Dear all,
The impact of @wikipedia continues going down on Twitter. There's no strategy 
to turn this trend and the team seems happy with the numbers 
.https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Social_media#Organic_social_media_strategy_update.

For context, the "Engagement Rate per Tweet" (this is the metric that the 
Communications Team proposed as a benchmark) felt to 0.011% (benchmark average 
is 0.035% and 0.05% for non-profits). Compare it with 0.27% of the Basque 
Wikipedia or the Catalan Wikipedia accounts (both have the same impact factor), 
or the 0.23% of the French Wikipedia account. We are talking about strategies 
with x25 impact.

Some months ago, some users made an offer to collaborate in making the social 
media communication strategy better, but there's no answer from the Wikimedia 
Foundation. I'm still waiting for an aswer to the offer.

Sincerely,
Galder
________________________________
From: Galder Gonzalez Larrañaga <galder...@hotmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2023 11:36 AM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter

Dear all,
I write to send a small update on this. In a message about the methodology 
followed to measure success 
(https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Social_media#Re:_Twitter_engagement_questions),
 Laura Dickinson posted this: "According to its 2022 
report<https://www.rivaliq.com/blog/social-media-industry-benchmark-report/>, 
the median Twitter engagement rate for brands across all industries is 0.037%; 
for nonprofits specifically, it is 0.054% [our engagement] over the last 28 day 
period is 2.7%."

I have measured the engagement with that methodology 
(https://www.rivaliq.com/blog/social-media-industry-benchmark-report/#title-methodology)
 for @Wikipedia in January (Likes+RT+Comments / Number of followers) and the 
result is: 0.012%, three times lower than the industry standard and 4.5 lower 
than for non-profits. For context, Basque Wikipedia had 0.055%, Catalan 
Viquipedia 0.060% and Indonesian Wikipedia an astonishing 2.79%.  (You can 
check the numbers here: 
https://www.rivaliq.com/free-social-media-analytics/twitter-head-to-head)

There's an open question about the strategy followed and a sincere proposal of 
opening this account to a shared volunteers/WMF administration.

Sincerely,

Galder

________________________________
From: Àlex Hinojo <alexhin...@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2023 7:42 AM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter

+1

On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 at 07:13, Peter Southwood 
<peter.southw...@telkomsa.net<mailto:peter.southw...@telkomsa.net>> wrote:

A Wikipedia account should be under the control of Wikipedians, following the 
editorial policy for Wikipedia, but they could let WMF do the technical work if 
such exists.  WMF can and should run Wikimedia accounts. WMF running a 
Wikipedia account could be misrepresentation.

Cheers,

Peter



From: Andreas Kolbe [mailto:jayen...@gmail.com<mailto:jayen...@gmail.com>]
Sent: 19 January 2023 02:46
To: Wikimedia Mailing List
Cc: F. Xavier Dengra i Grau
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter



Dear all,



The obvious question surely is: Why not let volunteers (co-)run the Wikipedia 
Twitter account?



A number of Wikipedia language versions (French, Catalan, Portuguese, Basque, 
Waray, etc.) seem to have volunteer-managed Twitter accounts that are doing 
fine. If volunteers are good enough to write the encyclopedia and curate the 
main page of each language version, aren't they good enough to write (or 
suggest) the occasional tweet?



Andreas



On Wed, Jan 18, 2023 at 11:20 PM F. Xavier Dengra i Grau via Wikimedia-l 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org<mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>> wrote:

Hi/Bona nit,



This last tweet from @Wikipedia is a good example of what some of us have been 
mentioning in this list during the past days:



https://twitter.com/wikipedia/status/1615756186640334848?s=46&t=7wB7VI4gwISyFjo-X2jZvQ



Despite the fact that many Wikipedias have already had this new skin deployed 
since months ago as voluntary testers, not a single mention on their huge 
contribution was explained on Twitter (neither back then nor today…). We need 
to go to the 8th tweet of today's publication to read something like "The new 
features, which start rolling out on English Wikipedia today, were built in 
collaboration with Wikipedia volunteers worldwide."



If this is the situation in which the main account is monopolized only to the 
English version and its news/articles, why not specifying it as "English 
Wikipedia" in the profile and in the main link?



Days pass by and we keep sharing to this list proofs, data and justified 
arguments (even collagues offering themselves and willing to trace a joint 
planning!), but still not a word or single thought from the Comms department. 
Disappointing, I am sad to say.



