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The DevRel Foundation is in the process of being formed. We welcome anyone interested in joining the community and working together to define the challenges, strategic goals and next steps of the professional practice of developer relations

The Developer Relations Foundation

The Developer Relations Foundation is an open community of practitioners who aim to elevate the professional practice of developer relations. For more information, please read the foundation charter.

The Developer Relations Foundation is part of the nonprofit Linux Foundation.

FAQ

If you have questions that are not answered here, please get in touch via the Developer Relations Foundation Discord.

Why a Foundation?

The major benefit of a foundation is that it promotes participatory governance, preventing any single company from monopolizing a collaborative project. Specifically, a foundation ensures:

  • Community-driven Governance: Projects are managed by the community for the community, with contributions reviewed and accepted based on merit.

  • Open Source: Contributors can use the project's resources without fearing sudden changes in licensing or direction.

  • Impartiality: contributions to the content and direction are accepted based on their community value, regardless of their impact on any particular vendor.

This initiative stems from a shared passion for DevRel and the recognition that the profession faces persistent challenges, such as a lack of clarity and difficulty in measuring impact. Despite significant growth in resources and organizations addressing these issues, these resources are fragmented. Our goal is to create an inclusive, community-driven entity that formally defines DevRel practices, addresses common challenges with best-in-practice resources, and attracts both individuals and organizations’ decision-makers. A foundation aims to be a trusted, credible, and expert resource, similar to professional bodies in other fields, providing training, certification, continuing education, and advocacy.

Why Linux Foundation?

This collaborative project has been hosted as a community project, with no funding involved. This means taking advantage of the governance structure, project management staff, and back-end resources that the Linux Foundation (LF) provides to all hosted projects under an unfunded model, to ensure long-term sustainability. Developer Relations Foundation is part of the LF project series, as a non-profit 501(c)(6). Examples of these projects include SPDX (SBOM Standard), FOSSology, and CHAOSS.

The major benefit of hosting with the LF is that it offers recognized global credibility. Specifically, the LF ensures:

  • DevRel value outside DevRel: Being part of a renowned and large open source foundation like the Linux Foundation enhances the project's credibility within the DevRel community and among external stakeholders and decision-makers. This recognition elevates DevRel's visibility and perceived value as a profession, demonstrating its importance and impact beyond industry peers.

  • Level Playing Field: Ensuring that no single company in the ecosystem can exert undue control over the project by owning the trademark.

  • Licensing Integrity: Protecting the licensing integrity of the collaborative project, as detailed in this LF blog post.

The LF allows individual contributors to retain copyright ownership of their contributions while providing an open source license, reflected through the Developer Certificate of Origin sign-off process.

We also chose the LF to avoid reinventing the wheel. Creating something new requires tools, infrastructure, and, ideally, a lightweight process to get started and make the initiative resilient.

Does DRF Serve Developer Relations Outside Open Source?
Yes. The foundation operates as an open source community, but Developer Relations Foundation's scope is Developer Relations across various specializations within a company, whether or not they involve open source engagements.

There are peer open source communities, like the TODO Group, whose mission focuses on open source engagement and where open source Developer Relations and open source community managers typically participate. However, the TODO Group’s scope doesn’t cover non-open source aspects of Developer Relations unless they intersect with the open source engagement journey in organizations. This is a gap the DRF community might need to address in the future, collaborating with existing peer communities.

Are Sponsors Involved?

No, there are no sponsors.

A sponsor organization provides financial support or funding to the initiative. This collaborative project operates under a non-funded model which means there are no sponsor organizations involved. Instead, the project is supported by community individuals and supporter organizations, contributing to its success through content, guidance, and expertise. Unlike sponsors, supporters do not make financial commitments.

What is a Steering Committee?

The Steering Committee provides oversight for the entire open collaborative project as defined in the Developer Relations Foundation Charter (first version). Currently, a group of volunteers has helped establish initial lightweight processes to support community-driven initiatives. These initiatives, still to be fully defined, aim to shape the day-to-day work within the Developer Relations Foundation. Leadership roles inside these initiatives will be responsible for coordinating these daily activities and may also have the responsibility to appoint other roles. These leadership roles, as well as how these initiatives will be grouped and formed, are yet to be defined by the community.

What is a Charter?
The purpose of having a charter for the Developer Relations Foundation is to help people understand its mission and scope. The DevRel Foundation Charter is a living document, allowing the community to propose changes and updates as the project evolves.
Who is the current Steering Committee?
The current Steering Committee participants are composed of tenured Developer Relations professionals who initiated this “intent to form foundation” built through the LF’s guidance and principles. A new leadership will be established once the charter and mission are in place. This process will be via elections at a future date to be determined.

While our profession is relatively small, it is big enough that there are many really good people who can do this work. And we hope they want to! We had the initiative and time to do this, and so we feel it’s reasonable for us, just like anyone else, to take the first steps forward on building something

Our aim has always been to thread the needle on process and progress - we wanted to get enough done that we, as a professional collective, had a base and some scaffolding from which to build, but not too much progress that folks felt we had prematurely made decisions.

