[Wikimediaau-l] Wikimedia Australia's FDC application

2013-03-06 Thread Craig Franklin
Dear All,

As you may be aware, Wikimedia Australia has withdrawn its application
for funding from round two of the Funds Dissemination Committee’s
(FDC) application process.  John Vandenberg and Steve Zhang spoke
about this at length during our public meeting last weekend, and I
encourage you to read the transcript of the meeting below for their
thoughts on the matter:

http://www.wikimedia.org.au/wiki/Meeting:Public_(2013-03-03)/Transcript

This email is a summary of some of my thoughts on why we did this, and
what direction the organisation should take from here.  These are my
thoughts only and not the official position of the chapter.

The nature of the FDC’s application process is that they have two
major grantmaking rounds every year, with the most recent round
closing on March 1.  It had been the intention of the management
committee to apply for annual funding for the 2013 calendar year
through this process.  As March 1 came closer, it became apparent to
me and the rest of the committee that we simply weren’t going to be
ready for this date.  The reasons for this were:

* We were still in the early stages of planning the World War One WiR
programme, a major initiative of the chapter that is tentatively
budgeted at over $150,000.  However, we felt that it was unlikely we
would be successful in getting funding for this initiative until we
had a more concrete idea of which institutions would be participating,
how many Wikimedians in Residence we could realistically support, and
what the overhead costs of running the program would be.

* Other programmes that the chapter has on the table need further
detail and costing to be performed before they’re ready to go. The
outcomes of these programmes are positive, and they align with the
strategic plans of both the chapter and the Wikimedia Foundation, but
we need to get better at articulating how we’ll get from vision to
implementation, and how much money we’ll spend, and what we’ll spend
it on.

* The FDC in the last round recommended that we establish a more
consistent record of programme success, and while we have had
successful programmes in that time (our presence at the New
Librarian’s Symposium and ALIA Information On Line events, workshops
in Toowoomba and Bendigo, and the beginning of a relationship with the
State Library of New South Wales), another six months of solid
achievement will give us a better foundation upon which to ask for
further funding.

The other major factor in making this decision is the significant
amount of administrative overhead that is involved in preparing and
submitting an application to the FDC.  As you are probably aware,
Wikimedia Australia has no paid staff, and the bulk of the work is
done by members of the management committee, whose time is taken up
with their own jobs, families, and other commitments.  Our limited and
precious Wikimedia time is usually best served advancing the interests
of the community and the movement by doing the things that we are good
at – running workshops, talking to GLAMs, and bringing the community
together, rather than filling out paperwork for the Foundation.  I
have observed that most if not all of the entities who have thus far
been successful in obtaining funds from the FDC have been those
entities who already have paid staff and other resources who can write
a quality application without having to worry about looking after the
kids and cooking dinner at the same time.

My other observation would be that lodging an FDC application
effectively bars an organisation from requesting funding from the
Wikimedia Foundation through their other funding processes.  I do not
see any logical reason for this; surely a request for funding ought to
be judged on its merits and positive impact on the movement, rather
than on decisions made in a separate programme by a separate body.  If
we applied to the FDC and got another disappointing offer, it would
more or less preclude the chapter from being able to take advantage of
any other opportunities that presented themselves for a whole year.
Having been on the committee of management for over two years now, it
has been my experience that such opportunities often present
themselves at very short notice, and tying ourselves to an annual
funding model with no opportunity to make supplementary applications
would not be in the best interests of the movement.

So, where to from here?  At the moment, the plan is to apply for
funding on a per-project basis from the WMF Grants Program (a separate
avenue to the FDC).  This will be done when the planning for each
project is ready, and has a reasonable prospect of success.  I hope
that the Foundation will also be willing to come to the party and
provide meaningful technical advice on the grant applications we make
this way, not only so that we are successful in getting the
applications improved, but also to try and spot any potential flaws or
opportunities that we haven’t seen, and make sure that our programmes

Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Wikimedia Australia's FDC application

2013-03-06 Thread Chris Watkins
Thanks Craig,

Your efforts and the efforts of others in moving this forward are much
appreciated. What can we, members and supporters, do to help?

