On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 3:16 PM, Thomas Dalton thomas.dalton@gmail.comwrote:
2009/1/23 Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org:
2009/1/23 Thomas Dalton thomas.dalton@gmail.com:
Sounds good. Could you calmly and sensibly explain it to me, then? How did you come to decide that the addition benefits of working in Wikia's offices were worth the extra money? (I'm willing to accept that there could be a good explanation, I'd just like to see it.)
I already named some of them - greater proximity, shared kitchen use, shared speakerphone use, established Internet connectivity. The other space we were looking at also had noise issues: open concept with two other tenants, and some noise every day at 6PM due to music lessons in the same building.
I was looking for something a little more quantitative. I know it is difficult to quantify these things, which is why, in my experience, charities usually err on the side of caution. In fact, the model governing documents for the UK Charities Commission explicitly forbids any such dealings with companies that share directors with the charity (I'm not sure the law requires such strict rules, but they are certainly recommended).
Hello, Thomas.
I admire your persistence in putting your question forward until your question is answered. :-) Let me try to answer your questions by giving you the background of this negotiation. So the number of total quotes collected are ten including Wikia. The criteria of request for quotes were 1) the space needs to house minimum five personnel and (2) the project team needs a meeting room. These ten quotes are not apple-to-apple comparison, for example parameters such as total space availability, infrastructure readiness, meeting room availability, distance from the WMF, access to kitchen, noise level, furnished and etc. Of course, the price varies too. We narrowed down our selection to two office space candidates, one is a shared office (open space) with architects and a game software company, which is near the Moscone Center (15 minutes walk from the WMF). Let's call this space X for simplicity's sake. Wikia's sub-lease space, let's call it W, offered a smaller floor space than X, but the workspace is enclosed and can be shut down from noise, and access to a kitchen and toilet were better than X. Connectivity was ready to go, we just need to install a router for WiFi. W's asking price was more than X, but we said our offer price would not be more than the price quoted by X. So, W evaluated if they can rent out space higher than our offer price. As there was no higher bidder than us, W had agreed to offer the space at our offer price. So the fact that W is even closer-walking distance (5 minute) which saves about 20 minutes per trip per person was additional advantage for us. The traffic between the satellite office is not just by the project team, but it includes HR, IT and Finance so this 20 min/trip/person cannot be under-estimated if you translate it into the 15 months span. Finally, the fact that the project team can walk over to Wikia's tech team and exchange ideas or chat by the water foundation comes on top of fair financial evaluation summarized above. I will try my best not to bug Wikia's tech team when they have deadline to meet though. :-)
FYI - I posted the following reply to blog about 8 hours ago, but since it hasn't cleared the spam check, let me just insert here; "On the space front, the bid from the Wikia's space was matched to the equivalent office space in SOMA. Leasing office space from the walking distance location has a great advantage for the project team and the WMF. As the project team will meet with the WMF's tech team regularly and administrative resource such as HR and Finance are shared, keeping the satellite office at walking distance helps save time from going back and forth. On the tech collaboration front, we are not treating Wikia's development work as the solution. Their work is one of the modified MediaWiki we are evaluating along with what's out there such as deki, uniwiki and numerous extensions developed by MediaWiki developers. The project team will produce its own code, but if the solution is out there already, why not collaborate, incorporate, and make it available for existing and next users of MediaWiki? Isn't that an open source project all about? "
I wish you all a jolly weekend.
- Naoko
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