Tl;dr

This must be Thursday. I never could get the hang of Thursdays.

Thank you for everything!

Now the longer version...

That was quite a run! A lot of your accomplishments have been shared here
but one is missing. One that is capturing how brilliant you are, how
facetiously crazy you are and, well, how very wikimedian to the core you
are.

The Selfie Monkey communication campaign.

That was quite a run, I am proud I got to work closely with you when I was
chair and vice-chair. It was a blessing to be able to work with someone
bold, smart and had a great vision of what Wikimedia should be.

But the real feat is that you turned a vision into reality.

Under your leadership we scaled up. Not only in resources but in openness,
inclusiveness and ambition. Let's not forget you also took head on the
challenge of healing the Foundation after a crisis and rebuilding trust and
dialogue with the entire movement. This thread is proof you succeeded :)

Things are never perfect and there is still so much to fix and to do. But
also so much less than five years ago thanks to you.

We have had global, open and inclusive conversations about who we are. Our
footprint has globally improved. But more than our footprints, you have
made room for leaders outside of the US and Europe to emerge.

We have a Universal Code of Conduct! If it was only for that your track
record would be amazing.

Those are deep changes. And there are so many more, I let others contribute
and list them!

And there are those things that are discreet but instrumental (yay API
project, Abstract etc.) that you and the teams you lead turned from ideas
to actual projects. Not forgetting your strong commitment to Wikidata from
day one. All will be structural to the future of open knowledge.

Your legacy speaks louder for you than any word I could write.

But enough with praising the professional you. You are an amazing
professional but you also are a stellar human being.

You are a very approachable and relatable leader. You care and that changed
everything.

Plus, you were a great companion to play  "who leaves the party last", "how
close to boarding time can I arrive at the airport and not miss my flight",
"can you open a bottle of wine with a shoe in Buenos Aires without spilling
any" and "Wikimedian terrible singers 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019".

I hope our paths will cross again, and preferably before the restaurant at
the end of the universe.

Farewell and keep changing the world.



Le jeu. 4 févr. 2021 à 6:48 PM, Katherine Maher <kma...@wikimedia.org> a
écrit :

> Hi everyone,
>
> Earlier today, I announced to my colleagues at the Wikimedia Foundation my
> intention to step down as CEO later this spring. April 15th will be my last
> day, marking my seven-year anniversary with the Foundation and the
> movement. This was not an easy decision, but it is the right one. For now,
> I want to share with you why I’m moving on, and what comes next. I’ll save
> the customary email with deeper reflections, memories, and thanks for later
> this spring!
>
> In some ways, this was the easiest hard decision I’ve ever made. It’s
> never exactly a good time to step away -- transitions always have some
> rough edges -- but it’s always best to do so when the organization is
> strong, and before you’ve overstayed your welcome. The movement is in a
> good, strong place. Our communities are growing, our readership is too. Our
> 20th birthday, the launch of our Universal Code of Conduct, and the
> movement strategy recommendations are all milestone moments of solidity and
> strength. I have great hopes and confidence in the upcoming plans for
> strategy implementation, particularly the work on the movement charter and
> interim global council. We are healthy and thriving.
>
> While we will always have more work to do to become the Wikimedia that we
> want to be, our movement and our organization is in a phase of renewal and
> regeneration. We have deepened our practices of consultation,
> collaboration, and inclusion that will be the foundation of the next decade
> of our work. We have a deep and stable financial position that will help us
> grow and protect us from any storm, and the trust in our projects has never
> been higher. Our communities are poised to take on deeper responsibilities
> of governance, accountability, and leadership, populating a rich,
> representative, and leaderful movement for free knowledge.
>
> The Foundation is also strong, and filled with passionate, values-aligned
> leaders at every level of the organization, deeply committed to the work of
> our movement and mission. Although we don’t always all perfectly agree on
> absolutely everything, we are working more openly and cooperatively with
> our movement than ever before. Collaborative strategic planning,
> sustainable programs to support technical communities and tooling,
> co-development and consultation on transformative new experiences welcoming
> newcomers, cooperative partnerships on public health data, bibliographic
> data, and human rights data -- all of these are signals of much great work
> to come. Even difficult topics, such as brand and movement governance,
> continue to bring people together in nothing less than feisty commitment.
>
> Together, we have rich resources of brilliant people, deep passion, and
> compassion. We are making progress on some of our greatest challenges, from
> editor and readership growth, technical debt, representation and
> participation, safety and knowledge equity. I am proud of what we’ve done
> together and grateful for all the ways in which this movement has made my
> life immeasurably richer: friendships that will last a lifetime,
> intellectual curiosity and kinship, and so many memories of *so much
> dancing*, from Accra to Berlin to Chandigarh.
>
> As for me, I’m going to take a break, and a research fellowship, as a
> place to think about what’s next. It’s hard to think about your future when
> you’re fully in your present, and for the past seven years, I’ve been fully
> present for this movement. But as I look around, I see global challenges
> such as polarization, inequality, and climate change, as well as
> opportunities for generational renewal and optimism. As a Wikimedian, I
> lean toward optimism, and plan to apply myself in that direction!
>
> *What’s next*
>
>    - We announced this planned transition publicly on our communications
>    channels during a Foundation all-staff meeting today.
>    - A Board Transition Committee composed of Dariusz Jemielniak, who is
>    chair of HR Committee, Tanya Capuano, who is chair of the Audit Committee,
>    Raju Narisetti, and María Sefidari as Board Chair, will launch the search
>    for a new CEO. They’ll work closely with the executive Transition Team on
>    organizational operations, and with the broader board on an open candidate
>    call. The Board is working with the goal of onboarding a new CEO by Q2 of
>    the 2021-2022 fiscal year.
>    - We’ve been working on succession planning for the CEO role since
>    2019 as a matter of best practice, and the organization is well-prepared
>    for a thoughtful search for the next phase of our mission. The Board has
>    decided to work with Kathleen Yazbak of Viewcrest Advisors[1] for the
>    executive search: I’ve worked closely with Kathleen on a number of
>    occasions, and she is a true Wikimedian at heart.
>    - I’ll be drawing back from day-to-day operational work to transition
>    interim responsibilities starting February 8th. A C-level Transition Team
>    of Jaime Villagomez, Amanda Keton, and Robyn Arville, our two board
>    officers and chief people leader, will take up key responsibilities and
>    decision making around planning, community, and people, and work closely
>    with the broader C-team and VP leadership cohort.
>    - I’ll spend the next three months supporting the Foundation in
>    readying itself for a transition. I’ll spend February preparing with this
>    group and other organizational and community leaders on movement strategy
>    and institutional knowledge transfer, sharing lessons learned, and
>    supporting the organization in developing the next year’s strategic plan.
>    - I look forward to celebrating with you in March and April!
>
> I'll be around for a bit, so feel free to reach out, and after that, I'll
> see you on the wikis!
>
> Cheers,
> Katherine
>
> [1] https://viewcrestadvisors.com/
>
>
> --
>
> Katherine Maher (she/her)
>
> CEO
>
> Wikimedia Foundation <https://wikimediafoundation.org/>
>
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