[Foundation-l] 4 wishes for Year 2007
florencedevouard
anthere at anthere.org
Mon Jan 1 11:26:29 UTC 2007
Hello community
Yet another year is over. We’ll soon celebrate our 6 years of existence.
Wikipedia has made an amazing transformation, growing from a grassroots
effort to a global resource. A unique community-driven, non-commercial
top 10 website, letting people share their knowledge, culture and
resources with neighbours near and far.
Wikipedia is just one piece of the Wikimedia movement. Other projects
are growing. Wikicommons, our common repository of media documents, has
experienced an amazing growth and celebrated its first million of
documents. WikiSource is a effort aimed at unearthing primary sources to
unlock historical information, further academic research and add
credibility and depth to publicly available information. WikiBooks is
the future of learning – up to date, readily accessible text books that
lets students around the world learn, inside and outside the classroom.
WikiNews, Wiktionary and Wikiquote are all growing, thriving examples of
the power of the community to bring new information to new audiences
everyday.
The global impact of Wikipedia and the other project opens the door to a
growing set of responsibilities and challenges for the Wikimedia
Foundation and the community behind it.
Year 2007 will be placed under two major priorities: Sustainability and
reliability.
Two minor priorities will be: Outreach and recognition as a charitable
organization.
Whilst there has been no formal “vote” to decide so, it seems to be the
consensus emerging from discussions during the board retreat,
discussions during the board meetings, discussions whilst preparing the
fundraising. So, roughly, it seems these four words, sustainability,
reliability, outreach and recognition, will lead the coming months. It
does not necessarily mean other directions will not be pursued, but we
will really try to push along those lines and I hope very much you will
agree these directions are indeed important and will help.
I want to explain a little bit more about these four directions.
Sustainability.
Sustainability for the organization and the projects it support.
Sustainability require a new level of dedication to both organizational
and technological infrastructure.
The board retreat in Frankfurt in October 2006, has revealed deficits at
the organizational levels were a major issue.
The bylaws needed to be fixed, as they did not reflect the reality of
the organization structure. This was done in November. Issue closed.
Board expansion was planned and first step implemented, with the
addition of Oscar, Mindspillage and Jan-Bart. Next step will occur at
the next board members election in june 2007.
An advisory board was set up, future members were suggested by the
community and many contacted. Most of the ones contacted agreed to help
and several of them are already helping the board on various issues.
Angela Beesley, formely board member, has agreed to help chair that
advisory board. More information on this will be provided during January
probably.
Committees and workgroups are not working very well (big
understatement). There are many people willing to help, but few
coordinators, and we are losing a lot of time and energy to identify and
channel goodwill. This is a major issue to work on in the coming months,
and of course an issue for which community input (your input) will be
critically important.
In the past few days, with the discussion over the matching donations
issue, and in the past as well, some ask why volunteers are not involved
more in the Foundation activity. There are various reasons, ranging from
“the Foundation does not communicate sufficiently on its needs” to “the
community does not show enough interest”, as well as “you can not always
count on the availability or willingness of a volunteer to do the job”,
or “a volunteer is not accountable” etc…
There is much to discuss on this list.
Staff. Most of you do not realize that, but the deficit of staff is
really a big issue. Various positions have been envisionned in November
and December, but we are waiting January and the end of the fundraising,
to really discuss that in depth and see what we can do, according to the
cash we have available. We need in particular more developers and more
people working in the office on administrative tasks, as well as divers
experts, which hopefully we could get pro-bono. I must say that it is
unlikely the global community will be involved much in these decisions,
simply because the people working on these tasks on a daily basis are
the ones more likely to know what is needed.
One of the most needed position and likely to be hired soon is an office
manager. We absolutely need to get some of the daily administrative
tasks fully taken in charge, and to relieve ourselves from this burden.
I saw a discussion this morning, stating that there was no need for an
accountant, that this could be done by a volunteer, just as so many
associations do. Now, wake up guys ! We are no more an association
running with 10 000 dollars a year and 10 checks to issue per month. We
are running an organization of over 2 millions dollars, with thousands
of unique donations, purchasing servers per hundred lot, receiving
hundreds of emails per day, legal requests every month. This can not be
done by a volunteer when (if) he has 2 hours free during the week end.
