Maybe there’s an easy way to just test this? A chapter could start calling itself e.g. Wikipedia UK in its comms for a year and see if there’s any noticeable difference?
Sent from my iPhone
On 14 Apr 2019, at 01:47, phoebe ayers phoebe.wiki@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Apr 13, 2019 at 2:29 PM Rebecca O'Neill rebeccanineil@gmail.com wrote:
I agree Galder!
I would like to respond to Phoebe's comment on not wanting to draw people to the *Wikimedia* movement is not true of the Irish experience. We have some idea of an editing community that aren't interested in getting involved in our user group (and probably never will be), so we are very keen to draw people to volunteering as Wikimedians not just as editors. Presenting our group as something more than people who are experienced Wikipedia editors is very important to us, and anything that makes that message easier would be of huge benefit to us.
Dear Rebecca, Thanks for this. Let me try to explain my thinking a bit more... I too want people to join Wikimedia New England, which is the group I'm currently running. And in general, I want a thriving and healthy ecosystem of affiliates. But I want that to be true because the work that chapters, affiliates and the Foundation itself does is meant to be enabling for the larger goal of making free knowledge available, and specifically for improving and sustaining Wikipedia and her sister projects.
Everything that the groups do - from building the technical/legal infrastructure side, to training new editors, to providing a friendly geographic or topical face to Wikipedia, to doing outreach, to supporting existing editors - is a means to an end. It is not the end itself. We do this multivarious work because we recognize that there are many, many effective ways to contribute in a project as complex as ours, and that participants can sometimes best find a home in ways that are not directly editing. But equally: there are of course other means to this end of building free knowledge that have nothing to do with the Wikimedia group/ structure, most notably the thousands of independent volunteers who work largely alone to maintain and build the projects, and upon whose work we all depend. Groups, and the Foundation, are important! But they are not, in themselves, the end goal.
So where does this leave us with rebranding? I admit I haven't read all of the comments/analysis. But, to my mind, there's a cost to rebranding: the several hundred person-hours that have already been put into this discussion, if nothing else. For the benefit to outweigh the cost, we need to imagine what will happen to increase participation in building free knowledge as a result. If we are "Wikipedia New England" or "Wikipedia Ireland" et al, will our groups be more effective -- for instance, with an easier to understand name, will new people join our trainings, perhaps becoming Wikipedia editors? Will more cultural institutions reach out, and be more amenable to releasing images? If the Foundation is the Wikipedia Foundation, then how does this improve the infrastructure that the Foundation provides, exactly?
If the answer is that this change will definitely increase participation in the projects and free knowledge generally, through the mechanism of the various groups being more recognizable and thus reaching a bigger audience, then the proposal is worth seriously considering. But if it is hard to imagine - and I admit I do find it hard to imagine that the name of the Foundation is the thing standing in our way to wider Wikipedia participation - then it doesn't seem worth the cost.
-- Phoebe _______________________________________________ Wikimedia-l mailing list, guidelines at: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Mailing_lists/Guidelines and https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia-l New messages to: Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l, mailto:wikimedia-l-request@lists.wikimedia.org?subject=unsubscribe