Hi everyone,
For the past few weeks, many people approached me asking for feedback on what Wikimedia France went through in the past 18 to 24 months.
We realize we poorly communicated on the topic, time to fix that.
I'll try to be as exhaustive as I can be without writing too much (even though you already know this is going to be a long email).
== Short WMFr history ==
Before going into the heart of the situation, here are some informations about Wikimedia France. We were founded in 2004. At some point, in 2007 iirc, we went from 30K€ in our bank account to 200K€ over night as, at the time, we were payment processing.
In 2010, we hired a first employee as a project manager. A year later, he left the organization. If we look back at why, at the core, he did leave, one of the reason is that we weren't ready to have an employee.
Though at the time we might have not realized that.
Afterwards we hired three new employees, one head of programs, one project manager for education and research programs and one technical project manager.
We weren't able to manage them correctly because we underestimated the amount of work it required, especially as back then we were still payment processing.
So we decided to hire a new employee, an Executive Director, to manage our employees for us and to hire a fundraiser.
It didn't work out, and the new ED left the organization after a few months. That is where the story starts.
== Facing failures and making radical changes ==
When the new ED left we took the time to try to understand why Wikimedia France had those issues.
We could have hired a new ED straight ahead, but we believed that, even though it would have been a good thing on the short run we weren't sure we wouldn't repeat past mistakes.
We then started to wonder if the organization of Wikimedia France was the right one, perhaps at the core we were doing things wrong. So we decided to get help to sort this out and hire a HR company to audit us and advise us on what to do.
Mostly at the same time, something else happened: the FDC rejected our first proposal and gave us a gap funding just to get through until the next FDC round.
At the same time we were auditing the organization we had to rethink everything we were doing and how we were working.
We had no ED, so the board and staff had to pick up on the tasks the ED used to do. We first splitted the tasks amongst us and then asked an interim company to help us hire an administrative assistant to help us with day-to-day administrative burden.
Before her arrival, we introduced processes used at companies we (board members) worked at (such as "buying request" that means that every spending of the association is matched with a sheet that summarize what the money was used for and that the use of the money has been checked by two differents people).
Once she arrived we worked, as a board, to define our needs and our role. We identified that one of our mistake was that, even though we had employees, we failed to build up trust and confidence and that we were looking too hard on small details and not enough on the big picture.
We saved that thought for later: as we had no ED we had to look at those details. But when we defined what we needed from our ED, we kept that in mind. We needed an ED with whom we were able to build a trust relationship and at the same time have the tools to oversee their job.
We also took the time to improve the board maturity. As we had no idea, our board meetings were really frequent and long. So we laid some board rules such as nothing said during a board meeting is personal, or that everyone should speak its mind but once a decision is made the board has to commit to support that decision.
As said before we also started to better define the roles of each board member.
After a few months, we started our search for our next ED. The HR company we hired for auditing us was charged with selecting 3 persons we would then interview. We believed that thanks to the audit, the HR company would have a good understanding of who we were and what we would need.
== New ED, "new" board, new organization ==
After a 5 months process, we hired our new ED. We then enforced what we've set aside a few months before, the board would focus to the big picture while the ED would provide the board with the tools to oversee how the organization is doing.
First things first, we needed to redesign how we worked (more there https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...). We created 5 working groups :
* Internal organization: closed group made of the chair, the vice-chair and the ED. This group is in charge of sorting out day to day things and to ensure the organization is running smoothly. * Internal controls: closed group made of the treasurer, the deputy treasurer and the ED. This group is in charge of designing and implementing internal policies and processes. Their goal is to ensure we do everything we can so the organization is runned in a healthy manner. * Quality group: open group to every WMFr member. This group goal is to design and update the metrics we're using to measure our efficiency. * Strategy group: open group to every WMFr member. This group ensures our strategic process is going forward and includes everyone's input. * Communication group: open group to every WMFr member. This group is in charge to make sure the voice of WMFr members and Wikimedians is taken into accounts and is also in charge of international relationships.
We also restructured the staff organization, for the curious it’s all detailed there : https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...
By doing this clear split within the board, we ensured that the few tactical tasks the board has to be in charge of are taken care of. We all agreed to trust each group with the topic they're in charge of. This limits the possibility of burnout, as no one has to care everything is being done, and efficiency as every board member focuses on a clear defined set of tasks.
