I think perhaps you attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained 
by incompetence. 

Cheers,

Peter

 

From: Todd Allen [mailto:toddmal...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 28 September 2021 10:01
To: Wikimedia Mailing List
Subject: [Marketing Mail] [Wikimedia-l] Re: About raising money

 

It's not only that.

 

When the WMF uses its funds to actively act against its volunteer community 
(ACTRIAL, MEDIAVIEWER, FRAMBAN, and more lately UCOC), that raises issues 
beyond disgust. The projects we spent our time building are now actively being 
used to do things we don't want to do. It is not just that WMF is using its 
money on frivolous or useless projects (though that would be a problem), it is 
that WMF is using its funds from what we built to actively punch us in the face 
and act against us.

 

If WMF were using its funds to take trips out to Barbados for no reason, 
well--we'd probably still be irritated about that. But use our funds to 
actively stomp on our volunteer community, and ignore what they say?

 

Well that's not just disgust. That's anger, and that's what you're seeing.

 

Regards,

 

Todd Allen

 

On Sat, Sep 25, 2021 at 2:51 PM Guillaume Paumier <gpaum...@wikimedia.org> 
wrote:

Hi,

 

(Sending this as a personal opinion, albeit one informed by my work on revenue 
strategy in the past few years.)

 

Discussions about fundraising in the Wikimedia movement often involve the same 
arguments over time. My theory, after observing and participating in those 
discussions for 15 years, is the following.

 

Objections to Wikimedia fundraising (and, more broadly, revenue generation) 
tend to stem from three main sources:

* the moral superiority of financial disinterest

* outlandish budgets and fundraising goals

* improper means used to raise money.

 

The first one is relatively simple. A significant number of us find any 
relationship between money and free knowledge viscerally disgusting. We've been 
editing as volunteers for years, devoting our free time to the advancement of 
humankind through knowledge. We have done so through countless acts of 
selflessness. Our financial disinterest is inextricably woven into our identity 
as Wikimedians. The Foundation should only raise the minimum funds required to 
"keep the lights on." Anything more is an attempt to profit from our free 
labor, and that's revolting. 

 

This is not unlike discussions of business models in the libre software 
community; we can also see those arguments surface in discussions around paid 
editing. I will leave the moral argument aside, because little can be done to 
change individual identities and moral judgments of money. But let's name them 
explicitly, in hopes that we can separate them from more fact-based arguments, 
if we are willing and able.

 

The second point of contention is how much we raise. To those of us who 
remember the early years ("May we ask y'all to chip in a few dollars so we can 
buy our second server?!"), raising $150+ million a year these days seems 
extravagant, and probably always will. The much smaller budgets from our past 
act as cognitive anchors, [1] and in comparison recent budgets appear greedily 
outsized. Instead of being outraged by the growth of the budget, we should 
instead ask ourselves how much money we really need.

 

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchoring_(cognitive_bias)

 

And the fact is that, as a movement, we need as much money as we can get to 
advance our mission. Our vision is so ambitious and expansive that it is also 
bound to be inevitably expensive. This is something that the Board understood: 
shortly after endorsing the Strategic Direction in 2017, they directed the 
Foundation to prepare to raise more funds than usual, to be able to move 
towards our collective vision for 2030. [2] My fellow members of the working 
group on Revenue Streams for movement strategy also understood the scope of the 
movement's ambitions: the first guiding question for our work was how to 
"maximize revenue for the movement". [3]

 

[2] 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Board_noticeboard/November_2017_-_Statement_endorsing_future_resourcing_and_direction_of_the_organization

[3] 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Strategy/Wikimedia_movement/2018-20/Working_Groups/Revenue_Streams#Guiding_Questions

 

People who attended the meeting of strategy working groups in Berlin in early 
2018 might remember a thought exercise led by the Revenue Streams group. In it, 
we estimated that coming closer to our vision would probably require an annual 
budget for the movement in the vicinity of a billion dollars. There is nothing 
intrinsically outrageous about that amount, as long as the money advances the 
mission efficiently and equitably. The International Committee of the Red Cross 
had a global budget of $1.6 billion in 2016.


And that's the heart of the argument about fundraising goals; it's less about 
how much we raise, and more about what we spend it on. Moral argument aside, 
the problem is rarely that the movement is raising too much money, but rather 
that people feel that they're not getting their fair share of it, whether in 
cash, attention, support, or something else. At the Wikimedia Conference in 
2018, literally no one wanted to talk about revenue; very few people wanted to 
be part of the working group. What people were arguing over was whom the money 
should go to, and who should decide its allocation. If volunteer contributors 
felt that they were properly supported with features, tools, and programs, and 
if affiliates felt that they had access to the resources they needed to grow 
their efforts and impact, I venture that we would all complain a lot less about 
the size of our fundraising goals.