What have you accomplished to date?

To date we have accomplished the following:

  • Formed an initial Steering Committee of tenured DevRel professionals with the shared goal of solving critical DevRel problems through the formation of a Foundation

  • Secured support from the Linux Foundation to have the DevRel Foundation hosted by them

  • Drafted a lightweight charter and took a first pass at organizational structure to provide the broader DevRel community with a starting point from which to work

  • Identified tools and lightweight processes get work done: Discord, GitHub, gitvote, and groups.io

  • Scheduled and facilitated open bi-weekly sessions to listen and learn (alternating APAC/EMEA and AMER)

How do you relate to other existing initiatives?

This is still a WIP answer and needs further discussion in the community calls and async

As we explored how best to address the persistent challenges faced by the practice of DevRel, the first thing we did as an interim steering committee was a survey of the existing communities and organizations, including the Developer Marketing Alliance, DevRelX(*), marketingto.dev, Devrellers and Developer Evangelists (LinkedIn groups), the DevRel Collective, DevRelCon, developerrelations.com, flyless.dev, and DevRel con Ñ.

We found that these groups in aggregate, provide exceptional breadth and depth of resources, expertise, and community. However, whether through incentives (ex: revenue-focused) or inclusivity (ex: DevMarketing not included) none felt centralizing enough to be the hub for this initiative, which strives to be open and inclusive, as well as more than just a resource repository.

We also know that we cannot succeed without the support, involvement, and partnership of the ecosystem of DevRel initiatives, which is why we hope that folks will feel inspired to help build a foundation that codifies the definition and best practices of DevRel; that brings together best-in-class frameworks, training, and resources in a single place; and that attracts individuals and organizations through trust, credibility, and collaboration.

(*) The DevRelX Community sunset on October 11, but the free resources they shared with the industry remain available. A massive thank you to their community members.

How do I join a Working Group?
In the Working Groups, everyone carries the water and helps out, where every participant’s contribution drives progress. Participation in the working group is open to anyone interested. People can join a working group by signing up for the specific mailing list on [dev-rel.org subgroups](https://lists.dev-rel.org/g/community/subgroups) and participating in their regular calls. Meeting notes are publicly available on the respective working group mailing lists.

Note: Mailing List are still being formed

Submissions for cohort 1 of the working groups were completed on November 14, 2024. Please follow our communication channels for updates on cohort 2.

When will you notify us that we’re part of a working group?

We plan to notify individuals by 6 December 2024, using the email shared in the sign up form. You can anticipate an email from [email protected]. Please note that participation in the working group is open to anyone interested. Once the initial group is formed, people can still join a working group at any time by signing up for the specific mailing list on dev-rel.org subgroups and participating in their regular calls. Meeting notes are publicly available on the respective working group mailing lists.

Note: Mailing List are still being formed

How are you selecting people for Working Groups?

We are forming initial groups based on expressed interest, and a willingness to commit to the DevRel Foundation Code of Conduct. In addition, there will be additional screening for working group managers for demonstrated program and/or team management experience.

Please note that participation in the working group is open to anyone interested. Once the initial group is formed, people can still join a working group at any time by signing up for the specific mailing list on dev-rel.org subgroups and participating in their regular calls. Meeting notes are publicly available on the respective working group mailing lists.

What is the difference between the Manager and the Participant role within Working Gorups?

The Manager (or managers) of each working group at DRF set the meeting times, dates and agendas, facilitate the conversations, and be the point of contact with the Steering Committee. Managers of a working group can assign new Managers within the working group if requested by Participants actively involved in regular activities.

Participants play an active role in accomplishing the group tasks, including attending and engaging in meetings, contributing to ideas and recommendations, and taking ownership of action items identified in the meetings.

In Working Groups, everyone carries the water and helps out. Shared effort creates a culture of collaboration, where every participant’s contribution drives progress. Participation in the working group is open to anyone interested. All communication channels and calls are accessible, and meeting notes are publicly available

What is the weekly commitment for Working Groups?

We anticipate that, between meetings and asynchronous work, that the working group commitment will be an average of 2-4 hours a week. Managers and participants can collectively decide what schedule works best for them as outlined on the expected commitment can be found here.

Criteria for manager selection can be found here.

Criteria for working group members can be found here.

When are the Working Groups expected to complete their proposals?

We aim to have groups deliver their initial proposals including their initial charter, goals, deliverables, milestones and meeting cadence by February 3, 2025. Further details can be found at this link.

Will the Foundation be officially formed after the Working Groups finish their work?

The official formation of the foundation will be based on administrative milestones, including work group and governance progress, to ensure a smooth transition of organizational leadership. Milestones will include:

  1. Working group managers assigned
  2. Working groups formed with regular calls started
  3. Steering Committee election process determined
What guidance can we expect from the Steering Committee?

