Jump to content
Wikimedia Meta-Wiki

Fundraising 2011/FAQ

From Meta, a Wikimedia project coordination wiki
Fundraising 2011
en/ English
Pages for translation: [edit status]
Interface messages
high priority
Translated on Translatewiki. Get started. Published
Banners and LPs (source)
high priority Published
Banners 2 (source)
high priority Published
Jimmy Letter 002 (source)
high priority Published
Jimmy Letter 003 (source)
variation of Jimmy Letter 002 Published
Jimmy Letter 004 (source)
variation of Jimmy Letter 002 Published
Jimmy Mail (source)
variation of Jimmy Letter 002 Published
Brandon Letter (source) Published
Alan Letter (source) Published
Kaldari Letter (source) Published
Karthik Letter (source) Published
Thank You Mail (source) Published
Thank You Page (source) Published
Recurring giving (source) Published
Sue Thank You (source) Published
FAQ (source)
low priority Published
Various requests: Mail to past donors · Jimmy quote

Outdated requests:
Jimmy Letter 001 (source) Published
Core messages (source) Published
Susan Letter (source) Published
GW Letter (source) Published
Translation instructions

To create a translation of this page, write your language's language code in the following box and follow the instructions.

If you have any questions or feedback regarding the translation process, please post them here. Translation FAQ

Wikimedia Foundation – Frequently Asked Questions

In a nutshell, what is Wikipedia? And what's Wikimedia?

[edit ]

Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org) is the world's largest and most popular encyclopedia. It's online, free to use for any purpose, and free of advertising. Wikipedia contains more than 47 million volunteer-authored articles in over 298 languages, and is visited by more than 430 million people every month, making it one of the most popular sites in the world.

It is a collaborative creation that has been added to and edited by millions of people during the past ten years: anyone can edit it, at any time. It has become the largest collection of shared knowledge in human history. The people who support it are united by their love of learning, their intellectual curiosity, and their awareness that we know much more together, than any of us does alone.

The Wikimedia Foundation is the non-profit organization that operates Wikipedia and other free knowledge projects. Together these sites are the fifth most visited web property in the world. The Wikimedia Foundation is a non-profit organization with offices in San Francisco, California, USA, and exempt (since April 2005) from paying taxes under section 501(c)(3) of the US Internal Revenue code which recognizes it with the status of a charity organization. You can review our letter of tax-exemption and our financial reports and annual filings.

Our mission is to empower a global volunteer community to collect and develop the world's knowledge and to make it available to everyone for free, for any purpose. We work together with a network of chapters in many different countries to achieve this goal.

If I donate to Wikimedia, where does my money go?

[edit ]

Money you donate pays for staff salaries and technology. Even though Wikipedia and its sister projects together reach 430 million people every month, we employ only 302 people; see our staff overview.

Our staff is divided into three program departments: technology (website operations, software development); community (public outreach, reader relations and community programs, fundraising), and global development (supporting chapter programs and growing Wikimedia worldwide). The remainder of our staff work in management, finance, and administration, which includes legal protection of our work. Your support also pays for servers, bandwidth, and Internet hosting that allow us to keep Wikimedia's projects running and growing. If you donate to a local chapter in your geography, your donation supports both the Wikimedia Foundation, and program activities in your country.

Above all, the Wikimedia Foundation exists to support and grow the vast network of volunteers who write and edit Wikipedia and its sister projects – more than 100,000 people around the world.

Where can I find more financial information?

[edit ]

The 2009–2010 Wikimedia Foundation Annual Report covers the previous fiscal year (July 1, 2009 to June 30, 2010) with a look-ahead to the next. This is our third annual report. The Wikimedia Foundation Annual Report is a summary of the organization's financials, program activities, milestones and accomplishments.

The 2011-12 Annual Plan is our budget for the current fiscal year. It contains a summary of our strategic goals, financial details on spending and revenue, and detailed explanations and risk analysis.

Click the images below to download copies of our Annual Report or our Annual Plan.

Download the 2009-2010 Annual Report:

Download the 2011-12 Annual Plan:

What are your plans? Where is this going?

[edit ]

As Wikimedia founder Jimmy Wales put it: "Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge."

We're serious about this vision. Every month, more than 430 million people around the world already use Wikipedia. It's available online, on your mobile device, on DVD, in books, and many other forms. We aspire to reach everyone, and to continually provide more and better information.

Supported by an intense community-driven planning process, in 2010 the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees set "big, hairy, audacious goals" for Wikimedia. These five-year targets (PDF) include increasing Wikimedia's global reach to 1 billion people and the number of articles in Wikipedia to 50 million. We're also setting out to dramatically increase and diversify participation, and to measure and improve quality of all Wikimedia content.

Wikimedia is not a traditional organization. It's a global movement. The core of the work is done by thousands of volunteers worldwide. This volunteer community is supported by a network of organizations, with the Wikimedia Foundation at its center, working in partnership with geographically focused local chapters in 37 regions or countries. It's our volunteer community that enables us to accomplish so much with so little.

These are some of the activities we're focused on right now:

Operating the world's fifth largest web property. At its heart, Wikimedia requires operational excellence to continue to exist. As of 2011, we're operating several hundred servers in three locations. While our global traffic continues to grow, our aim is to provide the best possible site experience to everyone in the world, to maximize uptime, and to ensure that all the information in Wikimedia projects is safe and secure.

Photograph: Wikimedia servers in our Florida hosting facility.

Giving Wikimedia's volunteers the best possible tools to do their work. The core technology that makes Wikipedia and its sister projects possible, the wiki, was invented in 1995. Things have changed quite a bit since then. Wikimedia projects run on an open source wiki software called MediaWiki, which we develop and improve. Our goal is to make it as easy as possible to contribute knowledge, and to give volunteers and readers great tools for assessing and improving article quality. In some areas, we lead and innovate. At minimum, we must keep up with key trends in the ever-changing web we're part of. Because our software is open source, everyone can use and improve it.

Photograph: Affinity diagram created based on Wikipedia usability research.

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /