Great question, Tomer. Generally, I think the whole
Board views itself as having the obligation to follow-up on
performance against plan. Specifically, our HR Committee has
the task of collecting feedback and preparing the annual
evaluation of our executive director. Much of the ED's review
is performance against the organization's annual plan.
Additionally, Sue has a process for evaluating staff
performance and much of that is also performance against the
goals in the annual plan.
More broadly, sorting out goals within a given year is
hard. We have the strategic plan which has a set of
objectives for 2015. What we all try to do at the beginning of
the year is identify the things we need to do to get there in
two areas:
- Financially. Here we develop high level revenue and
spending targets we believe are necessary to achieve these
objectives. See p. 29 of the plan for those.
-s
WMF
On Jan 1, 2012, at 3:46 AM, Tomer Ashur wrote:
Hi Stu,
I have a question:
You mention that staff prepare the work plan and the
board review and approve it. Who's in charge to verify
that the goals in the plan were met. I mean, it's a
good idea to have a plan but someone should also
verify that people actually try to achieve it? Is that
something the board does? if so, does it meet in order
to do so?
Tomer
WMIL
On Wed, Dec 21, 2011 at 12:29
AM, Stuart West
<stu@wikimedia.org>
wrote:
To begin sharing ideas
and best practices, let's start threads on
the governance/accountability/transparency
practices at each of our organizations. I'll
go first with my views on the
Wikimedia Foundation. A few others from the
WMF are on this list too. Please add new
thoughts or help answer questions!
I want to thank Thierry for his note to
Foundation-l in late August covering many of
these issues for Wikimedia France. That
was fascinating for me and helped inspire my
interest in this list. Thierry, maybe you
could update that email and send it around
to this list on a new thread?
This will be long, and may be repetitive for
many of you. But I think it is important to
share a thorough overview. It would be great
if others could aim for the same level of
detail / section headings when introducing
their own organizations. I'm really
interested in learning from what you all are
doing.
WMF
Overview
The Wikimedia Foundation is a U.S.-based
non-profit corporation created in 2003.
It received tax-exempt status in 2005. Its
primary governing document is the bylaws
at http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Bylaws.
The Foundation is the holder / owner of
the trademarks, including Wikimedia
and Wikipedia, and the operator of most of
the websites used by the projects.
Governance
The Foundation’s governing body is its
Board of Trustees. As a U.S. non-profit,
the Foundation has some flexibility
setting size and composition of its Board.
We decided in early 2008
to have 10 members. The editing community
(mostly) elects three seats in odd years
(e.g. 2009, 2011).
The Chapters as a group appoint two seats
in even years (e.g. 2010,
2012).
The founder seat is for Jimmy Wales. The
Board itself appoints the four remaining
members to bring necessary expertise to
the Board. Board member serve for two
years terms.
With appointed members, we attempt to
identify gaps between the
existing membership and the skills we need
to fulfill our duties. For example,
the Board identified financial, auditing,
and organizational governance experience
as an important skill to have. Since we
have not typically found that in the
community elected/appointed members, the
Board sought out someone with that
background. That’s me.
Not all Board seats have been filled at
all times, but we currently do have
the full 10 members. There's a lot of work
to do, and a lot of perspectives
to consider, so having a full Board is
really good.
Each year at Wikimania, the Board elects
four officers: A Chair, a Vice-Chair, a
Treasurer, and a Secretary. A few years
ago we wrote detailed definitions for
three of those roles: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Chair,
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Treasurer,
and http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Secretary.
The Vice-Chair role is mostly to be backup
to the Chair and is typically included on
all communications with the Chair.
We try to have different trustees in each
officer role. Last year I was
both Vice-Chair and Treasurer. It got to
be too much work for one person,
though, and we are sensibly back to
one-person, one-office this year.
It can sometimes be challenging to have
everyone focus on something at the same
time, so we’ve experimented with another
informal role of “whip.” That's a term
I’ve heard in U.S. and U.K. politics to
describe someone who is responsible for
collecting votes, keeping us on
schedule, etc. We’ve had mixed success
with that role, though. It's hard for
someone to always be the “bad guy.”
The Board has delegated duties to three
formal Board committees: an
Audit Committee which I chair, a Human
Resources committee responsible primarily
for evaluating the Executive Director
and for overseeing compensation, and a
Board Governance Committee responsible
for assisting in governance matters. We've
only written a formal chatter for
the Audit Committee (http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Audit_charter)
but I wish we had more because it is
really helpful to set clear expectations.
The
Audit Committee was, at first, quite
small and comprised mostly of Board
members. But we found that fairly few
trustees from the community had both the
experience and the time to focus on its
work. So for the 2009-2010 year we
switched to a model where one trustee
leads the Audit Committee (me), and
then we reach out broadly to the community
for members. We've had great success with
that model, and continue to have really
valuable participation from community
members. Membership history is at
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Audit_committee. The
Board's Chair and the ED sit in on
meetings.
