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  • Overview
  • Introduction
    • What are open standards?
    • Types of open standards for data
    • Using open standards for data
    • When not to create a new standard
  • Value and Open Standards
    • Getting started
    • Economic impacts
    • Technological impacts
    • Spotlight: evaluating the need for open standards
  • Adopting Open Standards
    • Finding open standards
    • Choosing an open standard
  • Creating Open Standards
    • About creating open standards
    • The standards lifecycle
    • First steps
    • Scoping and starting
    • Development
    • Building community
    • Launch and adoption
    • Spotlight: supporting adoption of the OpenActive standards
  • Stewarding Open Standards
    • About stewarding open standards
    • Review
    • Governance
    • Roles and Responsibilities
    • Update or Retire
  • Useful Tools
    • Ecosystem Mapping
    • Open Standards for Data Canvas
    • Outputs and Activities Checklist
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  • Open standards already exist
  • Your needs are still unclear
  • There is low community buy-in

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  1. Introduction

When not to create a new standard

This section outlines three scenarios in which open standard development is not recommended

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Last updated 3 years ago

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Open standards already exist

‌In our research into , we found that finding existing standards or relevant work can be a problem.

‌Difficulties range from not knowing open standards exist to determining if a given standard can help solve your problem.

‌As creating a standard is both time and resource intensive, we encourage owners of standards to provide useful examples, clear documentation, accessible tools and timely updates to encourage adoption.

‌Check for existing standards through existing networks and directories such as the , , and the .

‌Review our guidance on for more resources.

Check whether any existing standard meets your needs.

‌The UK government provides useful guidance on assessing open standards: , which you can read alongside our guide on .‌

Your needs are still unclear

‌When what you need is still unclear — for example, your project is in the initial stages — creating a new standard right away may not be the best option.

You can begin by focusing on:

  • understanding the scope of the problem — this tells you what your needs are and which are most important

  • understanding potential solutions — this tells you if open standards are the right solution to your problem

  • commissioning a proof of concept to explore options — this can help you find existing open standards and is a practical way to quickly test solutions to your problem

  • working through a discovery phase — this can help you investigate the problem and solutions, including finding and testing existing open standards

We encourage anyone interested in open standards to engage with those that already exist before creating new open standards.

‌There is much to be learned from existing standards in terms of what works and what doesn’t.

Getting to know existing standard communities will help you make connections that can help in developing or extending an open standard.

We encourage you to seek out standards that might form the basis of your new standard or act as a template for data formats, vocabularies and more.

There is low community buy-in

Open standards are reusable agreements developed collaboratively with a community.

Your community might be:

  • internal — for example a department or branches in your organisation

  • external — people and organisations in similar or complementary sectors

  • a mix — including internal and external stakeholders, the general public, governmental, public bodies and more

‌If there is little or no buy-in from your target community, creating a new standard may result in an open standard that is poorly consulted, inconsistently or inaccurately adopted or not used at all.

Late changes to the standard may lead to a loss of trust in the standard, or even splits in the community, with people abandoning the standard or creating versions of their own.

Owners of standards should , , and to make open standards easier to understand and adopt.

See for more on mixing and matching standards.

In our research, ‘’, we found that poor consultation can impact success. Poorly designed consultation and governance can cause problems during standards development, leading to incorrect decisions or poorly timed feedback.

user experiences of open standards for data
open data standards directory
civic open data standards by Azavea
UK government’s list of approved open standards
tools to find open standards
how open standards are selected
how to choose an open standard
provide examples and metaphors to explain the value of standards
teach through experience
be clear on the language used
types of open standards for data
User experiences of open standards for data