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rfc:rfc9400



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) M. Kühlewind Request for Comments: 9400 Ericsson Category: Informational M. Duke ISSN: 2070-1721 Google

                                                             June 2023
      Guidelines for the Organization of Fully Online Meetings

Abstract

 This document provides guidelines for the planning and organization
 of fully online meetings, regarding the number, length, and
 composition of sessions on the meeting agenda.  These guidelines are
 based on the experience gained by holding online meetings during the
 COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are candidates for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9400.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2023 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
 Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
 in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
   1.1.  Requirements Language
 2.  Some History
 3.  Guidelines for Online Meeting Planning
   3.1.  Time Zone Selection
     3.1.1.  Guidelines for Selection
   3.2.  Number of Days and Total Hours per Day
   3.3.  Session/Break Length
   3.4.  Number of Parallel Tracks
 4.  Additional Considerations and Recommendations
   4.1.  Full vs. Limited Agenda (and Interim Meetings)
   4.2.  Flexibility of Time Usage
   4.3.  Inclusivity and Socializing
   4.4.  Experiments
   4.5.  IANA Considerations
   4.6.  Security Considerations
 5.  References
   5.1.  Normative References
   5.2.  Informative References
 Acknowledgments
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced the IETF to convert all its
 plenary meetings to online-only events.  This document records the
 experience gained by holding plenary meetings fully online and
 proposes guidelines based on this experience.  In general,
 participant surveys indicated satisfaction with the organization of
 these meetings.
 Although these guidelines reflect lessons learned in 2020 and 2021,
 the IETF is encouraged to continue to experiment with the format and
 agenda of fully online meetings, using this document as a baseline.
 Hybrid meetings (meaning meetings that have large remote
 participation but also onsite participation) are out of scope.
 However, some of the experience gained from fully online meetings
 might also provide input for decisions regarding the organization of
 hybrid meetings.

1.1. Requirements Language

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.
 This document uses the term "plenary meeting" for the whole IETF
 meeting that covers the IETF meeting week; this term is used to
 distinguish the plenary meeting from other IETF meetings like
 "interim meetings".  The term "administrative plenary" is used for
 the respective session during the IETF meeting week that is usually
 hosted on Wednesday.

2. Some History

 When the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a worldwide
 pandemic in March 2020, the IETF canceled its plenary meeting and
 organized an online replacement in less than 2 weeks.  For this first
 online-only meeting, the agenda was reduced to a set of sessions that
 benefited most from cross-area participation, like BoFs, first-time
 meetings of new working groups, and dispatch sessions.  It also
 included the administrative plenary to preserve the official handover
 procedures that occur at March IETF meetings, as described in
 [RFC8713].
 With a reduced agenda, the meeting format was two sessions (about 4
 hours) per day with a maximum of two parallel tracks.  Other working
 group meetings were scheduled as interims over the following 6 weeks.
 The IESG published a purely advisory recommended schedule
 [INTERIM-SCHEDULE] to reduce conflicts among those interims.
 While satisfaction was high right after the meeting
 [IETF107-FEEDBACK], some participants later indicated in mailing list
 discussions that the period of intensive interims had a greater
 impact on their calendar than a single plenary meeting week, and in
 some meetings participation was reduced.  Those interims tended to
 occur at times convenient for the bulk of participants, which was
 convenient for most but could exclude those in less common time
 zones.
 For the remainder of 2020 and 2021, the online schedule was switched
 back to be similar to an in-person meeting (1- to 2-hour slots and
 eight or nine parallel tracks).  However, each day was limited to 5-6
 hours in recognition that remote participation is more tiring.
 All fully online meetings followed the time zone of the planned in-
 person meeting location.  As a 6-hour agenda has some flexibility
 regarding the start time while still fitting within a previously used
 8-hour in-person agenda, the start time was approximately noon, with
 adjustments of an hour or so to mitigate the impact of early morning
 hours in time zones with many participants.  As selection of in-
 person meeting sites was consistent with the 1-1-1 guideline as
 documented in [RFC8719], this approach was intended to share the
 burden across all common geographies roughly equally.