Following that reorganisation, we redesigned the interactions between board, members and staff. The goal was to improve the way we communicate and work with each other. One thing we've done is to write down the clear mandate of the ED. What the ED can and can't do and what the board can and can't do.
Then we designed a clear vision and strategy for Wikimedia France: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...
Once that was done, we tackled THE issue: being able to measure how efficient we are. Based on our strategic goals, we designed a matrix of indicators. Every project we now do goes through that matrix.
It's far from being perfect, but at least we now have a common matrix for everything we do, evaluate our effectiveness and make decisions.
== Where we are now and where we're going ==
Now where are we?
We are in the best situation we've ever been.
WMFr board is a working efficient body, with an internal organization that prevents burnout and also ensures continuity.
The staff now has clear goals and knows where the organization wants to go. They also have a clear mandate on what they can and can't do.
We have an evaluation process and people in charge of improving it over time.
I'm not sure this reflects what we went through. But to sum it up, at some point, we decided to make radical and urgent changes. To be better, even if that meant to spend months in a painful situation. We believed back then, and I guess we were right, that it was better for us to go through a hard time willingly, identify and face our mistakes and fix them rather than find a quick solution.
Now, it could seem that we're at the end of the process. Well it's quite the opposite. Everything we did was just the start of our "getting better" process.
We share in an other email the next steps of the process.
== Finally...==
We wanted to share our experience because we believe some of the other Wikimedia organizations could learn from it.
We also wanted to share that because we believe that it is important for organizations like us to face mistakes, to have a critical eye on everything you do, even if you've done it for years, and some time make radical changes in order to improve things on the long run.
If anyone has questions, please, feel free to ask them either on list or off list.
We hope that sharing this will help some of you.
All the best,
Christophe HENNER | Vice-chair ------------------------------------------------------------------- › Mail : christophe.henner@wikimedia.fr › Mobile : +33(0)6 29 35 65 94 › Tel : +33(0)5 62 89 12 01 › Twitter : @Wikimedia_Fr ----------------------------------------------------- Wikimédia France | Association pour le libre partage de la connaissance | Visitez notre blog http://blog.wikimedia.fr
Thank you Christophe for this e-mail and talking also about mistakes. Usually we heard only about success, and for younger chapters it's a bit frustrating thinking that everyone but us is working appropriately and the others did everything right in their first steps. However, many of us could learn a lot from both (mistakes and success), and sometimes more from mistakes already done, and of course, from those already solved. I think WMES could take ideas and learn from this.
Regards
El 2014-04-12 15:40, Christophe Henner escribió:
Hi everyone,
For the past few weeks, many people approached me asking for feedback on what Wikimedia France went through in the past 18 to 24 months.
We realize we poorly communicated on the topic, time to fix that.
I'll try to be as exhaustive as I can be without writing too much (even though you already know this is going to be a long email).
== Short WMFr history ==
Before going into the heart of the situation, here are some informations about Wikimedia France. We were founded in 2004. At some point, in 2007 iirc, we went from 30K€ in our bank account to 200K€ over night as, at the time, we were payment processing.
In 2010, we hired a first employee as a project manager. A year later, he left the organization. If we look back at why, at the core, he did leave, one of the reason is that we weren't ready to have an employee.
Though at the time we might have not realized that.
Afterwards we hired three new employees, one head of programs, one project manager for education and research programs and one technical project manager.
We weren't able to manage them correctly because we underestimated the amount of work it required, especially as back then we were still payment processing.
So we decided to hire a new employee, an Executive Director, to manage our employees for us and to hire a fundraiser.
It didn't work out, and the new ED left the organization after a few months. That is where the story starts.
== Facing failures and making radical changes ==
When the new ED left we took the time to try to understand why Wikimedia France had those issues.
We could have hired a new ED straight ahead, but we believed that, even though it would have been a good thing on the short run we weren't sure we wouldn't repeat past mistakes.
We then started to wonder if the organization of Wikimedia France was the right one, perhaps at the core we were doing things wrong. So we decided to get help to sort this out and hire a HR company to audit us and advise us on what to do.
Mostly at the same time, something else happened: the FDC rejected our first proposal and gave us a gap funding just to get through until the next FDC round.
At the same time we were auditing the organization we had to rethink everything we were doing and how we were working.
