John, This answer is my impression of the situation, informed by a brief discussion with the IESG. But I’m speaking only for myself, and in any case there is more to this topic. Other ADs may send additional thoughts. ART ADs in particular may have views about how well the structure works for them… There’s a couple of aspects to the ART area situation. Whether additional coordination among three (vs. two) ADs is working out. Whether the workload is appropriate for three (vs. four or two) ADs. And so on. My perception is that the new system is working relatively well, but given that people have been in their new roles for only some time, it may be too early to draw those conclusions. And the DISPATCH/APPSAWG merge is brand new in this meeting, so it will take some time to gather experience about that as well. We will continue to track this and other workings of the IESG and take action as needed. One aspect that the whole IESG is already quite happy about was that we’re all quite pleased with our increased ability to be flexible as far as AD responsibilities, shepherding WGs out-of-area and being able to increase or decrease personnel in an area as needs arise. We do want to make long-term changes, but we see that the the first step is maintaining the flexibility to be able to adapt to changes in workload and *not* making too many concrete long-term plans. Also, the IESG has internally had a lot of discussion about finding ways to transform AD role so that it can be done while also having significant day job responsibilities. This would increase the pool of potential AD candidates and would place IETF management work closer to daily life in networking. This has been a difficult thing for us to find solutions to, although I would observe that there are several ADs who are succeeding in such sharing of responsibilities. We continue to try to find solutions, particularly around further decentralising the IETF organisations. However, the areas are quite different in how they work, so solutions in this space have traditionally been different for different ADs. For instance, the need and practices around the use of review directorates differ wildly. Another topic that the IESG has had internal discussions about is whether we could make the group radically smaller, making internal coordination more efficient and perhaps as a side effect forcing some tasks out of the IESG. The ADs had wildly different perspectives into this, but it is no longer a direction that we’re considering. I’d say that the majority of the ADs are more focused on current or slightly smaller IESG size, but with less workload per person. In short, we’ve done some work in this space but also a lot of work remains. One additional aspect that we have not considered yet is whether the current flexible operating model ends up impacting job descriptions for the nomcom, perhaps asking for more generalists than people with deep expertise in the specific working groups they’d end up managing. Some specifics: > That evaluation and plan is particularly important > to those of us who believe that, long-term, areas with three or > more ADs tend to be too complex to follow and reduce the > possibility for accountability. Some of us wanted to understand better your thinking here, John. Why do you believe that three ADs implies those things? Is it the additional coordination that you envision? Jari
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