WEBVTT

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Okay, that's the one.

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Okay, so my name is Glenn Erksson.

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I'm going to present a study that we have done.

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I started in 2023.

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I'm just working for a non-profit research organization.

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I focused on applied research in development established in 2011 in Sweden.

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And our project, generally focused on open source,

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Open Data Research within the transport sector.

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In case there are open source ecosystems studies from 2012,

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suggest that participation in open source development can reshape

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organization practice includes software development methodologies,

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knowledge management approach and innovation processes.

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And a few studies on how open source participation

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contribute to organization transformation,

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especially traditional organization,

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lacking pre-existing digital transformation capabilities.

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So that's if this work.

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Okay.

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Yeah, so our study centers around digital transformation

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in the public organization,

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especially in public transportation organization.

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And this is a study literature review from 2021,

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where digital transformation is seen as a top-down initiative

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consisting of two main themes.

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It's a maleable organization design to adopt to constant change,

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changing environment and embeddedness in the digital business ecosystem,

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which characterized by their ever evolving turbulent nature.

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I won't go into more details,

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but this is another study done on from 2019

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on traditional organization in several different sectors.

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And they came out to this different capabilities

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that organization needs to be digital transformed

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and engage in the digital ecosystem.

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So transformation challenges.

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Public organization,

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generally determined by cost focus,

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outsourcing, contractual relationship,

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function-based procurement and fixed-time frame,

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which impedes digital innovation and transformation.

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Studies from the mid-2000 established that contractual relationship

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impedes innovation and responds to market change.

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So this is all news.

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But I don't know how many of you work in the public sector

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or transportation sector.

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Okay.

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Is that new to you?

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You are totally...

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Huh?

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It's not really new, but must I have a side again?

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Exactly.

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I'm going through this quite quick,

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so we can go to the core of the presentation,

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but I just need to get everybody on board.

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And rigid and silo-based organization

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can lead to development creates ad hoc IT solution,

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called shadow IT,

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to fix or solve immediate problems.

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This can further fragment the overall IT system environment,

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and create overlap and lead to resource waste.

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So yeah, let's speed up.

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So now we come to the topic for this presentation.

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Study on community engagement.

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So the idea for the study started in, as a report in 2023,

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on how open source was used to digital digital disrupt

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the public transportation sector in Norway.

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To see if other organizations,

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you're only resemblance to one from Norway.

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Finding one in session to interview in the community took one year,

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and was concluded in October 2025.

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So quite recently.

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It's quite hard to interact with open source community,

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because it's quite opaque,

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which people engage in, which organization,

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maybe there is only a GitHub account or that's what you see.

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It's quite hard to find number of organizations.

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But to finally make it, we find 13 of them.

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So how much time do I have?

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Seven minutes, I'm up there, okay.

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So the result of the study, which I will present soon,

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is submitted as a full conference paper by me

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and Professor Yuho Linman from University of Gothenburg,

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to the European Conference on Information System,

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which is in Milan, in 2006.

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And their announcement for submitted papers

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will be in the end of February, I think, so we don't know yet.

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So the things I will show you now, it's important to notice

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that the model I will present applies to developer communities,

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open source communities.

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The community, in the study, is quite small,

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but the narrow focus have a meritocratic governance model,

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dedicated member organization, and have very few hobby programmers.

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The relevance for other types of communities,

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such as vendors, sponsored, user and phone nation communities,

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with other governance model needs to be studied further.

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So this doesn't apply to everything, or we hope maybe

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some of them or findings will address also other communities.

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So let's see, this is, I won't go through everything,

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because it's quite, a lot of things in the model,

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but I will start with, let's see if I see all the text.

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So to start your present, an open source community engagement model,

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consist of three main elements, organization, community,

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and digital transformation.

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I've great up everything here else, so you don't have to focus on that now.

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Organizational element represent the internal incentives and activity,

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perform to align the organization to the community.

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The more involved they get in the community, the more aligned they become,

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and the process iterative, and continuous.

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That's the back and forth arrow there.

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So nine minutes.

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Organizational activity sub-aliment consists of evaluating community viability.

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This is an activity prior to taking the decision to engage in a community.

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This entails assessing the open resources, such as documentation, code base,

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repository interactions, frequency, number of maintainers, et cetera.

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But the most time-consuming event is activity to determine if the software

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design and architecture is sound and viable.

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This you need developer competence and next element, maybe the main one.

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This is more massive.

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This is the community.

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The community element represent the mechanisms.

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The organization can potentially access when they align themselves to the goal,

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culture, and process to the community.

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The element is divided into sub-part culture, process, and capabilities.

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So the culture, sub-aliment is part of the, is the part that holds the community together.

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And it's determined by the number of agreed upon principles.

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So, yeah, you can see it here.

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Maricrocratic, trust-based governance, and altruistic environment.

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Probably not going into that.

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So you can ask me later if you want to know more about that.

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And the processes, sub-aliment represents a collaborative and distributed development.

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And of course, in that occurs in the community.