3. Guidelines for Online Meeting Planning

3.1. Time Zone Selection

 The following algorithm was not used in 2020 or 2021, but it enables
 most participants to avoid late-night sessions in two out of every
 three fully online IETF plenary meetings.  Basically, every fully
 online meeting is for two regions of the three regions described in
 [RFC8719], with one being roughly after sunrise and the other around
 sundown.  This has the trade-off that the third region is in the
 middle of night.
 The times are also seasonally adjusted to leverage differentials in
 Daylight Saving Time.  These time slots are as follows, in UTC, based
 on the Daylight Saving Practices at the time of publication:
 +===============+=========================+=========================+
 | Name          | Times (Northern Summer) | Times (Northern         |
 |               |                         | Winter)                 |
 +===============+=========================+=========================+
 | North America | 0500-1100 UTC           | 0600-1200 UTC           |
 | Night         |                         |                         |
 +---------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+
 | Asia Night    | 1300-1900 UTC           | 1400-2000 UTC           |
 +---------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+
 | Europe Night  | 2200-0400 UTC           | 2200-0400 UTC           |
 +---------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+
                                Table 1
 Note that the "Europe Night" slot covers the "early morning" slot for
 Asia where most countries do not have Daylight Saving Time.
 If Daylight Saving Practices change -- this change is under
 consideration in multiple countries at the time of publication --
 this table may need adjustment.
 The intent of rotating between these three slots is to scatter
 meetings throughout the course of the global day, to maximize the
 ease of participants so that no attendee has to be consistently
 inconvenienced, regardless of their location and what time of day is
 optimal for their schedule.  However, as participation is distributed
 globally, it needs to be acknowledged that restricting the scheme to
 three regions observes the intent of [RFC8719] but does not achieve
 the goal of two non-late-night sessions for all participants equally.

3.1.1. Guidelines for Selection

 The IETF SHOULD select a start time from these three choices based on
 the prior three meetings.  The following table covers all
 permutations of previous meetings held in person in Region A, B, or C
 or remotely in the nights of one of those regions.
 +====================+==================+==============+===========+
 | Three Meetings Ago | Two Meetings Ago | Last Meeting | Online    |
 |                    |                  |              | Selection |
 +====================+==================+==============+===========+
 | Any                | Any              | In-Person A  | A Night   |
 +--------------------+------------------+--------------+-----------+
 | Any                | Online A Night   | Online B     | C Night   |
 |                    |                  | Night        |           |
 +--------------------+------------------+--------------+-----------+
 | Online A Night     | In-Person B      | Online B     | C Night   |
 |                    |                  | Night        |           |
 +--------------------+------------------+--------------+-----------+
 | In-Person A        | In-Person B      | Online B     | A Night   |
 |                    |                  | Night        |           |
 +--------------------+------------------+--------------+-----------+
 | In-Person A        | In-Person A      | Online A     | See below |
 |                    |                  | Night        |           |
 +--------------------+------------------+--------------+-----------+
 | Online A Night     | Online B Night   | Online C     | A Night   |
 |                    |                  | Night        |           |
 +--------------------+------------------+--------------+-----------+
                               Table 2
 This table follows two basic guidelines:
 1)  Whenever a fully online meeting follows an in-person meeting, the
     online meeting time is used that most disadvantages the
     participants in the time zone where the in-person meeting was
     held.
 2)  If multiple fully online meetings follow each other, the time
     zone selection should be rotated based on the most recent time
     zones in which the in-person meetings were held.
 The final case occurs in the rare event that back-to-back in-person
 plenary meetings occur in the same region.  In this case, find the
 most recent meeting that was in neither 'A' (if in person) nor 'A
 Night' (if fully online).  If this meeting was in person in region
 'B', then the next meeting should be in 'B Night'.  If it was remote
 in 'B Night', the next meeting should be in 'C Night'.

