Hi, 
I think that switching to regional conferences model will not reduce but 
increase local organisers involvement. In fact, any conference means that local 
organisers must arrange: * Programme (either local organisers manage themselves 
or they have to set up and work with an international programme committee) * 
Scholarships (or set up an international scholarship committee but still have 
to manage scholarship budget) * Venue + catering + insurance etc.  * 
Accommodation * Travel and visa support (WMF does it for WMF scholars at 
Wikimania so far) * Post-conference support (surveys , documentation, 
implementing next steps) etc. 
The amount of volunteer time needed for each of these lines is not linearly 
related with number of attendees, i.e. managing 5 conferences for 200 people 
each will require more volunteer time and efforts than managing 1 conference 
for 1,000 people, as this will mean designing five separate programmes, making 
arrangement with 5 different venues and so on. 
On the other hand, we can indeed save costs by switching to regional events, 
especially on travel (bringing 200 Europeans to Esino Lario is cheaper than 
bringing them to Mexico City) and on venue/accommodation/catering (many 
countries outside Europe and North America will have cheaper options but may be 
unable to accommodate large crowds). 
It would be indeed interesting to discuss how we can reduce local volunteer 
involvement as this seems to be indeed the most important limitation. 
Mykola (NickK) 
Wikimedia Ukraine 

10 липня 2016, 16:24:36, від "Dariusz Jemielniak" < [email protected] >: 

my two cents (please, forgive me if I'm stating the obvious, or if I'm 
repeating things that were said elsewhere or already addressed):  
First, I don't think that an event every four years will have the mobilizing 
and motivating role that an annual one does. Four years is longer than a 
typical tenure of an editor (more or less, I'm just recollecting). I understand 
that Christophe is referring to a 4-year event  rhetorically, but just saying. 
I see tremendous value in a global Wikimania every year. 
In the same time, I've seen the following problems over the years, not directly 
linked to the financial cost (which in the face of our relative financial 
stability can be justified by the benefits, depending on how we define them): - 
huge WMF staff involvement (most Wikimanias run smoothly also thanks to 
countless hours put in by the staff), - huge volunteer local organizers 
involvement (in fact, my observation is that many chapters organizing 
WIkimanias suffer from a motivation crisis afterward).  
Surely, we can have different surveys and other questionnaires. I doubt if they 
will show anything else than that Wikimania is an incredibly valuable event 
that comes at huge financial and human cost, though.  
While we can get the money (at least for now), the human involvement cost is 
something I would not dare to dismiss just by emphasizing the benefits of 
Wikimania for the movement.  
I'd be probably more interested in thinking out loud about how we can change 
the format so that we reduce the human and money costs while keeping the 
benefits. My understanding is that the proposal to have a global WIkimania 
every two years and local events in between is actually one attempt to address 
that. There can be others (and some have been discussed in this thread, we also 
have some sensible benchmarks from other organizations). 
My concern is that we may end up with losing a lot of Wikimania benefits, while 
not necessarily decreasing human or financial costs, but this is something that 
we definitely need to discuss and consider carefully.  
Instead of discussing whether we should have a Wikimania every year or not, 
perhaps we should try to list and discuss the reasons why it is such a big 
strain? If it is clear  that we can't afford it every year (because of the 
human cost, probably more importantly than the finances), the decision to break 
with the annual format will be a natural consequence of such an analysis.  
It could be useful to first have a really sensible and systematic list of 
alternative paths. 

best, 
Dariusz Jemielniak ("pundit", a current Trustee). 







On Sun, Jul 10, 2016 at 7:37 AM, Christophe Henner < [email protected] > 
wrote: 
One goal :) you always side effects. If the goal is to be a community event why 
don't we don't we do a huge event every 4 years where we fly in every single 
editors? Instead of doing 4 Wikimanias. That is why setting expections and goal 
is key, so then we can make decisions. We're talking about financial ressources 
what about the time spent by volunteers? My point being, Wikimania is a great 
event and has costs and setting expectations will allow us to make better 
decisions. Perhaps, as Andrew says, will end up saying we should spend twice 
what we're spending because it is key or perhaps half of what we're spending. 
​ Is it a community event? Is it a knowledge sharing event? 
Is it an outreaching event? 
Is it a way to reward people? 
​The answer to these four are yes ​Yes its a community event, one that brings 
people together and empowers them Yes it where we share  the lessons of our 
successes and failures​ 
Yes reaches out to local region, especially GLAM for them to see what can be 
achieved, it also attracts a media profile and put the ED, Borad and others 
within reach of potential sponsors Yes the scholarship process has an element 
of reward for participation in that it requires people to be sufficiently 
active to be considered ​   ​ 

