What basic information in a proposal is needed? Bear in mind it shouldn't be too much...Well, again, we must advert back to what the purpose of the system itself is. There is one thing that the system definitely
should not be set up to do, and that is to judge and approve the proposals themselves. That implies a kind of centralized decisionmaking that the CZ division of powers militates against.
The purpose of the system is project management, not project decisionmaking--there's a big difference--or, in other words, it's all about bookkeeping and cheerleading.
I think it will help for us to distinguish between some very basic types of proposals. One would be a proposal that a decision be made about some particular question; call these "Issues." Another would be a proposal that CZ adopt a specific policy or process or take some definite action; call these "Proposals." Well, I think it makes sense to distinguish Issues from Proposals, and also to treat them slightly differently. This doesn't necessarily mean they need to be made into different queues.
OK, so for purposes of "bookkeeping and cheerleading" (but not decisionmaking), what needs to be included in the (text of the) proposal itself? Let's see what Robert has put in so far in the present version of the proposals template: proposal text; justification; prior discussion; and notes. Well, let's see. How much of this, and what else, is needed in order to keep track of the proposal and make sure it is intelligently and efficiently considered and, possibly, adopted and acted upon?
The proposal text is obvious, but I would add a proposal title for ease of scanning, and I would limit both title and description under a certain number of words. The full proposal can be read elsewhere. (Where, we'll discuss, but this isn't the place for full proposals. It's the place to get an overview of the whole proposal proposal, with proposals living outside the system, so that the system itself can remain simple and easy to understand.)
As to issues, the title should contain a relatively simple question, and the text of the issue should lay out (briefly) the options that the person is proposing to present
as options.
I can think of only one reason to include the justification, and that is to explain why the proposal might appear necessary or beneficial, thereby simply clarifying why the proposal exists at all. It isn't part of the purpose of the justification section to give a full and complete defense of the proposal. So, all that justificatory work should be done elsewhere. And so, again, the number of words allotted to "justification" should be limited.
As to "prior discussion," I would definitely omit "prior" in any case, as any discussion for any non-adopted proposal will potentially be ongoing. Should we link to discussion at all? I'm not sure. Since the full proposal will live elsewhere, and we'd like people to read it before discussing it, why not simply link to the proposal page, wherever it might be? This strikes me as being ruled out by the "simplest possible system" meta-rule.
That raises the question: where
should the full proposals live? It depends on the
area of the proposal. I'll discuss that later. But, obviously, the template has to generate a link to the (full) proposal.
A "notes" section? Sure.
In addition, we might need to add the following:
(1) Assigned decisionmakers. To discuss. Will include things like the Editorial Council, the Editor-in-Chief, "whoever shows up," etc. This is a big topic that we must not quickly gloss over.
(2) Driver. These are the people who move the proposal from initial conception to consideration by the relevant decisionmakers, whoever they might be. Anyone can add their names here, as long as they specifically commit to moving the proposal along. You aren't necessary going to be the driver of a proposal just because you make the proposal. If you do nothing with it, you should be removed as driver, and something should happen to the proposal. Moreover, just because you're the driver, that doesn't
necessarily mean you get to spell out the details of the policy; that might have to be done by someone else, and so the proposal or issue might turn out looking different from what you originally proposed. More later on that.
Those are definite. The following are optional and, for that reason, should be strongly considered not to include:
(3) Status. Will it help very much for us to have a line that will read (for example) "Initial proposal," "Discussion," "Revision," "Under consideration by decisionmakers," etc.?
(4) Next step. This could be automatically generated by the data used for "Status."
(5) Urgency. Yes or no. Whether it's specifically important that it be done before a
specific date or not.
(6) Impact. Whether, in someone's opinion (?), the impact of the proposal is project-wide and dramatic, or relatively narrow and small in impact.
The last two might be used to rank the order of proposals. But they probably aren't necessary at all if we just have a queue. More on that later, too (discussion?

).
Anything else?