(no title)
aezell | 4 years ago
As for the language in the ads, it's there because it works. The WMF has tried, many times, language which is less emotional and more objective. It doesn't work. People don't respond.
What you're asking for is to have people donate because of their objective sense of value but that's not how most humans work. The WMF does what works.
Zarel|4 years ago
(That said, I agree that individual WMF employees aren't overpaid per se. But perhaps it doesn't need quite as expansive of a bureaucracy as it does. Not to pick on Wikipedia; I see this phenomenon in other organizations, too: my university has been expanding the bureaucracy and hiking tuition while more and more professors are adjuncts earning below-minimum wage on food stamps. The individual bureaucrats may not be getting rich, but they sure don't have food insecurity like the adjuncts, and perhaps hiring more of them was a poor decision.)
Qub3d|4 years ago
Currently, there is nothing preventing WMF from drawing down the endowment arbitrarily, effectively making it a checking account, not an endowment.
This is less a complaint about fundraising (we get it, nonprofits need money) but accountability. Its one thing to ask for donations. Its another to use loaded language (ironically in violation of the Wikipedia Manual of Style) that implies the site will go dead in a year unless you contribute money to the dark pool of cash with almost no oversight.
"We should make spending transparent, publish a detailed account of what the money is being spent on and answer any reasonable questions asking for more details. We should limit spending increases to no more than inflation plus some percentage (adjusted for any increases in page views), build up our endowment, and structure the endowment so that the WMF cannot legally dip into the principal when times get bad."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Guy_Macon/Wikipedia_has_C...
akolbe|4 years ago
https://lists.wikimedia.org/hyperkitty/list/wikimedia-l@list...
'According to the recent Independent Auditors' Report of the WMF [1], at some point prior to the end of June 2020, an entity called the "Wikimedia Knowledge Equity Fund" was established, and $8.723 million was transferred to it by the WMF, in the form of an unconditional grant. The Fund is "managed and controlled by Tides Advocacy" (a 501(c)(4) advocacy nonprofit previously led by the WMF's current General Counsel/Board Secretary, who served as CEO, Board Secretary, and Treasurer there). Given that a Google search for "Wikimedia Knowledge Equity Fund" yields zero results prior to the release of the report, it is clear that the WMF kept this significant move completely secret for over five months, perhaps over a year. The Report FAQ additionally emphasizes that the WMF "has no right of return to the grant funds provided, with the exception of unexpended funds."
'The WMF unilaterally and secretly transferred nearly $9 million of movement funds to an outside organization not recognized by the Affiliations Committee. No mention of the grant was made in any Board resolutions or minutes from the relevant time period. The amount was not mentioned in the public annual plan, which set out rather less than this amount for the entire grantmaking budget for the year. No application was made through any of the various Wikimedia grants processes. No further information has been provided on the administration of this new Fund, or on the text of the grant agreement.
'I am appalled.
'-- Yair Rand'
[1] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/f/f7/Wikim...
Part of this money eventually turned up here:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_Equity_Fund
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Knowledge_Equity_Fund
Where were donors told that $4.5 million of the money they gave would be used to fund causes that not only have nothing to do with Wikipedia, but also have nothing to do with any other Wikimedia project? Where was the oversight on who would be awarded these grants?
aezell|4 years ago
akolbe|4 years ago
> If you think anyone is getting rich working at the WMF, I can disavow you of that notion. It's just not true.
Managers earning $300K+ are not getting rich. Good. I guess it's all relative.
> As for the language in the ads, it's there because it works. The WMF has tried, many times, language which is less emotional and more objective. It doesn't work. People don't respond.
"We simply couldn't have increased our revenue from $5M in 2008 to $155M in 2021 without being emotional and, um, 'unobjective'. We just couldn't have done it."
> What you're asking for is to have people donate because of their objective sense of value but that's not how most humans work. The WMF does what works.
"If you want people to give you 31 times as much money as before, you have to tell a good story. What else can you do? By the way, did we mention that we think we should be the central part of the world's information ecosystem?"
aezell|4 years ago
This is not conducive to honest conversation. I've been nothing but polite in our discussion. Your sarcasm here and in further responses isn't constructive.
> Managers earning $300K+ are not getting rich. Good. I guess it's all relative.
It is relative. If you live in San Francisco where the WMF is headquartered, this salary won't make you rich. I wish I could make that much money but given the role and the location, it doesn't seem exorbitant.
It might be instructive to look at how many people are giving money and not just the actual amount of money. I'm honestly saying that. I don't know the numbers because I haven't looked in years. Maybe there's more money because more people use it, more people find value in it, and more people donate. It would be an interesting way to slice the data. What's the average donation size? How has the geographic distribution of donations changed?
It seems like across all these threads, what many people, possibly including you, are responding negatively to is the language in the ads and not strictly the fact that the WMF collects money from people who willingly give it. I've already said that I don't care for the language either. I believe that they could be successful without it. Perhaps, not equally as successful but successful nonetheless. I shared that feedback when I worked there. I want them to appeal to the better angels of our nature.
Still, it's marketing and if my money supports the mission (the whole mission and not just Wikipedia), which by all accounting it does, then I'll continue to donate. The marketing, while undesirable, doesn't change their dedication to the mission.
pbhjpbhj|4 years ago
The comparison should be the people WMF are begging money from, I doubt hardly any of those being asked to donate in order to "save" Wikipedia are earning anything like that amount. Fire the 40 advertising managers and you've got something like half what's _needed_.
They have over $300 million, they don't need people to respond and they certainly don't need to misrepresent the situation as they are.