Because of early investments in
movement-wide fundraising, the Board
has been able to hire a staff. It no
longer plays an operating one. We do not
get involved day to day in the
operations of the foundation. We do not
hire staff, other than the executive
director. We do not interact with staff
in a governance or management role,
though we do often in community work.
The Board really has two primary duties:
fulfill our governance obligations and
hire/evaluate the Executive Director.
Most of us also view us as having an
additional less-defined but really
important third role as one of the
movement-wide leadership/decision-making
bodies for Wikimedia.
All Board members are volunteers. The
time commitment is less than it used to
be but is still quite significant. I
estimate it's about 5 hours a week just
for board work (excluding
editing/community work), plus 10-12 days
of meetings/travel each year. The Board
meets in person three or four times a
year and on IRC a few more times a
year.
We maintain a Board manual with lots
more information at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Board_manual.
We use this regularly as a reference for
ourselves. We also use it to introduce
potential new trustees to the role.
Finance/governance/legal staff
Currently we have a chief of finance and
administration (Garfield Byrd),
a Controller (Tony Le), and a small
finance staff. We also have a
General Counsel (Geoff Brigham) and a
small legal staff. More details on staff
are at http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Staff_and_contractors.
Transparency
The two primary vehicles we use for
transparency are the
Foundation’s website at http://wikimediafoundation.org
and of course Meta. The staff publishes
activity and technology reports
each month at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Foundation_reports.
The staff also publishes semi-annual
financial reports and government
filings at http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Financial_reports.
The Board publishes its minutes at http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Foundation_reports
and its resolutions at http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolutions.
Financial audits
In the U.S., independent auditors focus
on the financial statements and controls
behind them, testing management's
draft results against
transaction records and against U.S.
GAAP. The WMF's Audit Committee has
engaged the San Francisco office of
global auditors KPMG in 2008.
Previously, the WMF had worked with a
small Florida auditing firm called
Gregory, Sharer & Stuart.
KPMG's latest audit is at http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/a/ac/FINAL_10_11From_KPMG.pdf.
Like many U.S.-based non-profits, our
fiscal year ends on June
30, mostly because it’s cheaper to get
auditors in the off-cycle and it gives
more time to catch up on end-of-year
fundraising paperwork.
Government regulation
The primarily federal regulator of
non-profits in the U.S. is the
Internal Revenue Service, which grants
non-profit status and requires
annual public filings of our activities.
This Form 990 is due about nine months
after the end of our fiscal year and the
WMF usually file in March or April.
The most recent Form 990 is at http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/1/1c/WMF_2009_2010_Form_990.pdf.
The WMF is also subject to the state
laws of Florida (where
it is incorporated) and California
(where it is headquartered). There
are also registration requirements
around fundraising in many of the 50
states in the U.S.
Mission
oversight/planning/accountability
The financial audit and IRS filings
cover financial reporting, controls,
and transparency. They do not
substantially address whether the
Foundation's activities are consistent
with the mission. IMHO, no one from
outside our community could have a big
impact in this role.
So this duty falls to the Board. Here's
a summary of the framework we use.
First, a few years ago the Board
commissioned a five-year strategy plan
to identify top focus areas. We did
this through a fantastic
community-driven process. The result was
the plan at http://strategy.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Movement_Strategic_Plan_Summary,
which continues to be a guide
on priorities and objectives.
Second, each year in the early Spring
the Executive Director and her staff put
together an annual operating plan. The
ED typically gives the Board a
high-level summary of her
thinking sometime in January or
February. The she and her team prepare
a detailed plan. As Treasurer, I review
this thoroughly with the ED and give
extensive feedback both on high-level
issues and, since I have experience
budgeting, on planning issues.
Third, we then have a series of
increasingly detailed reviews with the
full Board. We typically focus on
whether the high-level objectives of the
annual plan are a) consistent with the
mission and the strategy plan and b)
achievable. We each try to reach out to
people in the community to collect
feedback/ideas as part of our reviews.
As Treasurer, I give my recommendation
to the Board on the plan. Then we have a
vote. Typically, the Board approves
the annual plan in late June and the
staff publishes it around the July 1
beginning of our fiscal year. The plan
for this year is at http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/3/37/2011-12_Wikimedia_Foundation_Plan_FINAL_FOR_WEBSITE_.pdf.
Finally, each year the Board reviews the
performance of the Executive Director
against the mission
objectives/deliverables laid out in both
the annual plan and the strategic plan.
Wrap-up
OK. That's all i can type today. Thanks
for your patience with the long note. I
wanted to get us all off to a good start
on sharing different approaches on
these issues. I’m happy to answer any
questions. And I’m excited to
hear similar overviews for
other organizations. Who's next?
-s
ps
-- In case others are interested, I’ll
cross-post to my blog wikistu.org when I
have a chance.
===============
Stuart West
Board member
Wikimedia Foundation
stu@wikimedia.org
===============
Stuart West
Board
member
Wikimedia
Foundation
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