On 10 July 2016 at 14:05, Christophe Henner < [email protected] > wrote: 
Hey, So, as with everything, Wikimania is going through a process where we (as 
à group) will define if it pushes our mission forward or not. First, WMF staff 
working so we can have the discussion with all the cards in our hands. Which is 
not the case now. Second, what is Wikimania purposes? Right now I fear there is 
none clearly define. Is it a community event? 
Is it a knowledge sharing event? 
Is it an outreaching event? 
Is it a way to reward people? 
... One has to be define, a main one. Then we will be able to talk about how it 
happens. I have opinions but I rather keep them to myself until I have 
everything in hand. But I love Wikimania, and I want to know if it's the best 
format, and if it's not to fix it :) Le 10 juil. 2016 4:37 AM, "Gnangarra" < 
[email protected] > a écrit : 
Agree with the comments thats hard to measure the value of a Wikimania, and 
what an attendee will do with the experience. so here is my experience 
My first Wikimania was 2012 in Washington DC, I was a little introspective and 
embroiled in an ARBCOM case I shared a room with Richard Farmbrough with whom I 
had a deep discussion about the case he gave me some amazing advice about that 
process it literally reenergises my efforts...  While doing so he recommended a 
session about QRpedia, a really interesting project.  Two months later I'm back 
home and still editing when an opportunity presents itself to propose a QRpedia 
project in Fremantle, that produced the first Wikitown in Australia.  The 
Freopedia project as it became known opened the door to another WikiTown 
project in Toodyay called Toodyaypedia,  Next minute I'm nominated for a State 
Heritage award for the work I've been doing through Wikipedia and the out reach 
projects that have improved coverage of Western Australian History more doors 
start to open.  I'm on a roll really energised and its rubbing off on the local 
community they willingly helping with every silly idea I try, so much so that I 
get nominated to be a committee member(Vice President no less) of the local 
chapter. London 2014 Wikimedia Australia pays for me to attend London where I 
give back to the community my experiences and share my experiences about 
WikiTowns/QRpedia(along with a few Tim Tams and Caramellow Koalas) in the 
community village. Also while in London I got to attended a pre-wikimania 
training session by WMUK that they offer to people doing outreach that was a 
wonderful experience and helped me improve the way I do outreach here,[ side 
thought:that should be taken on the road to every chapter who does or wants to 
do outreach ].    
I return even more enrgise and what to bring the Wikimania experience here 
where more even more people can benefit directly rather than just through my 
efforts. 2015 I'm presented with another opportunity to expand the projects 
happening here this time writing in an Indigenous Australian language and 
improving content about a subject area thats has been inadeqautely covered for 
the first 10years of wikipedia.  Along come an offer from WMF to attend Mexico 
I'm torn between my commitment to the Noongar Language work which included a 
workshop that coincided with Wikimania and the opportunity to attend my 3rd 
event, of course my commitment to the local project took precidence. The cost 
of that was not finding out about the changes to the Wikimania processes and 
spending a lot of time putting together a bid for Wikimania in Perth.  The 
benefit of the Noongarpedia project is that we now have the first Indigenous 
Australian language in the incubator, with a number of other communities 
watching and learning from our experiences, I just spent a week in Darwin which 
included talking with people there and walking them through that project. 
Somewhere in all of this I also became President of WMAu  and with it WMAu has 
had its most successful period, I like to think some that is because of the 
energy I have brought to the table from my experience at Wikimania. 

One Australian once theorised about how WMF measures success and highlighted 
that the value is not in the physical numbers but in the intangible connections 
that are made, he even put forward a PEG proposal to demostrate that its the 
personal relationships that matter and how you build them that have the true 
impact.  Being isolated in Western Australia made for the perfect ground to 
develop such a project ironically it was declined because of the fact that the 
project lacked the generation of numbers which would make success measurable.  
We place too much emphasis on physical numbers to measure out comes yet we all 
know that education is more than just numbers and community development is 
about connections, energy and empowering others Wikimania does, that we just 
need to find the right boxes to tick. 

[conflict with Riskers response, apologies if I over lap] 


On 10 July 2016 at 09:50, Pine W < [email protected] > wrote: 
Hi Andrew and Leila, 

There are quite a few ways of looking at the numbers (which is one reason that 
I'm hoping for a thorough analysis.) Please note that I think that conferences 
should happen; I am asking if this is the status quo is the optimal way of 
spending these funds. There are other ways of using funds for conferences that 
could be explored. 

