We need a bold name with a call to action built in.
I have done listening interviews with CfA stakeholders from 7+ year brigade leaders to newbies. Their word choice blurred discourse with discord and other tools that link into here: Discourse has never existed tangibly for them. I think part of this is due to the name. “Slack” uniquely works because it has notability beyond CfA. We need something different for this tool.
Commons might be okay. Transaction cost political economist Elinor Ostrom is amazing inspiration on collective ways that hugely work. But I’m not completely convinced it has an obvious call to action for anyone that hears the name (sadly, see the washed up popular trope and piece “Tragedy of…”). On similar lines, libraries are something we like to use but not as often contribute to.
First, my proposal should be accompanied with purple elephant branding to counter the accidental violent connotations
. Out there in the world, some things we try leave a mark. The creator of Ruby on Rails (Basecamp, recently Hey!) once blogged “Don’t scar on the first cut”. By that, he referred to organizational learning, institutional memory, and risk of org policies.
Here’s a curve ball: When something goes wrong, have a chat about it, embed the learning in the organizational memory as a story instead of a policy. — DHH
I think this same metaphor works well for this tool here: we’re most motivated to write about things that we know others after us should be aware of. On the internet, we want to be consulted and heard about all the impossible volunteer effort we’d exerted.
Maybe it worked, maybe it didn’t, but here’s the sweet scars we have to show for it and you can learn from it, too.
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"Scar tissue"
, - or any other name based on this metaphor ,
would be names that have a clear call to action.
Bonus: that the first has an remarkable hook to it. Another bonus: it makes it clear we’ve been around for a little while.
. That union is actually what makes us unique.
on other ideas here, but just wanted to viscerally
“commons” as a term I’d feel really proud to see used.