Re: [Wikimedia-l] How many volunteers (not editors) does the movement have????

2014-06-25 Thread ImperfectlyInformed
 Samuel Klein meta.sj@... writes:
 
 I think a better formulation of the question might be: do we have a
 list of non-editing activities, and do we have a count of the number
 of people who do them regularly?
 
 To which the answer is partially-yes, and mostly-no.
 
 Yes: There is a mindmap of activities and roles that was created and
 is fairly comprehensive.
 
 No: Some of those activities have related logs (lists of users by
 technical flag) or categories (list of users who have categorized
 their userpage), or pages (lists of OTRS or press contacts, lists of
 members or a project or organization). But I've never seen a division
 of these into active v. passive (committee work v. group membership),
 or a total count.
 
 SJ
 
 On Sun, Jun 22, 2014 at 12:15 PM, Johan Jönsson brevlistor at
gmail.com wrote:
  2014-06-22 13:59 GMT+02:00 Federico Leva (Nemo) nemowiki at gmail.com:
 
  Wikimedia volunteers are self-organised, why would there be a list?
 
 
  Because we love making lists.
 
  That being said, Richard list wiki-specific positions like ArbCom, which
  I suppose would mean that volunteers for the Wikimedia Foundation should
  be understood in a broad sense, and if so, the answer is definitely no.
 
  Even when some lists exists, like the e.g. the press room list Benjamin
  linked, they're in no way complete. For example, the press contact for
  Wikimedia Sweden (which, of course, is technically not a volunteer position
  for Wikimedia Foundation, since the chapters are independent and sometimes
  do stuff that's not related to the Wikimedia movement) is listed, but
  Swedish-language Wikipedia has a volunteer press contact of its own, who
  isn't.
 
  //Johan Jönsson
  --
  http://wikipediabloggen.se


(emailing thru Gmane since I only track this thru RSS so my apologies if it
comes out funky; I dislike the enormous email volume these lists generate)

I'm surprised no one seems to have mentioned that Part I, question 6 of the
Form 990 which asks for total volunteers. For year 2011, 85,000 was the
number year 2010 has 100,000. See
http://990finder.foundationcenter.org/990results.aspx?990_type=fn=wikimediast=zp=ei=fy=action=Find

In addition, it is typical for directors and officers liability policies to
ask for an estimate of the number of volunteers (no idea if WMF's insurer
does, but when I last shopped for nonprofit DO it was a pretty standard
question). While I doubt the IRS cares much about the accuracy of this
particular number, the DO insurer can use a bad estimate as an excuse to
void coverage due to material misrepresentation when a claim is filed.

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] What community initiatives have made an impact on editor engagement?

2013-07-12 Thread ImperfectlyInformed
Steven Walling steven.walling@... writes:

 
 On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 10:31 AM, Erik Moeller erik at wikimedia.org
wrote:
 
  On Sat, Jun 22, 2013 at 4:34 PM, Steven Walling swalling at
wikimedia.org
  wrote:
   On July 11th at the next WMF Metrics  Activities meeting, myself, Erik
   Möller, Howie Fung, Maryana Pinchuk, and Dario Taraborelli are going to
   deliver a short update on the state of Wikimedia editor communities. (For
   those not familiar:
   https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Metrics_and_activities_meetings)
 
  This presentation will be at the meeting in 30 minutes. Don't worry if
  you're interested but can't make it; the meeting will be recorded.
 
 
 The video is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALT8_Toyc0g now.
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Thanks for posting the video. My thoughts below went longer than I expected,
so I'll start with a tl;dr.

TL;DR: more is not always better in encyclopedia-building; please include
more analysis of the old-timers in your stats; the drama issues could
probably use a little bit of attention; find and help the community engage
the editors who interface with newbies; Wikiproject Med has tried to work on
recruiting scientists - a good idea; on curation and quality control, we
could use edit metadata; and please slow down and show you're actually
listening when it comes to Visual Editor.

1. Mixing up the gender and geographical distribution is a lofty and
laudable goal, but you may want to be a little careful of neglecting your
base. I also agree with a later comment that a high male ratio could
negatively affect the discussion process, which tends to be quite testy in
a few different ways, so more women could have beneficial side effects.
However, there are also risks when you change Wikipedia's population: for
example, if editing became mainstream in America Wikipedia's
secular-humanist/rational slant could be significantly eroded. I don't think
it is a big risk but it's something to keep in mind.

2. I was disappointed to hear that the analysis of active editors focused on
editors with 5+ edits/month. I'd like to see a stratified breakdown and it
seems like it wouldn't be hard to do. This plays into the caution above that
not much attention is paid to the long-term regulars, although the presenter
alluded to earlier research showing their staying power.

I've been following this list for maybe a month or two now and I'm a little
surprised that little to none of the regular wiki drama seems to leak out
and that the metrics made no mention of the drama. I'm sort of glad that
there is little drama in this world, but I hope it's not ignorance. For
example, the English wiki has been a bit more dramatic lately with some
high-profile admin and editor resignations leaving and concerns about unfair
processes (e.g., SMcCandlish). Some of it is just interpersonal and maybe
it's not different than usual, but it would be nice to have more than
anecdotal observations. There's also reoccurring controversies about
civility enforcement (I rarely bother to weigh in, but I believe in
enforcing civility). I think there might be a role for the Foundation in
researching these types of issues and streamlining some of the tools.

3. I agree that user experience is poor and I agree with all 5 points listed
in the reasons for stagnation. Poor social interaction is particularly
serious. Maybe there is something being done that I'm unaware of but as a
first start I would try to identify the editors who have a lot interaction
with new users and try to communicate with them. I'm not one of those users;
in the rare case that I see a promising new editor in my areas I welcome,
but I have never left a template without adding a short personal note
afterwards (the welcome template of Twinkle has no field for an optional
message, so it takes a little extra work). However, just today I noticed
that a newbie I mentored a little and who made significant improvements to
the PPACA (Obamacare) got hit by speedy image deletion templates with scary
you may be blocked bolded messages and no personal touch, even though the
images may well have been just fine. The templater probably templates a lot
of people and could use some mentoring, although how to approach that in a
polite manner is its own challenge (I gave him my 2 cents). This is also an
area where the community could develop yet more rules (oh fun!) to rein in
those who interface with new users.

4. On campaigns and editathons, I know the WikiProject Medicine, mainly
through Doc James, had been trying to engage with biomedical scientists and
doctors. This type of outreach is particularly nice because these are
exactly the type of smart and mature people you'd like to see building an
encyclopedia. We've also seen