I don't want to make big promises (what with the cooking and the kids...
metaphorically speaking) but is it possible to chunk down the key parts of
the key projects and see where people are inspired to contribute?
On 06/03/2013 10:25 PM, Craig Franklin cfrank...@halonetwork.net wrote:

 Dear All,

 As you may be aware, Wikimedia Australia has withdrawn its application
 for funding from round two of the Funds Dissemination Committee’s
 (FDC) application process.  John Vandenberg and Steve Zhang spoke
 about this at length during our public meeting last weekend, and I
 encourage you to read the transcript of the meeting below for their
 thoughts on the matter:

 http://www.wikimedia.org.au/wiki/Meeting:Public_(2013-03-03)/Transcript

 This email is a summary of some of my thoughts on why we did this, and
 what direction the organisation should take from here.  These are my
 thoughts only and not the official position of the chapter.

 The nature of the FDC’s application process is that they have two
 major grantmaking rounds every year, with the most recent round
 closing on March 1.  It had been the intention of the management
 committee to apply for annual funding for the 2013 calendar year
 through this process.  As March 1 came closer, it became apparent to
 me and the rest of the committee that we simply weren’t going to be
 ready for this date.  The reasons for this were:

 * We were still in the early stages of planning the World War One WiR
 programme, a major initiative of the chapter that is tentatively
 budgeted at over $150,000.  However, we felt that it was unlikely we
 would be successful in getting funding for this initiative until we
 had a more concrete idea of which institutions would be participating,
 how many Wikimedians in Residence we could realistically support, and
 what the overhead costs of running the program would be.

 * Other programmes that the chapter has on the table need further
 detail and costing to be performed before they’re ready to go. The
 outcomes of these programmes are positive, and they align with the
 strategic plans of both the chapter and the Wikimedia Foundation, but
 we need to get better at articulating how we’ll get from vision to
 implementation, and how much money we’ll spend, and what we’ll spend
 it on.

 * The FDC in the last round recommended that we establish a more
 consistent record of programme success, and while we have had
 successful programmes in that time (our presence at the New
 Librarian’s Symposium and ALIA Information On Line events, workshops
 in Toowoomba and Bendigo, and the beginning of a relationship with the
 State Library of New South Wales), another six months of solid
 achievement will give us a better foundation upon which to ask for
 further funding.

 The other major factor in making this decision is the significant
 amount of administrative overhead that is involved in preparing and
 submitting an application to the FDC.  As you are probably aware,
 Wikimedia Australia has no paid staff, and the bulk of the work is
 done by members of the management committee, whose time is taken up
 with their own jobs, families, and other commitments.  Our limited and
 precious Wikimedia time is usually best served advancing the interests
 of the community and the movement by doing the things that we are good
 at – running workshops, talking to GLAMs, and bringing the community
 together, rather than filling out paperwork for the Foundation.  I
 have observed that most if not all of the entities who have thus far
 been successful in obtaining funds from the FDC have been those
 entities who already have paid staff and other resources who can write
 a quality application without having to worry about looking after the
 kids and cooking dinner at the same time.

 My other observation would be that lodging an FDC application
 effectively bars an organisation from requesting funding from the
 Wikimedia Foundation through their other funding processes.  I do not
 see any logical reason for this; surely a request for funding ought to
 be judged on its merits and positive impact on the movement, rather
 than on decisions made in a separate programme by a separate body.  If
 we applied to the FDC and got another disappointing offer, it would
 more or less preclude the chapter from being able to take advantage of
 any other opportunities that presented themselves for a whole year.
 Having been on the committee of management for over two years now, it
 has been my experience that such opportunities often present
 themselves at very short notice, and tying ourselves to an annual
 funding model with no opportunity to make supplementary applications
 would not be in the best interests of the movement.

 So, where to from here?  At the moment, the plan is to apply for
 funding on a per-project basis from