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And there you have a collaborative development.

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It illustrates how organization either by taking terms of joint coordinate development

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initiative in the community.

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So for initiative to occur, one or more members have to take responsibility to push the

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change request through the community.

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And then we have knowledge creation.

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That was another theme we found.

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It's a process depicts co-creation and sharing of experience and insights between

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members.

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The creation of and sharing knowledge can happen in both developer and product

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product on the level.

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That's what we've seen in this case.

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And then you have the software quality insurance and assessment,

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which stems from the fact that co-groups the repository is public and open to everyone

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and programmer take responsibility professional pride in their work.

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So, yeah, that's part of the community engagement.

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And let's see if I can see the last one.

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And then we have the capability sub element,

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which epitomize the technical competence and proficiency in the community,

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which you can access.

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The talent that the community attracts are related to the personal motivation

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and technical problems the community tries to solve.

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So this is more, I'm talking about general things here.

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So the state of the art technology, the digital technology,

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portrays the interest in finding the best possible solution to one

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or a set of problems.

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And then we have modular and deptable system design.

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It's a capability that is too folded.

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The first is that open source solutions are made to be more adaptable

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and comfortable to suit different use cases.

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And the second one is that adaptability comes at an increased

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developer cost due to its more flexible design.

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And a holistic use case perspective entails a variety of ways

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to solve domain business domain problems.

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For the members in the community,

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this translates to new insights or alternative perspective

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on solutions that are both scalable and adoptable.

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And then we have the partnership and synergy opportunity,

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which portray the possibility to find other members

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with similar requirements and form partnership based on trust.

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For example, members can form different clusters depending on the region

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or continent if it's a global open source community.

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And access to global competence pool, which members can utilize here.

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And a cumulative competence and experience is access

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through documentation, communication channels,

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and also prevent members from repeating common mistakes

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when they engage in the community.

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So that's the model.

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So let's see what this implies.

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Model implications.

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So the model aims to describe the dynamic integration

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where organization and community mutually shape each other.

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So for organization, adapting their structure,

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process, and practice over time to align to the community,

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norms, and governance mechanism.

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And also the community evolves through a diverse organization interaction

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by incorporating different use cases, perspectives,

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and expanding its pool of capabilities and resources.

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And the engagement opens up for access to state-of-the-art technology

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and model design that I showed before,

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to fit a wide range of use case scenarios.

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And organization that invest sustain resources

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and demonstrate loyalty to community objectives,

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gain influence, and access to deeper collaboration opportunities.

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And let's see, the last exhale, maybe that engagement enables

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those access to pool of developer competence,

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either within the organization or individual individuals

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that can be contracted or funded through community initiatives.

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And important here that these talents are probably not easily hired

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or recruited nationally, and are not access easily access

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if organization is part of the organization.

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So this is resources that you can use when you are a member.

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So for the next one, let's see, yeah, organization implications.

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Yeah, engagement in community can through core involvement,

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build the transformative organizational capabilities.

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So this pathway requires investment in the developer competence,

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allocating sustained resources, and demonstrating commitment

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to the community principles.

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Let's see, the time, 19 minutes, let's move the evaluation

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of the community is a critical preliminary activity,

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or organization need to assess not only technical factors,

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but also other things such as governance,

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maturity, contributor diversity, and alignment

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between community objectives and their organization.

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And engagement in open source community may manifest as a partial

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or department transformation.

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This is attractive opportunity for maybe strict structural

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rigid organization or traditional organizations.

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And yeah, this maybe leads to the road of the digital transformation.

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If you're a traditional rigid organization or a pathway to it.

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So that we've seen that procuring of the shelf standardized solution.

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Does not facilitate knowledge transfer or trigger change in its

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to international organizations.

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So we see that engagement in the open source community is a

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bottom up approach to engage or transform organizations.

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Normally a digital transformation is geared from the top,

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top down initiative, but we've seen that several organization

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that interacts with the community starts to change the

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transformation starts in the department and maybe

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radiates the other part of the organization.

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And let's see, we'll have one more.

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Yeah.

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So back again, organization need developer competence.

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Either they have it in house or they procure it.

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You see everything from organization have all the developer teams in

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house to other organization, recruiting teams of developers as

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call something working either locally or in other locations.

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But the minimum was that the organization in this study at least

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have project leader or product owner inside in house competence.

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And this was seen as important for the industry transfer and

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the long-term commitment to the open source community.

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And the longer and deeper the better opportunity becomes for

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knowledge transfer use case perspective and etc.

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And tied to the long-term investment resources is a loyalty

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also to the community, which increase influence and access to

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deeper collaboration opportunities.

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Yeah, and also loyalty culture.

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Maybe that doesn't fit all organizations.

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Time up.

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Okay.

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Good.

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Okay.

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The research project has ended.

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So I'm open for questions.

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And if somebody has, yeah, if they want to see this study

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continues, maybe they can talk to me afterwards.

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If they have national funds or European funds because we're

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on profit and we're searching for new research projects.

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Thank you.