We had no ED, so the board and staff had to pick up on the tasks the ED used to do. We first splitted the tasks amongst us and then asked an interim company to help us hire an administrative assistant to help us with day-to-day administrative burden.
Before her arrival, we introduced processes used at companies we (board members) worked at (such as "buying request" that means that every spending of the association is matched with a sheet that summarize what the money was used for and that the use of the money has been checked by two differents people).
Once she arrived we worked, as a board, to define our needs and our role. We identified that one of our mistake was that, even though we had employees, we failed to build up trust and confidence and that we were looking too hard on small details and not enough on the big picture.
We saved that thought for later: as we had no ED we had to look at those details. But when we defined what we needed from our ED, we kept that in mind. We needed an ED with whom we were able to build a trust relationship and at the same time have the tools to oversee their job.
We also took the time to improve the board maturity. As we had no idea, our board meetings were really frequent and long. So we laid some board rules such as nothing said during a board meeting is personal, or that everyone should speak its mind but once a decision is made the board has to commit to support that decision.
As said before we also started to better define the roles of each board member.
After a few months, we started our search for our next ED. The HR company we hired for auditing us was charged with selecting 3 persons we would then interview. We believed that thanks to the audit, the HR company would have a good understanding of who we were and what we would need.
== New ED, "new" board, new organization ==
After a 5 months process, we hired our new ED. We then enforced what we've set aside a few months before, the board would focus to the big picture while the ED would provide the board with the tools to oversee how the organization is doing.
First things first, we needed to redesign how we worked (more there https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...). We created 5 working groups :
- Internal organization: closed group made of the chair, the
vice-chair and the ED. This group is in charge of sorting out day to day things and to ensure the organization is running smoothly.
- Internal controls: closed group made of the treasurer, the deputy
treasurer and the ED. This group is in charge of designing and implementing internal policies and processes. Their goal is to ensure we do everything we can so the organization is runned in a healthy manner.
- Quality group: open group to every WMFr member. This group goal is
to design and update the metrics we're using to measure our efficiency.
- Strategy group: open group to every WMFr member. This group ensures
our strategic process is going forward and includes everyone's input.
- Communication group: open group to every WMFr member. This group is
in charge to make sure the voice of WMFr members and Wikimedians is taken into accounts and is also in charge of international relationships.
We also restructured the staff organization, for the curious it’s all detailed there : https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...
By doing this clear split within the board, we ensured that the few tactical tasks the board has to be in charge of are taken care of. We all agreed to trust each group with the topic they're in charge of. This limits the possibility of burnout, as no one has to care everything is being done, and efficiency as every board member focuses on a clear defined set of tasks.
Following that reorganisation, we redesigned the interactions between board, members and staff. The goal was to improve the way we communicate and work with each other. One thing we've done is to write down the clear mandate of the ED. What the ED can and can't do and what the board can and can't do.
Then we designed a clear vision and strategy for Wikimedia France: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...
Once that was done, we tackled THE issue: being able to measure how efficient we are. Based on our strategic goals, we designed a matrix of indicators. Every project we now do goes through that matrix.
It's far from being perfect, but at least we now have a common matrix for everything we do, evaluate our effectiveness and make decisions.
== Where we are now and where we're going ==
Now where are we?
We are in the best situation we've ever been.
WMFr board is a working efficient body, with an internal organization that prevents burnout and also ensures continuity.
The staff now has clear goals and knows where the organization wants to go. They also have a clear mandate on what they can and can't do.
We have an evaluation process and people in charge of improving it over time.
I'm not sure this reflects what we went through. But to sum it up, at some point, we decided to make radical and urgent changes. To be better, even if that meant to spend months in a painful situation. We believed back then, and I guess we were right, that it was better for us to go through a hard time willingly, identify and face our mistakes and fix them rather than find a quick solution.
Now, it could seem that we're at the end of the process. Well it's quite the opposite. Everything we did was just the start of our "getting better" process.
We share in an other email the next steps of the process.
== Finally...==
We wanted to share our experience because we believe some of the other Wikimedia organizations could learn from it.
We also wanted to share that because we believe that it is important for organizations like us to face mistakes, to have a critical eye on everything you do, even if you've done it for years, and some time make radical changes in order to improve things on the long run.
