. It's a merging of both mindsets. It's good to be first, but it's better to be best.
You only get out of the community what you put into the community. If you share what you know, you will get other people's knowledge in return.
If a meetup is run with competition in mind, it will likely fail. When your motivation is to share, chances are good that it will be a success.
Without building a community, you have no one to collaborate with. If you build the community in your local area, it will absolutely pay off. WordCamps plant the seed for local meetups to be started.
In the WP community, if you aren't someone that's willing to share and collaborate, eventually people will eventually begin to shun you. People won't respect that in a community built on open source.
This episode is sponsored by WP101
http://www.wp101.com
Mentions:
http://wpdaily.co
http://2013.sf.wordcamp.org/
[LISTATTENDEES event_identifier=”ep41-community-of-collaboration-not-competition-july-1-2013-5-51d10c3278385″ show_gravatar=”true”]
You're benefiting the community by collaborating and not being cutthroat. Instead you're able to share secrets and better the whole industry as a result. By collaborating with the community, you sharpen the industry as a whole.
Carrie will be talking on collaboration at WCSF after having been burned by someone in the community that wasn't even technically her competition. This has lead to some very educational blog posts on her website. Check them out carriedils.com
So why is the WordPress community so open to collaboration as opposed to the tech community in general?
* It could be due to WordPress's open source nature.
* It's a lot more common in open source communities to share things rather than hold on to it and not give it away.
* WP is so popular there are loads of meet ups and so everyone is always out there helping each other.
* Without the Foundation maintaining the hard line to ensure it remains open source, it would probably become competitive and capitalistic.
* The focus isn't just on the open source software but on the openness of the community. There isn't much kept secret. Anyone can jump right in and get involved and find the support they need.
Competition is motivation.
On the other hand, competition doesn't have to be the bad guy. It drives innovation. It's only when you're looking at what someone else is doing that you can say I think we can do this better. The key is to figure out how to collaborate and compete.
The WP community “iterates.” They see something someone has done and want to make it better.
“Co-Opetition” – WP isn't really one or the other. It's a merging of both mindsets. It's good to be first, but it's better to be best.
You only get out of the community what you put into the community. If you share what you know, you will get other people's knowledge in return.
If a meetup is run with competition in mind, it will likely fail. When your motivation is to share, chances are good that it will be a success.
Without building a community, you have no one to collaborate with. If you build the community in your local area, it will absolutely pay off. WordCamps plant the seed for local meetups to be started.
In the WP community, if you aren't someone that's willing to share and collaborate, eventually people will eventually begin to shun you. People won't respect that in a community built on open source.
This episode is sponsored by WP101
http://www.wp101.com
Mentions:
http://wpdaily.co
http://2013.sf.wordcamp.org/
[LISTATTENDEES event_identifier=”ep41-community-of-collaboration-not-competition-july-1-2013-5-51d10c3278385″ show_gravatar=”true”]
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