3.2. Number of Days and Total Hours per Day

 By 2021, fully online meetings were consistently held over 5 days
 with roughly 6-hour meeting days.  The day with the administrative
 plenary, which concludes with multiple open mic sessions, sometimes
 exceeded this limit.
 Six hours of online meetings, with two 30-minute breaks, was a
 compromise between the physical limits of attending an online meeting
 in an inconvenient time zone and the demand for many sessions with a
 manageable number of conflicts.  The IETF 109 feedback
 [IETF109-SURVEY] indicated broad satisfaction with a 5-day meeting
 but only medium satisfaction with the overall length of each day.
 The IETF did not seriously consider extending sessions into the
 weekend before or after the main meeting week, although at IETF 108
 and subsequent meetings the Hackathon occupied the entire week before
 (see [RFC9311]).

3.3. Session/Break Length

 For fully online meetings, there are typically fewer sessions per day
 than for in-person meetings, to keep the overall meeting day to
 roughly 6 hours.  With fewer sessions, chairs were offered only two
 options for session length (instead of three).
 IETF 108, based on an indicated preference of the community,
 scheduled 50- and 100-minute slots, with 10-minute breaks, in order
 to keep the overall day length at 5 hours.  This resulted in many
 sessions going over time, which indicated that 10 minutes for breaks
 is not practical.
 The survey after IETF 109 [IETF109-SURVEY] showed high satisfaction
 with 60/120-minute session lengths and 30-minute breaks, and a
 significant improvement in satisfaction over IETF 108.
 The longer breaks, while extending the day, provided adequate time
 for meals, exercise, and "hallway" conversations using online tools.

3.4. Number of Parallel Tracks

 In-person meetings are limited in the number of parallel tracks by
 the number of meeting rooms, but online meetings are not.  However,
 more parallel tracks would increase the number of possible agenda
 conflicts.
 If the total number of requested sessions exceeds the capacity of the
 usual eight parallel tracks, it is possible for a fully online
 meeting to simply use more tracks.  If the number and length of
 meeting days are seen as fixed, this decision is implicitly made by
 the working group chairs requesting a certain number of sessions and
 length.
 IETF 111 used nine parallel tracks for some of the sessions and
 experienced slightly more conflicts in the agenda-scheduling process,
 though there was no statistically significant increase in
 dissatisfaction about conflicts in the survey [IETF111-SURVEY].
 The IESG encouraged working group chairs to limit their session
 requests and use interim meetings aggressively for focused work.

4. Additional Considerations and Recommendations

4.1. Full vs. Limited Agenda (and Interim Meetings)

 The IETF 108 meeting survey [IETF108-SURVEY] asked about the
 structure of that meeting (full meeting) compared to that of IETF
 107, which hosted only a limited set of sessions followed by interims
 in the weeks after.  The structure of IETF 108 was preferred by 82%.
 Respondents valued cross-participation and an intensive meeting week
 for maintaining project momentum.
 Furthermore, a well-defined meeting time, rather than spreading many
 interims over the whole year, can make deconflicting with other non-
 IETF meetings easier.
 However, interim meetings can also help to reduce scheduling
 conflicts during an IETF week and allow for a more optimal time slot
 for the key participants.  While interim meetings are less likely to
 attract people with casual interest, they provide a good opportunity
 for the most active participants of a group to have detailed
 technical discussions and solve recorded issues efficiently.

4.2. Flexibility of Time Usage

 This document recommends further experiments with reducing conflicts
 by leveraging the increased flexibility of the online format.
 An in-person meeting must fit all sessions into an acceptable length
 for international travel (usually roughly a week), but online
 meetings do not have that constraint.
 Therefore, it would be possible to keep most regular working group
 sessions within the usual 5 main meeting days but have some of the
 more conflicted sessions in other dedicated time slots.  As the
 Hackathon for fully online meetings is usually held in the week
 before the online plenary meeting [RFC9311], that week is already a
 highly active week for many IETF participants and might provide an
 opportunity to schedule a few selected sessions.
 This might work especially well for sessions that are of high
 interest to a large part of the community, such as BoFs and dispatch
 meetings, and therefore hard to schedule during the main IETF week.
 At IETF 112, the IESG ran an experiment where the administrative
 plenary was scheduled on the Wednesday before the official session
 week.  The experiment report [IETF112-EXPERIMENT] found that it led
 to a reduction in scheduling conflicts but also a slight drop in
 attendance of the administrative plenary, partly due to insufficient
 awareness.

