Friday, January 2nd 2009
Wikipedia Donation Campaign Succeeds in Raising Above $6 Million
What started off on a low-key as a free online encyclopedia, Wikipedia now stands as an indispensable part of the internet, as one of the most important information resources. Earlier in 2008, the Wikimedia Foundation (the parent organisation behind Wikipedia) found itself in a severe cash deficit that threatened the very existence of the Website. The organisation then sought to go public for help, launching a worldwide donation campaign. Their donation goal was set at US $ 6 million. The organisation kept its operations fairly transparent by providing a break-down of its 2008~09 budget.
Around the last week of 2008, their donations stood at $3.8 million. Following Christmas, a surge in donations was observed. In a matter of five days since Christmas, not only was the $6 million goal approached at, but also surpassed, which now stands at roughly $6.158 million. Wikipedia is thus saved and will live to see the light of this year.
Source:
TG Daily
Around the last week of 2008, their donations stood at $3.8 million. Following Christmas, a surge in donations was observed. In a matter of five days since Christmas, not only was the $6 million goal approached at, but also surpassed, which now stands at roughly $6.158 million. Wikipedia is thus saved and will live to see the light of this year.
45 Comments on Wikipedia Donation Campaign Succeeds in Raising Above $6 Million
I'm using it day by day!
ps: U have two good friend's in the internet Google and Wikipedia! :D
psps:
Google (male)
Wikipedia (female)
Pobably :) :toast:
Look at this: upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/4/41/FY_2008_09_Annual_Plan.PDF page 13, and page 11.
3 fundraising staff earning $510,000 incl. expenses is approx $120,000 each, plus $1000 per week expenses each per week.
4 developers and 1 sys admin, plus a few contracting expenses, $375,000. That's an average of $70,000 for the developers and $100,000 for the admin.
5 people in Finance/admin costing $1,619,000 (incl. expenses).
LIke I said, while I support the wiki concept, these people are paying theseselves serious dollar and/or running huge expense accounts. I'm not sure that they will maintain so much private charitable donations when people really understand what the individuals are putting in their pockets; it's hardly charity or non-profit budgeting.
Yes you can get cheaper employees, perhaps even free, but can they run one of the largest websites in the world?
The wikimedia foundation board arent no mugs either (some of which have donated large sums of money)
wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Press_releases/Neeru_Khosla_to_Become_Wikipedia_Advisor_Dec_2008
wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Advisory_Board
I'm sure they are trying to get as much value for money as they can, like every other charity.
If it is a non-profit organisation it needs an entirely different "business model". It should not go paying higher-than-commercial salaries. Either, it needs to operate on part-time goodwill of key individuals, or it needs to have a revenue model to pay these fat salaries. BUT, they cannot just go cap in hand and expect the community to cough up private gifts to pay these fat salaries. It beggars belief!
As for expenses, you have no idea what the expenses include? Maybe these jobs require a lot of travelling around the world? Staying in hotels?
The basic salaries by themselves arent that remarkable.
These are skilled jobs and a lot of charities pay the going rate for these type of jobs.
edit:
A developer earning $70k. Is that really that much for someone with the experience to runa site like wikipedia? I know people taking computer science degrees who expect to earn 50-60k staright out of university, some of who will. The best almost definitely will.
If you think the salaries are small and the expenses are higher, then perhaps you need to think why they obfuscated the numbers, rather than ANY COMMERICAL ORGANISATION that would report a detailed breakdown of costs, separated between salaries, expenses, and overheads, for 100% transparency.
And I certainly hope that all the staff, esp. finance, admin, and programmers, dont have to spend their entire year in hotels. LOL. :roll:
I think you are really missing the point. The wiki foundation lives on the free contributions made by the community and on the free contributions and gifts made by OTHER charitable organistions, many of them state funded. (Look up the Advisory Board and see who pays their living costs) or who has paid foe the development of much of the software used by wiki).
What exactly do you mean by decent finance analyst? This is a charity not an investment bank! LOL :roll:
If say I was a developer who could earn $100k at google, but instead work at wikipedia for $50k, I am effectively donating $50k a year to wikipedia (think about this as me working for google and donating $50k a year to wikipedia so that they can hire a $100k a year developer, they are equivalent). People can be good, but that is stretching a bit.
Also maybe not finance analysts, but accountants etc. I said finance/business analysts because wikipedia is effectively purely about investment as there is no actual tangible product. So it may require a lot of analysis and expertise in that area.
edit:
You will find that people who work high up in charities are actually earning a lot less than what they could earn in the private sector.
If those budgets were covered by income (not gifts from the community) then one could argue it's none of our business... BUT, it is. As a charity it faces the same scrutiny from the community as does the public purse of government. Perhaps more so.
Anyway, I dont want to ambush the thread further. I think we just take a different "business view" of what is going on.
The real tragedy is the educational system. The libraries, encyclopedias and any traditional way of learning is becoming a dinosaur. The classic way to retrieve information is being neglected because of sites like Wikipedia. I think its a cool site but many people accept anything on it as fact without doing any cross referencing. G-d forbid it goes down one day. I think our educational system would collapse. :laugh:
"Who cares?". No I do care. Why? Because I think wikipedia is great. So why the concern? Because anything unsustainable is unsustainable. If their revenue/cost model is one of "charity" then they need to behave like one. If their revenue/cost model is like a commercial enterprise, then likewise, they need to behave like one.
Wiki is, IMO, in the middle of an identity crisis. It doesnt quite know what it is or what it wants to be.
Its for a website. In the end no one suffers. It's not like they say its for children starving in Africa.
Seems like charity and non-profit governance as well as NGO governance as well as government governance are all seriously underdeveloped areas requiring further thought, comment, and change.
PS. Let TPU governance shine a bright light through these muddy affairs and become a beacon of honour! :pimp:
Hmm, we need a new "governance brand concept" just like "bio". Theres money to be made... LOL ;) Let me think of a logo.
Much in Wikipedia is false info. Have a look at the large number of articles against India and about 'anti-Christian violence' in India. They are all copy-pasted from Christian sites. There is no neutrality. There is also anti-Asian slant all over, though the site is most used by Asians.
If you try any neutral editing, a group of Baptists and Catholic Admins gang up against you and Block you. It is all funny.
Many missionary and proselytizer-groups have paid employees to monitor Wiki. The more False stories they plant about Christian agony in Asia, the more donations they can claim from credulous Western donors.
This is where this sub-topic ends. Thanks!