Executive director. The search of an executive director is also one of
our urgent and important tasks. This is currently ongoing.
On financial sustainability, there is a lot to say. This has been a hot
topic in the past few days with the matching donations system. I did not
comment much myself, but I read all the comments made on foundation-l,
offered privately, and the ones in languages I could understand on
village pumps. All I can say is that we hear your feedback and we’ll
take it into account in the next fundraisings. It is likely we’ll have
more fundraisings this year. We also need to get new sources of money to
be able to go on. Hopefully, the new executive director will have
creative ideas on this as well. Setting up an endowment is such a
solution, and a first step for this are the audit results and a suitable
bank (which is under way). Other needs involve making use of our “big”
contacts, setting up an investment strategy and generally managing the
funds. Other directions involve making more “business”, either as
services (datafeed) or products (DVDs). As of today, we simply do not
have the infrastructure to do that.
There is not much to say on the topic right now, but I just wanted to
mention how big an issue it is for the board.
Related to financial sustainability, the audit completed on our first
three years of operations will be a major asset in the future. Such an
audit is essential to get big donations and grants. It required a lot of
effort in the past months, and hopefully the path in front of us is less
steep. We’ll go on getting our financial statements audited every year
and as much as possible, we’ll try to implement the various
recommendations given by the auditors to ensure our organization is as
clean, transparent, fair as the public would like it to be. This will
involve setting up many policies and guidelines at the administrative
level, which will be invisible to you, but important for our long-term
sustainability. I invite you to read again the financial audit document
where a list of suggested procedures to implement is listed.
Sustainability of course also is technical. Decisions in that direction
involve more developers, hiring a chief technical officer, and having a
tech summit to work on mediawiki.
On the legal side, an important and quite urgent topic is related to our
trademarks and domain names. By securing our trademarks, we ensure long
term fruitful use of them, and decrease the risk of abuse by third parties.
Reliability.
Whilst not all our projects or all our languages are not in a “mature”
phase, we believe a major issue on which we must dedicate time, energy
and probably money, is related to reliability. Content quality, not
quantity, is the measure that matters.
I could quickly cite some issues: the non-vandalized version feature.
The reviewed version feature. Guidelines to avoid spamming by small
companies. Guidelines to avoid uncontrolled modifications by PR
agencies. Issue of rampaging external links toward myspace and youtube
:-) Mandatory sources etc…
In most part, it is in community hands, but the Foundation (and the
chapters) can help, either the development of technical features, or
favor contacts between communities and academics/experts etc…
Outreach
It is regularly discussed. Pushing the envelope on global reach is
critical. We must continue to extend our boundaries in terms of
providing knowledge as well as a voice to those who’ve never had them
before. Not much to say on this issue. I think it a very important
issue, unfortunately often falling behind other more pressing issues.
Hopefully, we’ll find time and energy to work further on this.
Recognition
This comes from a very simple observation. For many, Wikimedia projects
are web 2.0 websites, similar to other websites such as myspace or
youtubes. People tend to confuse us with commercial projects, even
wikipedians themselves sometimes, who fear we will “sell” the projects
to big companies.
We are not a commercial product. We provide free knowledge (… or
content… or educational content…) for everyone. Our goal is not to make
money. Our purpose is to help humanity be more informed, knowledgeable.
Not only are we confused with commercial companies sometimes, but big
charitable organizations do not recognize us as a charity, which greatly
limit the support we might get from them. I would consider as a goal for
year 2007, to change this.
Note that the blocks are not independent one from another.
To be recognized as an important charity, we must show we are a stable
and solid organization. We must show we are trustworthy as a resource.
And we must show we try to go beyond boundaries of wealth, language and
copyright.
To be able to reach everyone, we must be organized and relevant.
To be reliable, we need good foundations.
So, we can build the tower with the four blocks. First sustainability.
Second reliability. Third outreach and fourth recognition.
Hopefully, that’s what we will succeed doing in 2007. Together.
Happy New Year
Anthere
Some links:
* http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/What_we_need_the_money_for (what
we need the money for)
* http://fundraising.wikimedia.org/fr (live list of donations)
* http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Wikimedia_2006_Mgmt_Letter.pdf (audit)
* http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Wikimedia_2006_fs.pdf (financial
statements)
* http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolutions (passed resolutions)
* http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Board_retreat (board retreat)
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