4.3. Inclusivity and Socializing

 Participation in the fully online meetings in 2021 was high and had a
 stable per-country distribution, even though time zones were rotated.
 This indicates that online meetings support a more consistent
 geographic distribution of participants than in-person meetings,
 where participation often fluctuates based on the location.
 However, online meetings do not provide an equivalent opportunity to
 socialize.  Despite significant investment in tools to foster hallway
 conversations, many did not use those tools, whether due to ignorance
 of them, dislike of the tools, or a preference for other activities
 at home (including sleep and food) over hallway interactions.
 There was a decrease in submissions of new (-00) Internet-Drafts
 during 2020 and 2021, although the overall number of draft
 submissions remained stable; this decrease in new submissions might
 have resulted from the loss of these interactions.  Informal
 conversations might be important to inspire new work.

4.4. Experiments

 This document recommends further experiments with the meeting
 structure.  Often, only practical experience can answer open
 questions.  A given meeting SHOULD only experiment with one major
 change at a time in order to be able to assess the outcome correctly.
 Furthermore, the IESG SHOULD announce any such experiment well in
 advance, so people can adjust to changes and potentially provide
 feedback.

4.5. IANA Considerations

 This document has no IANA actions.

4.6. Security Considerations

 This document has no security considerations.

5. References

5.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
 [RFC8719]  Krishnan, S., "High-Level Guidance for the Meeting Policy
            of the IETF", BCP 226, RFC 8719, DOI 10.17487/RFC8719,
            February 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8719>.

5.2. Informative References

 [IETF107-FEEDBACK]
            Daley, J., "IETF 107 Virtual Meeting Survey", 17 April
            2020, <https://www.ietf.org/media/documents/ietf-107-
            survey-results.pdf>.
 [IETF108-SURVEY]
            Daley, J., "IETF 108 Meeting Survey", 13 August 2020,
            <https://www.ietf.org/blog/ietf-108-meeting-survey/>.
 [IETF109-SURVEY]
            Daley, J., "IETF 109 Post-Meeting Survey", 7 December
            2020,
            <https://www.ietf.org/blog/ietf-109-post-meeting-survey/>.
 [IETF111-SURVEY]
            Daley, J., "IETF 111 post-meeting survey", 23 August 2021,
            <https://www.ietf.org/blog/ietf-111-post-meeting-survey/>.
 [IETF112-EXPERIMENT]
            IESG, "IETF 112 Plenary Experiment Evaluation", 4 February
            2022, <https://www.ietf.org/blog/ietf112-plenary-
            experiment-evaluation/>.
 [INTERIM-SCHEDULE]
            Cooper, A., "Subject: Post-IETF-107 Recommended Virtual
            Interim Schedule", message to the Working Group Chairs
            mailing list, 13 March 2020,
            <https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/wgchairs/
            l382SqKVVHoTzFw9kIYl2boM6_c/>.
 [RFC8713]  Kucherawy, M., Ed., Hinden, R., Ed., and J. Livingood,
            Ed., "IAB, IESG, IETF Trust, and IETF LLC Selection,
            Confirmation, and Recall Process: Operation of the IETF
            Nominating and Recall Committees", BCP 10, RFC 8713,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8713, February 2020,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8713>.
 [RFC9311]  Eckel, C., "Running an IETF Hackathon", RFC 9311,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC9311, September 2022,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9311>.

Acknowledgments

 Thanks to Brian Carpenter, Lars Eggert, Toerless Eckert, Charles
 Eckel, Jason Livingood, Sanjeev Gupta, Dale Worley, and Mark
 Nottingham for their reviews, and thanks to the many other people who
 provided input and suggestions on the time zone discussion!

Authors' Addresses

 Mirja Kühlewind
 Ericsson
 Email: mirja.kuehlewind@ericsson.com
 Martin Duke
 Google
 Email: martin.h.duke@gmail.com
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