 

This brings us to the problem of impact and accountability. The Wikimedia 
Foundation is in the very privileged position of having very little individual 
accountability to its donors: the choice of the "small-dollar donor model," in 
which an enormous number of people donate very small amounts of money, makes 
our financial model extremely robust. But it also dilutes the accountability to 
each individual donor.

 

Nonprofits usually have a much smaller donor base; they need to convince their 
donors that their money is put to good use, and that it has the maximum impact 
in service of the organization's mission ("the best bang for the buck"). But we 
are an unusual nonprofit with the ability to reach billions of people, and 
those numbers work in our favor. This is also why disintermediation (meaning 
third parties like search engines and smart assistants providing Wikimedia 
content directly to people, without sending them to our sites) is such a risk 
to the model we have relied on for most of our existence.

 

For the most part, and leaving aside major donors, people support us because we 
provide them with utility, and they want to give something back in return. This 
dynamic frees us from having to woo and please donors, and enables us to 
instead work on what we think advances our mission the most. But it also makes 
it tempting to assume our impact without really ever having to prove it. Which 
means that the impact of movement funds ends up being a matter of personal 
interpretation, and we have no shortage of variety when it comes to individual 
opinions.

 

Without direct accountability from donors, who else is left to hold the 
movement (and the Foundation) accountable for the impact of our spending? The 
Board would be an obvious candidate, but Trustees have historically encouraged 
us to spend more, not less. The Global Council might think differently, but 
it's still a long way away. And as much as volunteer communities may demand 
accountability, the truth is that without mechanisms to enforce it, their 
competing claims of authority are just that: claims.

 

Discussions on this mailing list and elsewhere are a classic example of the 
concept of voice, as formalized by Albert Hirschman in his work on responses to 
decline in organizations. [4] We are unhappy with a decision but reluctant to 
simply exit the group, either because we don't see an alternative, or because 
of the sunk costs of emotional investment, or because of the sense of identity 
that comes with belonging to the group, or because ultimately we can live with 
the decision. And so, with exit not available as an option, we use our voice 
instead, even though it has proved to only have a very limited effect on making 
different decisions. (And also because we *do* love to argue.)

 

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exit,_Voice,_and_Loyalty

 

Of course, it's not difficult to imagine a scenario where fundraising "too 
much" could lead us to making bad decisions. Indeed, you don't even need to 
imagine it: I wrote just that scenario a few years ago. [5] But that's a matter 
of how we spend, not how much we raise. Another reason for caution is that 
excessive fundraising might conceivably jeopardize our future ability to raise 
funds (the "crying wolf" argument). But it's also likely that sources of 
revenue that are available to us today might not be available to us in the 
future. 


[5] 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/2018_Revenue_strategy/Futures#2031:_Success_into_oblivion

 

So now we're left with how we raise money, and the common complaints about the 
size, frequency, and tone of fundraising banners. The argument is that 
fundraising messages use unduly alarmist language, and that donors are 
therefore misled into thinking that Wikimedia is facing imminent danger. I do 
believe that not enough credit is given to the people who craft those messages 
in banners and emails. These people care an extraordinary amount about doing 
the "right thing." They have literally spent years doing A/B tests to soften 
the tone and figure out the least alarming language possible to raise the 
required amounts. All that while enduring constant criticism of their work. 
They are heroes.

 

But beyond that, there is also a real sense of urgency that the most vocal of 
us here generally do not sense. There are very real threats to our mission, 
much closer in time than we imagine. [5] Assuming that, just because we've been 
around and successful for 20 years, we'll be around and just as successful for 
the next 20, is wishful thinking underpinned by normalcy bias. [6]

 

[5] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/2018_Revenue_strategy/Summary

[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normalcy_bias

 

There's a fine line between thriftiness and privation, and in today's 
fast-changing world, denying ourselves the resources we need is harmful to our 
mission. As emijrp would argue, there is a deadline, [7] especially if we look 
beyond privileged communities and we strive to make up for historical 
oppression. The modesty of financial ambitions reflects a certain privilege and 
ignores the vast resources required to actually focus on communities left out 
by structures of power and privilege. If we are to live up to our commitment to 
epistemic justice, we must give ourselves the financial means to do so. The 
longer the injustice persists, the more compounding harm is done. Our work *is* 
urgent, even if it's not the same urgency that drives donors.

 

[7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:There_is_a_deadline

 

In a nutshell: by all means, let's better assess our impact, instead of just 
assuming it. And let's discuss accountability mechanisms. But let's also be 
realistic about the resources required for a mission as broad as ours. And 
let's understand both the urgency of our endeavor, and the financial demands of 
our collective promise of Knowledge Equity. Misery is no more virtuous than 
opulence if wealth is distributed equitably to advance our mission.

 

-- 

Guillaume Paumier

(he/him)

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