For example, if a Wikimania costs $600,000 and there are 1,000 attendees, that 
works out to a cost of $600 per attendee for 1000 people. Is that a wiser 
investment than spreading out the same funds among (hypothetically) 3,000 
attendees at multiple national/regional conferences for an average expense of 
$200 per attendee? At this point I don't think any of us can answer that 
question. 

The Wikimania-going population, especially the people who go to many 
WIkimanias, are a vanishingly small percentage of the overall WIkimedia 
population. They tend to be active, but there are plenty of active Wikimedians 
such as myself who have never been to Wikimania, although I'd like to go next 
year. Does it make sense to spend so much money on such a small percentage of 
our community? There are reasons to think that the answer could be yes; for 
example, if Wikimania motivates highly active contributors and leaders to keep 
up the good work. However, it's not clear that similarly good effects couldn't 
be achieved on a broader scale by spreading the funds among more numerous 
smaller conferences. 

There is a good argument to be made that having lots of highly active 
contributors and project leaders from all over the world in the same place, and 
having WMF staff mix with them, is a good idea for purposes of improving 
communications and relationships. Generation of good PR press, and 
cross-pollination of ideas, are also important and I think that we should 
support those. However, similarly good outcomes might be achieved through 
multiple smaller conferences. 

I'm in favor of continuing to spend funds on conferences; what I think that 
none of us know is whether our current model of a single large conference is 
"better" than multiple national/regional conferences. 

Along the lines of Leila's suggestion, the idea of temporarily scaling up WMF's 
support for national/regional (or thematic) conferences while keeping Wikimania 
in place makes sense to me. That requires some willingness to spend the funds 
for both types of events for a few years. It's a bit of an expensive 
proposition though, and I'm wary of asking the WMF staff to spend more time 
traveling to more conferences. I guess I'm cautiously in favor of looking at 
this option if it's financially practical to scale up the support for focused 
conferences while maintaining support for Wikimania. Keep in mind that WMF 
Fundraising is worried about plateauing revenues, so we're working in a world 
of resource constraints and trying to do the best we can with what we've got. 

I'm looking forward to hearing what Katherine and Christophe think. And with 
that, I'm afraid that I must depart this thread to attend to other matters. (: 
Thanks for the good conversation, everyone. 

Pine 

On Sat, Jul 9, 2016 at 6:37 PM, Leila Zia < [email protected] > wrote: 
Hi Pine, 

On Sat, Jul 9, 2016 at 1:14 PM, Pine W < [email protected] > wrote: 
  I'd also be interested in projections of total attendance and costs 
(including travel costs and staff time) for Wikimania vs. having more or 
expanded national and regional conferences. 

But then there is the benefit (which is not fully captured by attendance that) 
we need to take into account, too, and that's where the main problem starts. 
It's relatively easy to measure the costs of conferences, it's very hard to 
measure their benefit for a variety of reasons, one of which, in our context, 
is that it's hard to assign price-tag to many of the projects the community and 
beyond drive, even if you can clearly link them to Wikimania (which is a 
problem on its own). And that's already the easier part of the benefit 
analysis. It can get way more complicated if we want to assign a price-tag to 
how much it's worth for each of us to learn more about others. 

And now add to all the above, that you are suggesting that we do cost-benefit 
analysis for multiple conference models and compare them. Think about designing 
control experiments, considering the interactions between conferences (people 
who attend both vs. those who attend only one kind), etc. 

I would not go down the path of cost-benefit analysis for a conference such as 
Wikimania. We will loose too much time and money and still the analysis will 
have so many questionable components. 

​What industry and academic conferences usually do when they're in doubt is 
that they become bold and start a new conference but keep the original one in 
place. If the new conference attracts more audience, to the extent that at some 
point organizing the original conference doesn't make sense (too few attendees, 
lower quality abstract submissions, major people in the field moving to the new 
conference), then they gradually stop the original conference. It seems that 
following that approach would be more beneficial than questioning the 
usefulness of Wikimania without more extensively trying the other 
conference/meet-up types first and in parallel to Wikimania. 
​ 
If WMF and the community are going to spend that much money every year on an 
annual conference, with the majority of that money coming from donors who give 
small-dollar amounts, I think that we need to think carefully and thoroughly 
about how we plan the conference (or conferences) to align with the goals of 
our donors and what we tell our donors. 
​Two points to take into account here: 

* Wikimania is a major and mature conference and it's fair to compare it to 
major academic conferences that I'm more familiar with. The cost of such 
conferences is usually quite higher than Wikimania, if you consider roughly the 
same attendance numbers. I would start worrying about the cost of Wikimania 
only if the cost goes much higher than the industry standard. 

* I wouldn't recommend reconsidering how we plan for our major conferences 
based on what we tell our donors. We should define our needs and find a way to 
fund them. 
  
