I usually hang out on the slack channel, but I thought I would post the idea everywhere to get feedback.
My gut says there are going to be a lot of new people getting involved in Dash in the next couple months/years. Admittedly, there is a ton of information for newbies to digest. With regards to the proposals to the treasury, I think we can and should make substantial improvements in the process.
1. If you do a google search for “How to make a proposal to Dash” this is the top meaningful response: Since I can't post links yet, this will be a text simulation of a hotlink:
dashcentral.org/budget/create
This is an easy but expensive way to put in an official proposal to the Masternode group.
Unfortunately, that’s absolutely the wrong first step.
The first step is to have a pre-proposal conversation with the slack/masternodes/dash.org/proposals community. But how would people find that out? Amanda’s otherwise excellent video about proposals suggests that you submit the proposal first, and then publicize it. If they actually do that, they get yelled at for not doing it right. This is both inefficient, and it’s bad public relations for the Dash community.
2. I think the cost to submit a proposal should be cut by 75% and adjusted as needed to keep the entry level to around a hundred bucks. This should increase the number of proposals substantially but still weed out trivial fluff.
More proposals reduces the risk that when we come down to the wire, we won't be forced to choose between just burning the last 186 Dash that haven't been allocated or picking some last minute ½ baked proposal.
3. I think the development team should have a standing proposal during every cycle for a "rainy day" fund. In the event that there's 186 Dash that is looking for a home, we could always stash it in the rainy day fund rather than burn it.
Then the Dev team has some flexibility if an unforeseen problem or opportunity comes up, they have some reserve Dash. Effectively, this raises the bar for proposals that are down the list a ways in terms of bang for the buck. Again, weeds out the fluff.
4. I would like to see a prominent list of trusted members of the dev team, and the larger Dash/Slack community. If a newbie has no idea about the merits and risks of a new proposal, they could ask for comments from this list of trusted people. And they could easily recognize comments on proposals, "Oh, moocowmoo thinks this is a terrible idea. I trust Moocowmoo, I vote no."
This would also alert new proposers who they should chat with to get useful feedback in producing a solid and useful proposal.
5. We need a prominent tutorial on DashCentral, Reddit DashPay and the Slack channel on how to submit a good proposal to the treasury. Amanda’s video from 6 months ago, while good, could use some updating. Somebody that knows something about search engine optimization could insure that the tutorial comes up on top of a google search.
In summary, good proposals would include:
A. A full and robust discussion on the proposal channel of Slack/Dash prior to submitting an actual proposal.
B. Establish who you are, to assure us you’re not some fly by night scammer.
C. An obvious way to verify if the owner of the proposal follows through and does a good job.
D. An estimate of the return on investment.
E. A better means of dealing with the highly volatile price of Dash. There are a ton of good ways to achieve this. It could be a "stretch goal" for additional work, or agreeing to donate the overage to the Devs’ rainy day fund, or perhaps Dash’s favorite charity. How awesome would it be for us to support Habitat for Humanity, or fill in the blank every month. Talk about awesome public relations…
OK, I have officially stirred the pot, let’s see what solutions emerge.
My gut says there are going to be a lot of new people getting involved in Dash in the next couple months/years. Admittedly, there is a ton of information for newbies to digest. With regards to the proposals to the treasury, I think we can and should make substantial improvements in the process.
1. If you do a google search for “How to make a proposal to Dash” this is the top meaningful response: Since I can't post links yet, this will be a text simulation of a hotlink:
dashcentral.org/budget/create
This is an easy but expensive way to put in an official proposal to the Masternode group.
Unfortunately, that’s absolutely the wrong first step.
The first step is to have a pre-proposal conversation with the slack/masternodes/dash.org/proposals community. But how would people find that out? Amanda’s otherwise excellent video about proposals suggests that you submit the proposal first, and then publicize it. If they actually do that, they get yelled at for not doing it right. This is both inefficient, and it’s bad public relations for the Dash community.
2. I think the cost to submit a proposal should be cut by 75% and adjusted as needed to keep the entry level to around a hundred bucks. This should increase the number of proposals substantially but still weed out trivial fluff.
More proposals reduces the risk that when we come down to the wire, we won't be forced to choose between just burning the last 186 Dash that haven't been allocated or picking some last minute ½ baked proposal.
3. I think the development team should have a standing proposal during every cycle for a "rainy day" fund. In the event that there's 186 Dash that is looking for a home, we could always stash it in the rainy day fund rather than burn it.
Then the Dev team has some flexibility if an unforeseen problem or opportunity comes up, they have some reserve Dash. Effectively, this raises the bar for proposals that are down the list a ways in terms of bang for the buck. Again, weeds out the fluff.
4. I would like to see a prominent list of trusted members of the dev team, and the larger Dash/Slack community. If a newbie has no idea about the merits and risks of a new proposal, they could ask for comments from this list of trusted people. And they could easily recognize comments on proposals, "Oh, moocowmoo thinks this is a terrible idea. I trust Moocowmoo, I vote no."
This would also alert new proposers who they should chat with to get useful feedback in producing a solid and useful proposal.
5. We need a prominent tutorial on DashCentral, Reddit DashPay and the Slack channel on how to submit a good proposal to the treasury. Amanda’s video from 6 months ago, while good, could use some updating. Somebody that knows something about search engine optimization could insure that the tutorial comes up on top of a google search.
In summary, good proposals would include:
A. A full and robust discussion on the proposal channel of Slack/Dash prior to submitting an actual proposal.
B. Establish who you are, to assure us you’re not some fly by night scammer.
C. An obvious way to verify if the owner of the proposal follows through and does a good job.
D. An estimate of the return on investment.
E. A better means of dealing with the highly volatile price of Dash. There are a ton of good ways to achieve this. It could be a "stretch goal" for additional work, or agreeing to donate the overage to the Devs’ rainy day fund, or perhaps Dash’s favorite charity. How awesome would it be for us to support Habitat for Humanity, or fill in the blank every month. Talk about awesome public relations…
OK, I have officially stirred the pot, let’s see what solutions emerge.