The Steering Committee will provide expectations, timelines, tools, and regular check-ins for group leads. In addition, we’ll be available via the Discord community for questions as they arise.

Resources

  • dev-rel.org: Official website for the Developer Relations Foundation.
  • Charter: Official charter document for the Developer Relations Foundation.
  • Code of Conduct: Standards and guidelines for contributing to the Developer Relations Foundation.
  • Calendar: Official Developer Relations Foundation meeting Calendar
  • LF Antitrust Policies: Policies that participants must adhere to when participating in DRF-related meetings, communication channels, or forums.
  • Playbook: Hands-on resource for the community. Developer Relations Foundation Operational Guidelines.

Get involved

Discord

We have a Discord channel where the community can ask questions, join regular calls focused on building this initiative together, and learn more about ways to get involved and contribute.

Join the Developer Relations Foundation Discord

Join the Developer Relations Foundation Discord Server

Community Calls

Part of our community calls are being used as Open Office Hours to reach community consensus on the foundation's next phases and address questions and blockers on the DevRel Challenges and Frequently Asked Questions. If you would like to get involved, this is a safe and welcoming space to start!

Note: Due to the usual December holiday season, DRF has paused these calls. These community calls will be restructured around January or February 2025. Once new meeting series are created, they will appear on everyone's emails (check spam too) for anyone who has joined the lists.dev-rel.org community mailing list. People can see the upcoming meetings in our Calendar: https://lists.dev-rel.org/g/community/calendar

We host community calls every other week:

  • AMER Building DevRel Found Community Call
  • APAC & EMEA Building DevRel Found Community Call

Mailing List

Additionally, we have a groups.io mailing list where the community can post announcements, news, and notifications

Join the Developer Relations Foundation Community Mailing List

Join the Developer Relations Foundation Community Mailing List

GitHub Discussions

Developer Relation Foundation also has an official forum under this GitHub Org Repo via GH Discussions. People can read existing issues or create new topics here

Be part of a DevRel Foundation Working Group - Sign up by 13 November 2024

To date, the community is ready to launch Working Groups, which will collaborate to define and recommend objectives, operations, and goals of the groups, based on the themes identified by the community:

  • DevRel structure and organization
  • Professional development, career growth, and support
  • Community engagement and support
  • Resource and asset aggregation
  • Metrics, reporting, and best practices
  • Innovation and emerging trends

We’re seeking both group managers and group participants, with an estimated weekly commitment of 2-4 hours for the next 6 months. FAQs on Working Groups can be found here: https://github.com/DevRel-Foundation#faq

License and Intellectual Property

All documentation is made available by the Developer Relations Foundation under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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  1. governance governance Public

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  2. wg-resource-aggregation wg-resource-aggregation Public

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  3. wg-structure-organization wg-structure-organization Public

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  • wg-community-engagement-support Public

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    DevRel-Foundation/wg-community-engagement-support’s past year of commit activity
    3 2 4 1 Updated Feb 14, 2025
  • wg-structure-organization Public

    Collaborative space for the DevRel Structure and Organization Working Group under the Developer Relations Foundation

    DevRel-Foundation/wg-structure-organization’s past year of commit activity
    4 1 1 1 Updated Feb 14, 2025
  • wg-professional-career-growth Public

    Collaborative space for the Professional Development, Career Growth, and Support Working Group under the Developer Relations Foundation

    DevRel-Foundation/wg-professional-career-growth’s past year of commit activity
    2 1 1 1 Updated Feb 13, 2025
  • wg-metrics-reporting Public

    Collaborative space for the Metrics, Reporting, and Best Practices Working Group under the Developer Relations Foundation

    DevRel-Foundation/wg-metrics-reporting’s past year of commit activity
    4 3 2 2 Updated Feb 8, 2025
  • wg-resource-aggregation Public

    Collaborative space for the Resources and Asset Aggregation Working Group under the Developer Relations Foundation.

    DevRel-Foundation/wg-resource-aggregation’s past year of commit activity
    7 CC-BY-4.0 0 3 3 Updated Feb 3, 2025
  • governance Public

    DevRel Foundation Governance

    DevRel-Foundation/governance’s past year of commit activity
    29 CC-BY-4.0 4 5 0 Updated Jan 28, 2025
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    DevRel-Foundation/.github’s past year of commit activity
    2 CC-BY-4.0 1 2 0 Updated Jan 13, 2025
  • wg-innovation-emerging-trends Public

    Collaborative space for the Innovation and Emerging Trends Working Group under the Developer Relations Foundation

    DevRel-Foundation/wg-innovation-emerging-trends’s past year of commit activity
    3 2 1 2 Updated Dec 16, 2024
  • website Public

    Repo that hosts the devrel foundation source code. The community can contribute to its content and infrastructure

    DevRel-Foundation/website’s past year of commit activity
    SCSS 1 1 2 0 Updated Oct 29, 2024

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