Leila 
​ 
-- 
Leila Zia 
Research Scientist 
Wikimedia Foundation 


Pine 
On Sat, Jul 9, 2016 at 12:50 PM, Deryck Chan < [email protected] > wrote: 
I find it a bit over the top too to have such a letter, so strongly worded, and 
signed by so many board chairs. It reveals a divide between those who 
participated in the IdeaLab survey[1] and those who were at the Future of 
Wikimania session in Esino. It would perhaps be interesting to see if 
correlations can be revealed as to what demographic of Wikimedian prefer 1 year 
per Wikimania and what demographic prefer 2 year per Wikimania - like 
geographical distribution, involvement in local Wikimedia groups (staff / board 
/ other volunteer / not a participant), and past attendance at regional 
Wikimedia conferences and Wikimania. [1] 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:IdeaLab/Towards_a_New_Wikimania/Outcomes 
Thank you. I find it confusing that the letter starts with "The chairpersons of 
the Wikimedia chapters state that Wikimania needs to be arranged every year," 
which implies that all of the chapter chairs are united in agreement, but it 
appears several chapters didn't sign the letter. Looking further at the content 
of the letter, I would have some questions about some of the statements that 
were made there. In the future, I would encourage chapter chairs to have 
discussions about matters such as this on the Affiliates mailing list so that 
we can have more inclusive discussions among more affiliates before sending 
letters like that. The Wikimania situation is already convoluted, and I believe 
that letters such as this should get fuller discussion among affiliates before 
they are sent to WMF. Thanks, Pine On Jul 8, 2016 20:04, "Christophe Henner" < 
[email protected] > wrote: 
My bad I forgot it already is on meta 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_chapters/Statements/Chapter_chairs_statement:_Wikimania_needs_to_be_arranged_every_year
 Le 9 juil. 2016 4:50 AM, "Pine W" < [email protected] > a écrit : 
Thanks Christophe. I, for one, have had difficulty figuring out what is going 
on with Wikimania in regards to varying decisions in different parts of WMF and 
the community, so I look forward to the clarifications. Personally I am 
currently neutral on the decision of whether to have annual Wikimanias, or 
alternate Wikimanias with years in which there is emphasis on national or 
regional conferences. My hunch is that some research about costs and benefits 
is needed so that we have reliable data about a variety of scenarios before 
making a decision. Thanks again for working on this. To the board chairs: I 
would be interested in seeing that letter. In the spirit of transparency, would 
you please publish it on Meta? As you know I am an advocate for much more 
transparency from WMF, and I would like for the affiliates to also to be 
transparent about governance matters such as this one. Thanks, Pine On Jul 8, 
2016 19:18, "Christophe Henner" < [email protected] > wrote: 
Hi everyone, The same question was raised to the board a few days ago by chairs 
of Wikimedia organizations asking Foundation's board to make sure there's a 
comprehensive decision on this very topic.  The chairs letter wasn't public, I 
let them share it on meta or here if they want to :) First step, in my opinion, 
is to set expectations and define the scope (in the role of the event but also 
in the ressources (both human and financial) we commit to the event.  Katherine 
is working with the staff to provide groundings. Here is the answer I provided 
them with.  ---- Hi chairs! First of all, thank you with the email, the 
feedback is clearly useful and raises interesting point.  Now, the Wikimania 
discussion definitly is on the table. Living by what we said during Wikimania, 
we, as WMF, will make sure we end up with a clear answer to your questions but 
also to the different points you raise.  Wikimania is an important time in our 
movement, but as you said it also comes with costs and challenges that we have 
to adress. Katherine is going to meet in the coming days with the staff in 
charge of that topic to start that discussion within WMF and provide groundings 
for a comprehensive decision.  We will try to be as diligent as possible on 
that topic, but I would ask you to keep in mind that as we're in a transition 
phase and that might take a little more time than you could expect.  Again 
thank you for your email, I love the fact that he raises issues but also 
includes the challenges we have to take care of :) We'll get back to you as 
soon as possible to continue that discussion. Have all a really great day / 
night :) Christophe 

