Although each group is different, there are generally accepted practices to help ensure the success of your group. Please send suggestions to [email protected].
Please see also:
Meetings
Community and Business Groups may (but are not required to) hold both face-to-face meetings and teleconferences. If a group holds meetings, the following are required per the Community and Business Group process:
- the meeting is announced to the group in a timely fashion so that people can schedule attendance;
- an agenda is posted;
- meeting minutes are published, including topics discussions and decisions.
Teleconference services
For teleconferences, Business Groups have access to W3C teleconference services. Community Groups may use external teleconference services.
Business Group Chairs that do not have W3C Member access may request information on [email protected]. Business Group Chairs with W3C Member access have information on setting up a teleconference.
Note: Incubator Groups that transition to Community Groups may also use W3C teleconference services. Contact [email protected] for more information.
Tools to facilitate meetings
W3C provides a set of Internet Relay Chat (IRC) tools to help manage meetings.
- Quick start guide for setting up tools for managing an agenda, generating minutes, and updating issues lists.
- Scribe 101: Taking meeting minutes using W3C IRC tools.
W3C has tools to make it easy to manage the speaker queue, record actions, keep an agenda, etc. using IRC tools (called “bots”):
- Zakim for management of agenda, queue and teleconference bridge (the latter for Business Groups only)
- RRSAgent for minutes management
Issue tracking
- Tracker issue tracking tool (which integrates with both IRC and email). See also How to use Tracker.
- Trackbot for issue management (using Tracker) during an IRC-based meeting
Decisions
- A Community Group may adopt operational agreements (recorded, for example, in the form of a charter) that establish the group’s scope of work, decision-making processes, communications preferences, and other operations.
- Community and Business Groups are not obligated to achieve decisions by consensus, but it is strongly recommended. See our recommended decision process, part of our recommended charter template.
- You can use a WordPress poll to help in the decision-making process.
Publications
Chairs publish reports on behalf of the group. Reports must satisfy a small set of report requirements.
Read more about how to publish a report.
Community management
W3C Staff Participation
W3C management does not typically allocate staff to full-time support of individual Community Groups. However, W3C management may do so on occasion according to the policy for W3C Team support for Community Groups.
See also the FAQ question: How are Business Group staff liaisons chosen?
Managing disruptive participation
In general, W3C participants interact in a constructive fashion. In rare cases of disruptive participation, the Community and Business Group process includes some tools to help keep a group on track. While the Chair does not have the right to ban participants, the Community Development Lead is so empowered. Discussion among the parties involved should take place before any person is banned. For more information see general communications policies.
See also the Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct, which applies to all W3C participants.
Communications and Branding
Please refer to the Community and Business Group Process on: