Open-source documentation is shaped as much by people and processes as by tools. As projects grow, documentation workflows change, teams reorganise, and well-intended improvements can sometimes create new problems elsewhere.
In this Boye & Co member call, we’re joined by Milana Cap, long-time contributor and representative of the WordPress Documentation team. Milana has spent years working across end-user, developer, release, and contributor documentation in one of the world’s largest open-source ecosystems.
Drawing on this experience, Milana will share practical insights into how documentation workflows evolve over time, what tends to work well at scale, and where things often break down
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Content design is often the overlooked key to product success. We all know the feeling: teams ship features at pace, design systems mature, AI enters the workflow, and yet the product still feels confusing, inconsistent, or oddly hard to use. Often it’s not because the interface is “bad”, but because the content decisions, the language, the structure, and the flow are treated as something to polish at the end rather than design work from the start.
That’s where content design leadership comes in and why so many teams are struggling right now. Content designers are increasingly asked to do strategic work (voice and tone, information architecture, onboarding, trust, accessibility, decision-making), but they’re still often positioned as a support function. They’re brought in late, spread too thin, or expected to “fix words” in products that were never set up to succeed. And when content design is under-resourced, everyone feels the friction: teams move slower, quality drops, and customers lose confidence.
In her book Managing Content Design Teams: A Guide for Product and UX Leaders, Melanie Seibert offers a refreshingly practical guide to making content design a real capability
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The stories we tell about “green tech” are comforting. Gerry McGovern’s new book argues they’re also dangerously incomplete.
Join us for a live conversation with Gerry McGovern, one of the most respected voices in digital thinking and a long-time critic of wasteful, growth-driven technology.
In his upcoming book, 99th Day: A Warning About Technology (out in February), Gerry makes a stark case:
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Once again, AI dominated many of the conversations this year, but the most-read pieces went beyond technology alone. Questions around discoverability, authoring experience, professional identity and how teams adapt to structural change all featured prominently, reflecting what many members were actively grappling with in their day-to-day work.
As the year comes to a close, we like to pause and look back. Boye & Co is built around conversation and learning together, often in the same room, but sharing those insights more widely is just as important. The blog remains one of the ways we do that: capturing ideas, discussions and perspectives while they are still forming.
In 2025, we published 52 blog posts, up from 35 in 2024, covering everything from AI and CMS evolution to sustainability, equity and the human side of digital work. Keeping with tradition, here are five popular pieces that resonated most with our community, based on readership, engagement and ongoing discussion. Selecting just five from a much larger body of work is never quite fair, but it does offer a useful snapshot of what mattered most this year. As always, the list is presented in alphabetical order.
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A year-end reflection on six books that slowed me down and shaped my thinking, including Careless People, How to Do Nothing, If There Is a Will, There Is a Way, How to Resist Amazon (and Why), How to Know a Person, and This Is for Everyone.
Together, they offered fewer answers, better questions, and a timely counterweight to the speed, noise, and incentives of life online.
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The traffic collapse is real. Around 800 million weekly users of ChatGPT are already changing how people search, alongside growing audiences for Gemini, Perplexity and other AI services. With more than half of all searches now ending without a click, some organisations are experiencing traffic losses of up to 90%.
These are no longer edge cases or future warnings. Over the past year, AI-generated answers have started to satisfy user intent before visitors ever reach a website, fundamentally changing how visibility, authority and value are created online.
In last week’s end-of-year member’s call, we explored what this shift really means in practice with Jörg Schäffer, a Hamburg-based product marketing leader with more than a decade of experience working at the intersection of content platforms, search and digital commerce
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Over the past decade, I have spent approximately $194,345 USD on themes, subscriptions, hosting, plugins, templates, and licensed media across multiple content management systems. That figure is not an exaggeration, nor is it unusual for organizations that have operated at scale in the CMS ecosystem. What makes it notable is not the amount, but the outcome: despite significant investment, much of this spend produced little durable, compounding value.
This experience is not unique. It is a structural characteristic of how traditional CMS platforms evolved. Tooling, plugins, and hosting models optimized for flexibility and extensibility, but often at the cost of long-term resilience, portability, and efficiency. Over time, complexity became normalized.
As the former owner of a hosting company, an advertising agency specializing in CMS, a board member of Open Source Matters and Joomla, CMO of Magnolia and CMO of Jahia, I believe….
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Digital products are getting smarter and more energy intensive, and AI is accelerating that trend. Many teams are now asking how to design responsibly while still moving fast. In that context, Sustainable UX is shifting from a nice-to-have to a practical necessity.
In a recent end-of-2025 members call with Thorsten Jonas, we explored the latest developments shaping the Sustainable UX Network as it moves towards 2026. Thorsten is known for using memorable quotes to anchor complex topics, and he left us with a fitting one by Jane Goodall, a long-standing environmental advocate known for her work on the relationship between humans and the natural world.
“Just remember that every day you live, you make an impact on the planet.”
As sustainability pressures grow and AI reshapes the digital landscape, the network is gaining momentum around shared methods, tools, and collaborations that help organisations make sustainability a natural part of everyday design work.
As a long-time digital sustainability activist, responsible AI evangelist, and founder of the SUX Network, Thorsten combined reflection with practical direction. The session helped clarify not just why Sustainable UX matters, but how teams can start acting on it more consistently.
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I thought I might retire this year. I quit a company I loved and left people whom I enjoyed working with.
I removed, unsubscribed and eliminated all noise. It took 3 months....but finally, I gained some clarity.
I’m taking the next year to focus deeply on a few areas: how to leverage AI intelligently for investing, how to rebuild and modernize existing applications, and how to redefine my own priorities as an entrepreneur.
This certification pushed me in ways I didn’t expect…
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We are excited to announce a new addition to our conference programme:
Open Source CMS 26.
Taking place on 20–21 October 2026 in Utrecht, Open Source CMS 26 is a new European conference for the open source CMS community. It brings together practitioners, digital leaders, agencies, and platform builders working with open source CMS in real organisations.
This is a focused, practitioner-led conference rooted in the Boye & Co community. It is designed as a place to…
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I used to play it safe when booking conference speakers.
I picked the low risk options. Well known names, proven speakers, familiar companies. I knew what I would get, and I could build a reliable programme around that.
But over time, I started to question whether that was really what people came for.
Were we optimising for safety, or for learning?
For recognition, or for genuinely new perspectives?
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Our annual collab meeting returned to Hamburg in late November, once again generously hosted by adesso. The atmosphere was exactly what makes this community special: curious, informal, quietly ambitious and rooted in shared practice.
People arrived from across industries and regions, filling the room with a mix that has become a hallmark of these meetings. Enterprise leaders from SAP and Adobe sat alongside public-sector teams from Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein, product companies like Cognigy, CoreMedia, Staffbase, and StreamX, and a strong delegation from agency members including B13, Monday Consulting, and Sitegeist. The result felt less like an event and more like a working session with friends.
This year’s agenda reflected the shifts we are all navigating: AI’s growing influence on design and content, new expectations in public services, the ongoing grind of accessibility, the realities of governance and compliance, and the very human work of values, culture and craft…
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"Belonging is not the warm glow after a team lunch. It is a hardwired human need."
This was one among several notable quotes from Antonia Fedder during her energising recent members’ call on The Business of Belonging. Exclusion, she reminded us, registers in the same region of the brain where we process physical pain. The cost of ignoring this is profound for organisations, while the upside of taking belonging seriously is decisive.
Antonia, who is a Hamburg-based designer and an active member of our community, brings a rare combination of clarity and pragmatism. Her work spans
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Yesterday’s Boye & Co “annual collab meeting” in Amsterdam felt like a mini CMS Summit Frankfurt: same open, curious energy, only in a smaller room with lightning talks on content, accessibility, AI and structure.
It was a packed agenda and below I have tried to share a brief summary of what we covered:
First up was Stefan Barac, who kicked off with accessibility and exclusion…
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My main message to the TYPO3 community yesterday at the T3CON25 conference in Düsseldorf:
Your ecosystem is growing, which is impressive in 2025, but your websites are getting dirtier.
Customers still expect faster, lighter and more responsive digital experiences, yet across the industry we continue to produce heavier sites and more complexity than most teams genuinely need. This is not just a TYPO3 problem. It is a marketplace challenge…
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