While I concur with Coren’s conclusion, I’ll try to neutrally report on the 
events at Wikimania which led to this result. :) 
Full disclosure: I’m a fan of Wikimania being yearly, and was asked to serve on 
the Wikimania Committee after Esino Lario. I was also the main moderator of the 
Wikimania 2016 session on the “Future of Wikimania.” These views are my own, 
and not anything official from the committee. 
Background: Many folks (I’d say a majority) who I talked to in Esino Lario 
early in the conference thought that the decision to do Wikimania every other 
year was a done deal, as a result of the IdeaLab consultation. I told them that 
might not necessarily be so. The vote was close, not particularly widely known, 
and we could still be heard. Chris Schilling from the WMF, who oversaw the 
Idealab consultation, sought me out specifically at the start of the conference 
and to my delight, said that the consultation was “just another data point,” 
and that it was by no means the final word on things. Obviously, this was good 
news to people who were interested in keeping a yearly Wikimania. 
I was scheduled to moderate the “Future of Wikimania” discussion session [1] at 
the very end of the conference, and encouraged people to let their views be 
heard. It was under these conditions that we entered into the final discussion 
room and I asked Chris Schilling to give an opening statement to the room. Most 
people were happy to hear him say that it was “just another data point.” During 
the discussion, there was overwhelming support to keep Wikimania going every 
year, which is not a surprise considering this was *at* Wikimania. I encourage 
folks to peruse the Etherpad notes, which are quite extensive and expertly done 
by several folks there. 
Some views I’d highlight: - Having yearly Wikimania is important to keep the 
momentum of the movement going, according to many - A case for cancelling 
yearly Wikimania was to encourage/fund regional meetups. However, there is no 
guarantee that those regional meetups would actually take place, or that WMF 
would necessarily take the money saved from Wikimania to fund them. Some folks 
from Asia specifically said that there is weaker linguistic, cultural and 
geographic synergy for an “Asian” conference like there is in Europe and 
Africa, which is why it has been hard to do one. - One person noted that one 
trip to Wikimania served the same role as several international trips to get 
the same benefit from meeting other Wikimedians/developers, so there are indeed 
cost efficiencies in having a central conference. 
Thanks. 

[1] 
https://wikimania2016.wikimedia.org/wiki/Discussions/The_future_of_Wikimania 
[2]  https://etherpad.wikimedia.org/p/Wikimania2016-discussion7b 



-Andrew Lih 
Associate professor of journalism, American University 
Email: [email protected] 
WEB: http://www.andrewlih.com 
BOOK: The Wikipedia Revolution: http:// www.wikipediarevolution.com 
PROJECT: Wiki Makes Video 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Wiki_Makes_Video 

On Fri, Jul 8, 2016 at 10:18 AM, Marc-Andre < [email protected] > wrote: 
On 2016-07-08 10:01 AM, Chris Keating wrote: 
Interestingly, I couldn't see any sign of the Committee's decision being 
informed by the WMF's consultation on the future of Wikimania, or anyone from 
the WMF's community engagement department being present. 

Wikimania is, and always was, a community led and organized event. The WMF, as 
its traditional biggest sponsor[1], has a great deal of influence in the matter 
- but ultimately no decision power beyond "fund and resource or not". 

The committee's decision has indeed taken into account the consultation you 
refer to - as well as the roundtable discussion on the "Future of Wikimania" 
that took place earlier[2].  Our evaluation, which is reflected in that 
resolution, is that the consultation was clearly flawed and that its conclusion 
does not reflect consensus - neither of the community members who organize nor 
of those who attend Wikimania. 

-- Coren / Marc 

[1] Although "underwrite" might be a better term - the WMF has pretty much 
shouldered the vast majority of the costs and given the most logistical support 
year in and year out. 

[2] Where the consensus was to overwhelmingly reject that consultation's 
conclusion in favor or continuing with Wikimania as a yearly even given its 
irreplaceable role in our movement. 

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-- 
GN. 
President Wikimedia Australia 
WMAU: http://www.wikimedia.org.au/wiki/User:Gnangarra 
Photo Gallery: http://gnangarra.redbubble.com 


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-- 

__________________________ 
prof. dr hab. Dariusz Jemielniak 
kierownik katedry Zarządzania Międzynarodowego 
i grupy badawczej NeRDS 
Akademia Leona Koźmińskiego 
http://n wrds.kozminski.edu.pl   
członek Akademii Młodych Uczonych Polskiej Akademii Nauk 
Wyszła pierwsza na świecie etnografia Wikipedii "Common Knowledge? An 
Ethnography of Wikipedia" (2014, Stanford University Press) mojego autorstwa  
http://www.sup.org/book.cgi?id=24010 
Recenzje Forbes:  http://www.forbes.com/fdc/welcome_mjx.shtml Pacific Standard: 
 http://www.psmag.com/navigation/books-and-culture/killed-wikipedia-93777/ 
Motherboard:  http://motherboard.vice.com/read/an-ethnography-of-wikipedia The 
Wikipedian:  
http://thewikipedian.net/2014/10/10/dariusz-jemielniak-common-knowledge 
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