Kind regards/Salutacions



Xavier Dengra



El ds, 14 gen., 2023 a 09:52, Galder Gonzalez Larrañaga 
<galder...@hotmail.com<mailto:galder...@hotmail.com>> va escriure:

Egun on Boodarwun/Gnangarra,

You are righth in one thing: it is very difficult to prove a point only from 
one puntual statistic. That's why I have been tracking statistics for a long 
time, because patterns are here the most important thing. Neverthless, there is 
only one way to know if the point me and some other users in this thread are 
rising is valid: experimenting. @Wikipedia should try something: tweeting 6-7 
times a day, with varied topics, "on this day" like tweets, varying timezones 
and even curiosities about how Wikipedia works 
(https://twitter.com/depthsofwiki/status/1614045362985082881 2 million 
impressions in 9 hours). Then, after -let's say- one month, if the results 
(engagement, followers, retention) are better, it would be quite obvious that 
there's a point changing the social media strategy. If not, if engagement is 
the same, no obvious uprise in followers or RTs is visible, the current 
strategy could be validated.



Me, personally, I'm ready to help the Communications Team with this task, 
proposing intercultural items that could be tweeted and promoted. If they want 
help, they know where to go for it. Again, I think that following the same 
pattern is a bad communication strategy (as we can see by our own eyes) and 
trying something new could be better. Is up to the communications team to 
aknowledge this and give a try.



Sincerely,

Galder



________________________________

From: Gnangarra <gnanga...@gmail.com<mailto:gnanga...@gmail.com>>
Sent: Saturday, January 14, 2023 6:00 AM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org<mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter



Kaya Galder



The assumption that despite there being a wider audience the interests of those 
audience members is exactly the same, if that was true why have multiple 
channels.  What I am saying is that in different communities that doesnt and 
will never hold true.  Using statistics to compare the two is the issue and 
then complaining about different audience responses to the same event being 
caused by those posting to the channel. Its not the channel operators, it's the 
underlying expectation that all audiences are the same and react exactly the 
same way every time even as the audience is increasing by many orders of 
magnitude.



Boodarwun



On Sat, 14 Jan 2023 at 02:06, Galder Gonzalez Larrañaga 
<galder...@hotmail.com<mailto:galder...@hotmail.com>> wrote:

@Gnangarra: I would doubt on the idea that Pelé is not relevant to the English 
audience, as it was the most visited article by far that day 
(https://pageviews.wmcloud.org/topviews/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&date=2022-12-29&excludes=),
 and the second most visited next day, just after the less known Andrew Tate. 
Also, the account is not ENGLISH Wikipedia. Is called Wikipedia, so it should 
take into account, even if it tweets only about English Wikipedia (as pointed 
by @Xavier Dengra) a global audience. Because, again, the goal is "By 2030, 
Wikimedia is to become the central infrastructure for Free Knowledge on the 
Internet.". Not only for US centered people, but by a global audience. Even 
with that in mind, Pelé was the most visited article in English Wikipedia.



@Yaroslav: Basque Wikipedia is not one of the few accounts tweeting about Pelé, 
and in perspective, there are more Basque tweeting accounts per speaker, than 
there are for other larger languages. We are not competing with major news 
outlets; we are competing to be "the central infrastructure for Free Knowledge 
on the Internet". Wikipedia is doing well on that: nearly 2,5 million visits in 
two days for the article about Pelé only in English. I think that there may be 
very few web services having 2,5 million visits for a page about Pelé in two 
days, if there's any. Also, next day the most visited article was about Andrew 
Tate. So, you are right: we are not a news outlet, but we are visited according 
to the news. Any strategy that doesn't have this in mind, will fail.



You also ask how many tweets a day would be enough. I don't have an answer for 
this. I would like the communications team to come with one, but they don't 
seem either to have one. I don't think that tweeting every hour is better, but 
I'll explain why one tweet per day is a bad strategy, based only in what we 
know about the Twitter algorithm:

  *   The Twitter algorithm tends to show a tweet to followers and others more 
often if it gets more engagements (RTs, likes, comments...). So, maximizing 
engagements seems a something positive if we want to reach to new people.
  *   It also shows an account more often if the user interacts with it. If 
someone likes, RTs or comments a tweet, it seems that this account will be 
shown again soon. That's why you see more often tweets from your friends than 
others. And that's why ideological bubbles are created.
  *   If people are engaged with a tweet, it will be shown more regularly after 
a tweet by other people you follow once you scroll down. This is why if you 
open a tweet by a far-right politician, you will see below other tweets by 
far-right sided politicians and the opposite for left, libertarian, green or 
vegans. It shows you similar content, based on people's interaction.

