Re: release announcements, talking points, release notes, and how we group features into audiences or stories

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On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 6:44 AM, Jaroslav Reznik <jreznik@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
----- Original Message -----
> Hi,
> 2. Note that I'm not advocating for the "user, sysadmin, dev"
> categories to change in docs-land; I think that these stories/themes
> are likely to change with each release.  But, given the
> intertwinement
> of docs and marketing when it comes to the release announcement, it
> seems like (if docs is crafting the tech-bits of the release
> announcement) if we were to bucketize by stories, that we'd need to
> get marketing to figure out what those stories are. And I don't just
> mean the overarching stories, but also the individual feature
> stories,
> in some cases; I can't tell you how many times I look at a feature
> and
> say, wow, I wish I spoke that language, I wonder what the bigger
> picture is, what this effectively enables? Maybe the talking points
> is
> a launch point for that as well, in additoin to being the list that
> gets handed off to ambassadors, and then can drive the story
> collections in a release announcement, or in one-page release notes;
> I'm not sure. Thoughts? The workflow, as often seems to be the case
> between docs & mktg, is key.

I'll skip directly to the workflow here - as I generally agree with
the idea you'd like to implement.

So for workflow - what we have now? We have features/change proposals,
from these we have to in some way prepare release notes -> extend to
documentation for bigger changes, the second part are talking points ->
featuring "shiny" changes -> and finally flipped to release announcement
and other marketing stuff. Currently all of these are tracked in
different places, we still don't have a strong ownership of individual
tasks and it often goes out of sync (aka was this feature/change really
finished, so we can document it and market it?).

Talking points aren't the basis for release announcements. The only thing they are a predecessor to is feature profiles (and even this association is fairly loose; feature profiles can be chosen and completed without doing talking points.) They can share content, but: from the Marketing POV, Release Announcements are, in my mind, "do or die"; talking points, feature profiles, etc. are more or less NTH. (And let me be clear: VERY nice to have, we really really should do these things, but we aren't going to have people in death matches on mailing lists if talking points/feature profiles don't get done.)

I also don't think that the marketing and docs portions necessarily need to be intertwined with one another, aside from perhaps the release annoucement (I'll get to that in a second).  The marketing things - talking points, feature profiles - were never intended to cover every single thing, the SOPs around them are fairly specific about picking a handful of items; they're really intended to help catch people's attention and give them a reason to install Fedora.  Release notes (and by some extent the rest of the documentation) are more comprehensive, give details on the less "shiny" things that tend to not get press attention as well as the Shiny Things, because they're a useful reference for when folks have their system installed, and in the case of release notes, specifically for folks who are previous users who want to see what has changed.  The basis for how items are chosen are fairly different for marketing and docs.

The release announcement tends to be where there is more crossover, and I think it's mostly because folks writing the release announcement tend to look to the release notes for some pre-canned materials to write from, whether they are folks from docs or marketing writing the announcement, but marketing tends to guide a bit as to what bits should be highlighted.
 

What I do right now, I'm trying to revamp feature/change proposal
template, the Feature List and I'd like to "centralize" the planning
and tracking of not only development but also these tasks.

How could it look like?

Instead of plain Features List, I'd like to have a clear overview,
generated (I have scripts) from Change Proposals pages. It's very
rough draft!
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/20/ChangeSet

The template could be extended - not only to be change owner place,
but to offer planning/tracking space for Docs, QA, Marketing etc.
See our current draft:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/JaroslavReznik/ChangeProposalTemplate

My question is - what would be useful for your teams to be available
in the change proposal page? What's needed for tracking RNs, TPs etc.
- tracking bugs, ownership etc. I can definitely help here with
coordination - one place for the process from beginning to the end
- to release could make it more manageable.


I think at the bare minimum: Having a page that lists Changes (both systemwide and self-contained) that were "dropped" -  and having a way for both marketing and docs to individually ack that features were removed from "upcoming" documentation/collateral/"written anything" (that is to say: we don't want to "retroactively" remove a "change" from an announcement that already went out).

Notification could either be a ticket, weekly mail that has a list of "adds" and "subtracts" to changes (subtracts going in a page of "removed changes" or etc), or something else. And then have a checkpoint near alpha/beta/final change deadlines for individual teams to double-check the list for any changes/subtractions to the feature set, and make sure those removals aren't being written about.

The sticky part here is that once we get into beta mode, release notes have to be ready well before the deadline where we'd know features got dropped - things are moving from wiki to publican, and then they have to be translated, so anything dropped after that point not only needs to get tracked back through marketing and docs but also translations. 
 
I'm not saying it's perfect, very theoretical for now - but we can
be flexible, there's not so much time for Fedora 20 but it can be
on going effort - to make it better and perfect one day ;-)

Robyn, sorry - I don't want to kidnap your topic :) just it's one
part - the wokflow, how.

Thanks
Jaroslav

> Basically: Seeking feedback? Thoughts, anyone?
 :D
>
> -Robyn
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