I've heard it countless times in Drupal community discussions: "I like that idea," "We need this," "This can really help." The enthusiasm is genuine, but here's what I've learned through my experience with community initiatives. Good intentions without action don't move the needle.
When we launched the IXP (Inexperienced developer) Initiative, the response was overwhelming. So many people reached out saying they wanted to help. Then we get busy, life happens, and the follow-through disappears. I've been guilty of this myself. In the end, it was just a few of us (Mike Anello, Ana Laura Coto, myself, and Tim Lehnen from the DA) who did the actual work of defining the program.
This pattern isn't unique to the IXP Initiative. It's something I see across our global Drupal community, especially when it comes to regional representation and authentic global participation. For our community to thrive globally, we need systematic change that benefits everyone.
The Numbers Tell a Story
When you look at Drupal.org's certified partners, the geographic concentration tells a story. The gap between regions is massive, with top-tier partners with 30,000+ contribution credits predominantly based in wealthier markets. There are different business models working in different regions. Some companies focus on local markets, while others depend on staff augmentation work for international clients. This dependency relationship means many regional companies may not know about partnership opportunities or can't access them.
In my February intervention at the Drupal Association board meeting, I shared some economic realities: minimum salary in countries like Colombia runs $200-300 per month, while in the United States, minimum wage is $7.25 per hour. With 40 weekly working hours, that's approximately $1,160 per month in the US. This total may exceed what many junior developers would make in Latin America. I speak about Latin America because it's what I know, but this economic reality translates to other regions as well.
As Tim Doyle noted in the board meeting, the Drupal Association (DA) does have regional pricing adjustments, but this needs to be better publicized so regional communities know these options exist.
From Franchise to Federation Support
I proposed a franchise schema for DrupalCon to the DA back in 2015. I'm glad to see elements of that concept being used now, but there's a fundamental problem: all the risk gets placed on the people interested in organizing a regional DrupalCon.
When I explored DrupalCon Latin America returning, I was told to find a fiscal sponsor. This requirement exists because of DA budget constraints - another example of the paradox.
This should be an intentional strategy from the Drupal Association or the emerging Federation initiative. During my experience helping organize DrupalCon Bogotá 2015, if we had continued building on that foundation, we'd have established regional DrupalCons by now.
The path forward requires building a cadence of regional events. Initially, organizers need well-known international speakers to attract local developers and gain government and business support. Eventually, they could become self-sustaining regional powerhouses. The goal would be genuinely regional conferences: by Latin Americans for Latin Americans, by Africans for Africans, creating local business opportunities and expertise.
In Latin America, we have trade show style events (what we call "ferias") - imagine a conference where each company booth potentially generates business revenue where companies pay for their spots and create sustainable business models around the conference itself. I believe DrupalCon should incorporate a well-balanced hybrid approach that includes some of this business-community balance. I also wish DrupalCamps could find this local business connections approach beneficial, especially if we can open the middle and bottom of the pyramid to smaller budget customers.
The Federation Opportunity
During recent community discussions about the Federation initiative, I've emphasized that we're dealing with multiple chicken-and-egg situations. Regional conferences need international speakers for credibility, the Marketplace initiative for accessible business models, the Federation for institutional support, and Drupal CMS for simplified access. Each depends on the others.
Here's the paradox: everyone is resource-constrained right now, and these initiatives might not immediately solve everyone's problems. Yet without building this interconnected system, regional communities will remain dependent on wealthier markets indefinitely. We need to build this interconnected ecosystem when resources are scarce, even though skeptical communities don't see immediate benefits. Recent Federation discussions highlighted this when community members raised concerns about representation gaps, including regions like Africa that currently lack formal inclusion.
The Federation initiative represents a historic opportunity to move beyond the "we should do this" conversations toward systematic structures that actually enable global participation. Regional DrupalCons need institutional support, not just permission to proceed.
Think about what this could look like: DrupalCon Asia, LATAM, and Africa as ongoing initiatives with proper Federation support. Regional certification pathways that make economic sense for local markets. Partnership models that work for companies serving their regional markets.
Beyond Good Intentions
When I participated in recent Federation discussions, I saw genuine enthusiasm for addressing these challenges. People acknowledge the need. The question is whether we're ready to move from recognition to action.
I've spent years working on regional community building. From helping organize DrupalCon Bogotá 2015 to participating in the Colombian Drupal Association to implementing the IXP Initiative. Each experience has taught me that community enthusiasm is necessary but not sufficient. You need systematic support, proper incentive alignment, and institutional commitment.
I'm committed to contributing to these solutions, not just identifying the problems. The community has the opportunity to shape this transition, but only if we move beyond good intentions. The community has shown it can innovate when we combine good intentions with proper structure and resource commitment. The question is whether we're ready to apply that same approach to global representation and regional development.
The Drupal community has always been about building together. Now we need to make sure "together" actually includes everyone, not just those who already have the resources to participate on terms designed for the wealthiest markets. That's going to take more than good intentions. It's going to take intentional action. Join the Federation Working Group discussions. Advocate for regional representation. Help turn good intentions into systematic change.
Add new comment