Hi Woubzena,
Thank you for your comments.
I agree that it is a good idea for staff to reflect on the Rapid Grants program and how it might evolve to better serve the needs of grantees. Also, I understand that WMF might have a backlog of grants in process and that WMF may wants to pause accepting more of these grant requests while the backlog is reduced. However, pausing the program for six weeks seems like a high price to pay, especially for a program with the name "Rapid Grants" which implies short turnaround times. I hope that considerations during this period of reflection include how to make the process more efficient in terms of WMF staff time, and how to staff the program adequately so that the program is continuous in the future. Continuity of operations is valuable in many organizations, even when important staff people become unavailable for planned or unplanned reasons, and I hope that WMF will make every reasonable effort to ensure that the Rapid Grants program is continuously operational after this pause regardless of future unavailability of the regular program staff. One way to improve the continuity of operations for this program could be to cross-train staff who could be reassigned to this program if a need arose.
I understand that $500+ grants might seem to be more efficient uses of resources than grants of lower amounts, but I am concerned about initiatives with costs less than $500 potentially being unfunded after this change, for example a request for $100 to rent a display projector for an edit-a-thon. Also, the $500 floor creates an undesirable incentive for potential grantees to increase the amount of money that they request for the purpose of meeting the floor. And while I agree that the ratio of administrative expenses to the impact of grants under $500 is worth considering, I think that the potential for individual Wikimedians to be required to pay expenses from their personal funds if they want to run programs that cost under $500 (and not inflate their requests to meet the $500 floor) is problematic. For the changes that you outlined for this program, I am less concerned about the costs of WMF staff time and more concerned about adverse impacts to small programs (particularly small programs with potential to grow), the potential adverse impacts to individual Wikimedians, and the potential for artificial inflation of amounts for grant requests.
Regarding the process through which WMF made the decision to implement these experiments, I think that these experiments should have been proposed by WMF to the community, and that at a minimum WMF should have run a two week consultation before implementing these changes.
I think that the best that can be done at this point is to hope that these experiments produce valuable data, that the benefits will outweigh the adverse impacts, and that WMF staff's time for reflections will yield valuable ideas. I encourage WMF to consider how to mitigate the potential adverse impacts of the $500 floor and the limited windows for applications each month. I hope that WMF will produce a report regarding the results of these experiments, and that after the six week pause WMF will consult the community before making any further changes to the program.
Thank you,
Pine ( https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Pine )
On Tue, May 1, 2018 at 3:51 PM, Woubzena Jifar wjifar@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hello Pine,
Many Wikimedians have been thinking a lot about the strategic direction and how we might best position ourselves to move towards it. We in the Foundation’s Community Resources team are planning some temporary changes that will allow us some space and time to be part of building towards a long term direction. Please keep that larger goal in mind as you read the responses to your questions about Rapid grants:
- Yes, you are correct in that the budget of the Rapid grants program was
originally 200,000 USD for this fiscal year, 2017-18. We have actually recently allocated an additional 65,000 USD in Wikimedia Foundation funds for this program, enabling us to fund grant requests already in the pipeline and programs such as Wiki Loves Earth. During the last quarter, we received a large increase in grant proposals for Rapid, and made over 70% more grants in Q3 this year than last year. The 6-week closure will give us time to process these and also allow the team to reflect on the program’s needs and explore proactive ways the rapid grant program can reach out to new grantees and find ways to collaborate with them better.
- Regarding having a minimum of $500 for the rapid grants program, this
is something we’re experimenting with while we’re aligning to the new strategic direction. Our preliminary data is showing that this change will improve our ability to support communities, allowing for more impactful grants with less overhead for a more effective use of our shared resources. We also need to make reductions in the time spent processing grants this year in order to make space for the considerable research and discussions needed to implement the new strategy, and we need to consider whether the impact of very small grants warrants their administrative expense.