So, tweeting more doesn't maximize engagement (if you tweet every minute, you 
will lose it), but tweeting less minimizes engagement. If you only tweet once a 
day, and you don't get too much attention, your next tweet will be less 
important for the algorithm, and so on. The only valid strategy is one that 
gets people engaged to your tweet, so you get more impressions, and this drives 
more interactions, and this drives more followers. Because, at the end of the 
day, we want to be "the central infrastructure for Free Knowledge on the 
Internet".



I don't know how much is the ideal thing. In Basque Wikipedia our strategy is 
to publish 5-6 tweets every day, and then also interact with people talking 
about Wikipedia or speaking about articles they have created (like @viquipedia 
does, with great success). Our topics from the 5-6 daily tweets now (2023) are 
like this: every morning (yes, most of our followers live in the same 
time-zone) a biography of someone who was born/died on this day; then, 
something that happened 100 years ago. At noon, an artwork. If the artwork is 
depicting something interesting, a second tweet linked to that explaining the 
artwork itself. Two tweets in the afternoon: the first one, optional, about 
something related to Wikipedia itself (Statistics, projects, some user who has 
created something cool...) and then science/technology in a broad sense. At 
evening, we like to tweet something related to current events, if this is 
interesting. We have a shared doc with the daily tweets and we program them 
some days in advance. Also, we use MOA to have them copied to Mastodon.



I don't know, again, if this is the optimal. I know that is better than 
one-per-day, because data is obviously better. Engagements, followers and 
interactions are better this way, as I have proved above.



Best,

Galder









________________________________

From: F. Xavier Dengra i Grau via Wikimedia-l 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org<mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>>
Sent: Friday, January 13, 2023 3:37 PM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org<mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>>
Cc: F. Xavier Dengra i Grau 
<xavier.den...@protonmail.com<mailto:xavier.den...@protonmail.com>>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter



Hi/Bon dia



Yaroslav: Also, you say one tweet per day is too little, how may do you think 
is normal? If I personally see an account which tweets more than say 10 per day 
(not counting threads) I start thinking may be it is a spam generator.



Since 4 years ago we updated the social media methodology for the Catalan 
Wikipedia Twitter account (approx 4.5M native speakers, 10M audience), we 
boosted from 15.3K to 45.4K speakers, now being the 4th most followed language 
of Wikipedia.



Our method in a nutshell: we have up to 23 knowledge themes that we oblige 
ourselves to post at least once every week. The number of our daily tweets vary 
from 6 to 10 only in content (i.e., articles). This depends on, ofc, whether 
it's a working day vs a weekend or other time aspects (peak hours). Plus the 
interactions (RT+kudos) with our wikipedians that share their new articles 
tagging us, which has been a massive way to appreciate their task and to 
visibilize to others the task of being a volunteer in Wikipedia. In fact, the 
latter has been especially critical to bring us huge additional views and to 
renew a few of our new, most active editing community (especially young users!).



If our account, managed by volunteers, can conduct this organized work for a 
small-medium size language, why should we accept that a whole staffed team from 
the WMF, firstly, rejects to provide engagement data on our common, biggest 
handle? And secondly, why should we give up on them preparing a strategy to 
improve its scope and objectives?



Regarding the last question, I'd like to add a last thought: never ever in the 
4 years that I've been upfront in the handles in my language, the @Wikipedia 
account has given a simple, courtesy RT of any knowledge content (articles) 
from the Arabic, Bahasa Indonesia, Basque, Catalan, Galician, French, Suda or 
Portuguese (etc.) existing handles. That should be a key aspect in our debate.



Because if @Wikipedia is mostly used as the “central account” for the project, 
then it should also be very careful 1) to not always post in English and give 
some room to interact with the other language handles, 2) to stop centering 
their tweets on English-speaking culture, and 3) to post without clear range of 
topics to stay balanced. Oppositely, if it is decided that @Wikipedia is only 
the English-language handle, then it may change its profile name to "English 
Wikipedia" and not continue as the reference speaker either for the WMF nor for 
significant news or events.



Best/Salutacions,



Xavier Dengra

------- Original Message -------
On divendres, 13 de gener 2023 a les 14:56, Yaroslav Blanter 
<ymb...@gmail.com<mailto:ymb...@gmail.com>> wrote:



Hi Galder,



on the other hand.. Basque Wikipedia is one of very few accounts twitting on 
the Pele death in Basque, whereas a lot was twitted in English. I do not think 
English Wikipedia twitter can compete with major news outlets, they operate on 
a completely different scale.The low-hanging fruit would be twitting DYKs, FAs, 
GAs, or may be some other randomly picked stuff. Also, you say one tweet per 
day is too little, how may do you think is normal? If I personally see an 
account which tweets more than say 10 per day (not counting threads) I start 
thinking may be it is a spam generator.



