Joomla! Mission, Values and Vision

Foundations for the project

Written by Chris Davenport

Joomla!

One of the real pleasures of being on the Joomla! Core Team is you get to help shape the future of this wonderful project. Much of what the Core Team does is of a strategic nature; we are collectively responsible for making decisions about where we go and what we do as a project. But ultimately our strategy for taking the project forwards depends on what we see as our mission and our vision of the future. In the early years of the project this vision was not well defined and as a result there were times when we lacked a clear idea of what should be done next. But over the last several months we and the board of Open Source Matters have been working on a very important document that will help us shape strategies to continue to build the project as a major open source content management system and nurture the community that is the very lifeblood of the project.

It is with great pleasure that we present to you our Mission, Vision and Values:

Mission

The Mission describes the overall purpose of the project. This is what the project was formed to do:

"Our mission is to provide a flexible platform for digital publishing and collaboration."

Vision

The Vision statements are what keep us moving forward. They paint a picture of the future and show us what that future will look like if we are successful:

In our vision, we see:

People publishing and collaborating in their communities and around the world;

  • Software that is free, secure and of high-quality;
  • A community that is rewarding and enjoyable to participate in;
  • People around the world using their preferred languages;
  • A project that acts autonomously;
  • A project that is socially responsible;
  • A project dedicated to maintaining the trust of its users.

Key Values

The Key Values help guide our behaviour and our decisions on a daily basis. They are numbered to reflect their relative priorities and so help us make decisions when there are competing priorities:

  1. Freedom
  2. Equality
  3. Trust
  4. Community
  5. Collaboration
  6. Usability

The new home for this document is at Open Source Matters, and an annotated version is also available on that Web site.

This document has been through an extensive community consultation process and I would like to personally thank the following people for their help in hammering out the fine details of the text and commentary (alphabetically): Ian MacLennan, Jennifer Marriot, Sam Moffatt, Robin Muilwijk, Ron Severdia, Rob Schley, Amy Stephen, Elin Waring, Tonie de Wilde and Russ Winter.


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9 Comments

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  1. I've found very interesting idea on blog:
    Using of Joomla! as base for developing of web-based applications can speed up developing process:
    http://blogs.helion-prime.com/vasiliykiryanov/2008/05/07/cms-based-web-applications-fast-way-for-creation-of-web-based-solutions.html
  2. Where is the RSS feed? :)
  3. On each of the blog "home" pages, there is an RSS feed on the left side of the page. You have to be on the blog page - there is no RSS feed for individual articles, of course. Hope that helps!
  4. I know this might not be related, however I was really curious how you turned Joomla into a blogging platform like this Developer Blog. Surely a tutorial on this will be well-appreciated by the community if it comes from the Joomla developers themselves. :)
  5. @Waxstrong,

    The site uses com_content plus a comments extension. Each blog--coordinators, developer team, bugsquad, the summer of code projects-- is in a separate category and the displays use the category blog view with one column. The RSS feed is the one from the core of Joomla!.
  6. OK. Thanks!
  7. What Plugin are you using for your social bookmarking on the developers site for all the articles?
  8. I like usability of Joomla work flow to be improved . for example having a “search box” in the "module manger" and "plug-in manger" and you just type the module name you’re looking for and bring up the relevant module with those words. That would save lot of time than looking long list of different module to find right one

    I seen their Joomla extension to add to your site where you can just click on an update button it will up date your Joomla 1.5 site to the next current version of Joomla, this is something that should come with the Joomla package, as it does with Magneto and other Joomla extensions offer this feature click button to update. the JFusion extension is a brilliant example of this!

    Keep up the Great work!
  9. Great!

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