- On your third point of having the 1st - 15th of the month be an open
application time, this is also an experiment. We hope that this focused, clear timeline will allow us to respond more quickly and help community members understand the state of their application more easily.
Best regards, Woubzena
Woubzena Jifar Program Officer Rapid Grants Wikimedia Foundation http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Home User: WJifar (WMF)
On Mon, Apr 30, 2018 at 11:12 AM, Pine W wiki.pine@gmail.com wrote:
Hello Woubzena,
I would like to remind you that I am waiting for a response to the email that I sent on April 19.
Thank you,
Pine ( https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Pine )
On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 6:52 PM, Pine W wiki.pine@gmail.com wrote:
Hello Woubzena,
I am glad to hear that the WMF Rapid Grants program has been so popular that its original budget for the year is near exhaustion. I trust that these funds are being spent wisely, and that community members and affiliates are achieving valuable outcomes with these funds.
I have some questions about this group of decisions.
- My understanding is that WMF routinely underspends its quarterly
budgets for the organization as a whole. Also, WMF has ample funding in its reserves. Because Rapid Grants appears to be a popular program and the budget of this program appears to be relatively small (am I correct in saying that the program's total budget for FY1718 is $200,000?), why has WMF chosen to suspend the program instead of transferring a relatively small amount of other funds, perhaps $50,000, to support this program through the remainder of FY1718?
- My understanding is that one of the original goals for Rapid Grants
is to support small projects and events in an efficient and timely manner. I am puzzled by the decision to raise the floor for Rapid Grants to $500, which seems to eliminate WMF funding for small projects that might not happen without Rapid Grants support and/or require volunteers to take money out of their personal funds to support Wikimedia projects and events. The WMF Annual Plan for 2018-2019 is currently in a draft phase, and it seems to me that the plan could be revised to support continuing the Rapid Grants program with no floor, or perhaps a very low floor like $50, for funding requests. If the FY1819 budget for Rapid Grants and/or the budget for staff time for Rapid Grants needs to be increased in order to achieve the goal of supporting small projects and events in a timely manner with minimal or no floor, then it seems to me that the modest amount of additional funding to accomplish this would be reasonable.
- Similarly, if additional staff time is necessary to support
continuous processing of Rapid Grant requests instead of limiting requests to the 1st through 15th of each month, then my inclination is to support the funding for additional staff time in FY1819. Does that option sound reasonable from your perspective? I realize that continuous processing might be less convenient for WMF, but I think that support for the community and affiliates should be the highest priority here.
Thank you,
Pine ( https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Pine )
On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 1:30 AM, Woubzena Jifar wjifar@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hello all!
Hope this email finds you well. We are sending this message to select community mailing lists and all previous recipients of a Wikimedia Foundation Rapid Grant.
We have an announcement regarding the closure of the Rapid Grants [1] program between May 14 - June 30, 2018. This year we've received a lot of interest in the program and this quarter we've almost doubled the amount of grants offered to the community compared to last year's quarter. You can look at our spending analysis https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Community_Resources/Grants_spending_analysis [2] for reference. Unfortunately, this means we've expended our funds for this fiscal year. The last date we will be receiving an application for a rapid grant before the closure will be *Friday, May 11, 2018*.
We encourage *Wiki Loves Earth* participants to apply for a Rapid Grant by May 11, 2018 to receive support for their project.
The grant program will be open again to receive grant requests starting *July 1, 2018*. At this point we will be implementing the following changes:
- There will be a minimum of *$500 USD* for grant requests
- Applications will only be accepted between the *1st - 15th of each
month*. This is to help with our current workflow and to allow us to be more responsive to your requests.
If you have any questions, please email us at rapidgrants@wikimedia.org .
Best regards, Woubzena
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project/Rapid [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Community_Resources/Gran ts_spending_analysis
Woubzena Jifar Program Officer Rapid Grants Wikimedia Foundation http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Home User: WJifar (WMF)
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