Best

Yaroslav



On Fri, Jan 13, 2023 at 2:26 PM Galder Gonzalez Larrañaga 
<galder...@hotmail.com<mailto:galder...@hotmail.com>> wrote:

Some months have gone since I started this topic in this list, and still, we 
can't know how much engagement we have at Wikipedia, because data is not 
available. Twitter is now owned by Elon Musk, things are changing, there are 
more accounts in Mastodon daily, but still Twitter matters. I have been looking 
at the Twitter activity in the last days for @Wikipedia and I'm still very 
worried about the (lack of) strategy followed here. A full team, with staff 
members, which only produces one tweet per day, a lonely message in the 
vastness of the ocean, and gets really poor engagement numbers.



A couple of weeks ago Pelé, one of the greatest football players of all time, 
died. (English) Wikipedia Twitter account needed 7 days to tweet about it, even 
if the article was changed in a few minutes after the death 
(https://twitter.com/Wikipedia/status/1611363972174778368). The tweet had 
13.729 impressions (now we can know the number of impressions), 14 RTs and 129 
likes. Wikipedia account has nearly 644.000 followers. If we divide these two 
numbers, we get a rate of 2,13% of impressions per follower.



The same day Pelé died, Basque Wikipedia made a tweet. Not a week after, just 
when it was news (https://twitter.com/euwikipedia/status/1608541274491211776). 
The tweet had 964 impressions, 3 RTs and 2 likes. Basque Wikipedia account has 
7,956 followers. This is a rate of 12,11% of impressions per follower. x5.68 
times larger, relatively than (English) Wikipedia Twitter account.



(English) Wikipedia Twitter account has nearly 81 times more followers than the 
Basque one. English Wikipedia is more visible, because it has a (now golden) 
verified account symbol, so tweets are more often promoted. English has 1.500 
million speakers around the world. Basque has fewer than one million. English 
Wikipedia should have around 1.000 more followers than Basque Wikipedia. 
English Wikipedia article about Pelé had 2,5 million pageviews in the two days 
after his death. Basque had 250 pageviews. This is 10.000 times more pageviews.



@Wikipedia has 644.000 followers, and @euwikipedia has nearly 8.000. Audience 
of English Wikipedia is 10.000 times larger for the same event. Why Wikipedia 
is not 10.000 times larger? Why doesn't Wikipedia account have 80 million 
followers? YouTube's Twitter account has 78 million followers. "By 2030, 
Wikimedia is to become the central infrastructure for Free Knowledge on the 
Internet.". How could we if Youtube's account has 100x more followers than we 
have? How can think that we are in a good shape if our tweets are only seen by 
less than 2% of our followers?



I hope that 2023 comes with a change. A change to open these accounts, have a 
fresh way of thinking on social media ,and building engagement, both with 
momentum, not losing opportunities, and promoting good content.



Sincerely



Galder





________________________________

From: Galder Gonzalez Larrañaga 
<galder...@hotmail.com<mailto:galder...@hotmail.com>>
Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2022 3:21 PM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org<mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter

Dear all,

Some weeks ago, we had a discussion here about the different approaches we have 
for the @wikipedia account at Twitter. We don't know yet how many interactions 
does the account has, but as I said in the discussion, we try to find ways to 
measure our work at @euwikipedia. Today I want to share with you that this 
account was ranked last week as the most influential social-movements account 
in Basque language (https://umap.eus/ranking/gizartea) and the 10th most 
influential account in all categories (https://umap.eus/ranking/orokorra). This 
is a good metric we use to know if we are doing fine or not.



Sincerely,

Galder



________________________________

From: Andy Mabbett <a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk<mailto:a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk>>
Sent: Friday, August 5, 2022 8:50 PM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List 
<wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org<mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: @Wikipedia losing opportunities in Twitter

On Mon, 18 Jul 2022 at 18:48, Lauren Dickinson 
<ldickin...@wikimedia.org<mailto:ldickin...@wikimedia.org>> wrote:

> Also, Andy, we will follow up this week regarding your questions
> about the @WiktionaryUsers and @Wiktionary accounts.

Three working weeks have passed since the above was written; I've seen
no such follow-up. Have I missed something?

--
Andy Mabbett
@pigsonthewing
https://pigsonthewing.org.uk
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