If anyone has questions, please, feel free to ask them either on list or off list.
We hope that sharing this will help some of you.
All the best,
Christophe HENNER | Vice-chair
› Mail : christophe.henner@wikimedia.fr › Mobile : +33(0)6 29 35 65 94 › Tel : +33(0)5 62 89 12 01 › Twitter : @Wikimedia_Fr
Wikimédia France | Association pour le libre partage de la connaissance | Visitez notre blog http://blog.wikimedia.fr
Wikimedia-l mailing list Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l, mailto:wikimedia-l-request@lists.wikimedia.org?subject=unsubscribe
Thanks for that,
And because I’m one of those who ask repeatedly I thank you twice :-)
What I like in your feedback is that it echoes the « let’s do better mistake tomorrow » last saturday in Berlin. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Conference_2014/Programme#21_Let.E...
I really think that sharing bad experience, is actually building the "good" experience of the movement.
We use to share our success because it’s never easy to share failure and because we naturally want to share positive experience that people can replicate, we always forget to share bad experience that people can avoid to replicate if they are aware. of
In 2013 in WMCH we learn a lot by trying to expose our challenges in the FDC quarterly report. In wikimedia movement we are not good at reporting, we do not like to do report, I hate that. But honestly taking the time to understand why something goes wrong is always good, and lot of the time the initial failure was to have not really investigating why we wanted to do it in the first place :-D
Earlier this year I share this sentence on a social network: "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better. » Samuel Beckett
I would just add that in our movement we have the chance to benefit of the experience of a lot of people and that we may be able to remove the "fail again" and add a "succeed" at the end
my 2 useless cents, but it's late :-)
Charles
___________________________________________________________ I use this email for mailing list only.
Charles ANDRES, Chief Science Officer "Wikimedia CH" – Association for the advancement of free knowledge – www.wikimedia.ch Skype: charles.andres.wmch IRC://irc.freenode.net/wikimedia-ch
Le 12 avr. 2014 à 15:40, Christophe Henner christophe.henner@wikimedia.fr a écrit :
Hi everyone,
For the past few weeks, many people approached me asking for feedback on what Wikimedia France went through in the past 18 to 24 months.
We realize we poorly communicated on the topic, time to fix that.
I'll try to be as exhaustive as I can be without writing too much (even though you already know this is going to be a long email).
== Short WMFr history ==
Before going into the heart of the situation, here are some informations about Wikimedia France. We were founded in 2004. At some point, in 2007 iirc, we went from 30K€ in our bank account to 200K€ over night as, at the time, we were payment processing.
In 2010, we hired a first employee as a project manager. A year later, he left the organization. If we look back at why, at the core, he did leave, one of the reason is that we weren't ready to have an employee.
Though at the time we might have not realized that.
Afterwards we hired three new employees, one head of programs, one project manager for education and research programs and one technical project manager.
We weren't able to manage them correctly because we underestimated the amount of work it required, especially as back then we were still payment processing.
So we decided to hire a new employee, an Executive Director, to manage our employees for us and to hire a fundraiser.
It didn't work out, and the new ED left the organization after a few months. That is where the story starts.
== Facing failures and making radical changes ==
When the new ED left we took the time to try to understand why Wikimedia France had those issues.
We could have hired a new ED straight ahead, but we believed that, even though it would have been a good thing on the short run we weren't sure we wouldn't repeat past mistakes.
We then started to wonder if the organization of Wikimedia France was the right one, perhaps at the core we were doing things wrong. So we decided to get help to sort this out and hire a HR company to audit us and advise us on what to do.
Mostly at the same time, something else happened: the FDC rejected our first proposal and gave us a gap funding just to get through until the next FDC round.
At the same time we were auditing the organization we had to rethink everything we were doing and how we were working.
We had no ED, so the board and staff had to pick up on the tasks the ED used to do. We first splitted the tasks amongst us and then asked an interim company to help us hire an administrative assistant to help us with day-to-day administrative burden.
Before her arrival, we introduced processes used at companies we (board members) worked at (such as "buying request" that means that every spending of the association is matched with a sheet that summarize what the money was used for and that the use of the money has been checked by two differents people).
Once she arrived we worked, as a board, to define our needs and our role. We identified that one of our mistake was that, even though we had employees, we failed to build up trust and confidence and that we were looking too hard on small details and not enough on the big picture.
