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Moderately experienced developer
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Feels some sense of ownership over the project ("I want to share this with the world")
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Sees self as ultimate decisionmaker
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Still building a community reputation
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Has never open sourced a project before
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Wants people to notice their project
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Wants people to actually use the project and give feedback
- Doesn't know how to find an audience
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Experienced developer
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Feels some sense of ownership over the project ("I want to share this with the world")
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Sees self as ultimate decisionmaker
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Has a decent community reputation
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Has open sourced a project before. May manage multiple projects
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Likely manages projects on their own time (volunteer work)
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Manage personal time so project demands don't become overwhelming
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Find other contributors or maintainers to help with the project
- Feeling burned out, exhausted from open source work
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Experienced developer
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Wants to share ownership of the project ("I want to build this with others")
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Sees community, not self, as ultimate decisionmaker
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Has a decent audience/reputation
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Has open sourced personal projects before
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Likely manages projects on their own time (volunteer work)
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Get people to participate, contribute back to the project
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Make sure everybody involved with the project is happy and has a good experience
- Managing a community is exhausting, especially when it's volunteer work
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Team of employees working at the same company. Primarily engineering, but likely multiple stakeholders across functions
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Likely feels some sense of ownership over the project ("We are open sourcing this project to the community")
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Company plays a clear role in decisionmaking
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May not have open sourced a project before
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Projects are managed by paid employees
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Cares about fostering a healthy community, but does not necessarily want to share ownership in a formal capacity
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Improve brand and reputation
- Attract new technical talent for recruiting (make sure people hear about it)
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Grow a platform (get people to use it)
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Balancing community + corporate needs
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(For community: being a good corporate citizen, respecting cultural norms)
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(For corporate: adhering to company policies)
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Making sure people know about the project