We saved that thought for later: as we had no ED we had to look at those details. But when we defined what we needed from our ED, we kept that in mind. We needed an ED with whom we were able to build a trust relationship and at the same time have the tools to oversee their job.
We also took the time to improve the board maturity. As we had no idea, our board meetings were really frequent and long. So we laid some board rules such as nothing said during a board meeting is personal, or that everyone should speak its mind but once a decision is made the board has to commit to support that decision.
As said before we also started to better define the roles of each board member.
After a few months, we started our search for our next ED. The HR company we hired for auditing us was charged with selecting 3 persons we would then interview. We believed that thanks to the audit, the HR company would have a good understanding of who we were and what we would need.
== New ED, "new" board, new organization ==
After a 5 months process, we hired our new ED. We then enforced what we've set aside a few months before, the board would focus to the big picture while the ED would provide the board with the tools to oversee how the organization is doing.
First things first, we needed to redesign how we worked (more there https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...). We created 5 working groups :
- Internal organization: closed group made of the chair, the
vice-chair and the ED. This group is in charge of sorting out day to day things and to ensure the organization is running smoothly.
- Internal controls: closed group made of the treasurer, the deputy
treasurer and the ED. This group is in charge of designing and implementing internal policies and processes. Their goal is to ensure we do everything we can so the organization is runned in a healthy manner.
- Quality group: open group to every WMFr member. This group goal is
to design and update the metrics we're using to measure our efficiency.
- Strategy group: open group to every WMFr member. This group ensures
our strategic process is going forward and includes everyone's input.
- Communication group: open group to every WMFr member. This group is
in charge to make sure the voice of WMFr members and Wikimedians is taken into accounts and is also in charge of international relationships.
We also restructured the staff organization, for the curious it’s all detailed there : https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...
By doing this clear split within the board, we ensured that the few tactical tasks the board has to be in charge of are taken care of. We all agreed to trust each group with the topic they're in charge of. This limits the possibility of burnout, as no one has to care everything is being done, and efficiency as every board member focuses on a clear defined set of tasks.
Following that reorganisation, we redesigned the interactions between board, members and staff. The goal was to improve the way we communicate and work with each other. One thing we've done is to write down the clear mandate of the ED. What the ED can and can't do and what the board can and can't do.
Then we designed a clear vision and strategy for Wikimedia France: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014_round2/Wikim%...
Once that was done, we tackled THE issue: being able to measure how efficient we are. Based on our strategic goals, we designed a matrix of indicators. Every project we now do goes through that matrix.
It's far from being perfect, but at least we now have a common matrix for everything we do, evaluate our effectiveness and make decisions.
== Where we are now and where we're going ==
Now where are we?
We are in the best situation we've ever been.
WMFr board is a working efficient body, with an internal organization that prevents burnout and also ensures continuity.
The staff now has clear goals and knows where the organization wants to go. They also have a clear mandate on what they can and can't do.
We have an evaluation process and people in charge of improving it over time.
I'm not sure this reflects what we went through. But to sum it up, at some point, we decided to make radical and urgent changes. To be better, even if that meant to spend months in a painful situation. We believed back then, and I guess we were right, that it was better for us to go through a hard time willingly, identify and face our mistakes and fix them rather than find a quick solution.
Now, it could seem that we're at the end of the process. Well it's quite the opposite. Everything we did was just the start of our "getting better" process.
We share in an other email the next steps of the process.
== Finally...==
We wanted to share our experience because we believe some of the other Wikimedia organizations could learn from it.
We also wanted to share that because we believe that it is important for organizations like us to face mistakes, to have a critical eye on everything you do, even if you've done it for years, and some time make radical changes in order to improve things on the long run.
If anyone has questions, please, feel free to ask them either on list or off list.
We hope that sharing this will help some of you.
All the best,
Christophe HENNER | Vice-chair
› Mail : christophe.henner@wikimedia.fr › Mobile : +33(0)6 29 35 65 94 › Tel : +33(0)5 62 89 12 01 › Twitter : @Wikimedia_Fr
Wikimédia France | Association pour le libre partage de la connaissance | Visitez notre blog http://blog.wikimedia.fr
Wikimedia-l mailing list Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l, mailto:wikimedia-l-request@lists.wikimedia.org?subject=unsubscribe
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