Hi folks,
Forwarding from the announce list, since it does not yet auto-forward :-)
Thanks, Sue
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org Date: 2 June 2010 19:08 Subject: Announcing new Chief Global Development Officer and new Chief Community Officer To: WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Hi folks,
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
There will be a press release going out tomorrow, but the news isn't confidential: please feel free to tell whoever you like.
Zack Exley will be our new Chief Community Officer. Zack joins Wikimedia from the Chicago-based firm Thoughtworks where he oversaw strategy and technology projects for organizations like Obama For America, Rock the Vote, and Global Zero.
Zack has a long history of mobilizing people and facilitating them reaching their goals. During the nineties, he worked as a labour organizer and software developer. In 2002, he joined MoveOn.org as director of organizing, where he ran mobilization and fundraising campaigns – and in the same period, helped the Howard Dean campaign with its online fundraising. Zack left MoveOn.org to become online communications and organizing director for the 2004 Kerry-Edwards U.S. presidential campaign, where he ran the team that raised $125 million online for Kerry, and also oversaw online-to-offline organizing efforts responsible for mobilizing hundreds of thousands of field volunteers. In 2005, he led internet strategy and online fundraising for the UK Labour Party's 2005 election campaign, and since 2005 he has acted as a senior strategist and advisor helping many mission-driven organizations advance their fundraising and mobilization goals, including the American Civil Liberties Union, Amnesty International, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the International Rescue Committee and Greenpeace USA.
Zack grew up in Connecticut and has also lived in Kenya, China and the United Kingdom. He has an BA in Economics from the University of Massachusetts.
As Chief Community Officer, Zack will be responsible for developing the Wikimedia Foundation's relationships with key constituencies including readers, editors and donors. This will include our work aimed at recruiting new editors (including the public policy project) and supporting community health, as well as fundraising. The people who will report to Zack are Philippe, Cary, Frank, Rand, Rebecca and Sara, plus their direct reports.
Zack currently lives in Kansas City: he'll be relocating to the Bay Area in July.
Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Some of you know Barry from Buenos Aires or Berlin, where he attended Wikimania and the chapters meeting, respectively. He comes to us from the strategy consultancy firm The Bridgespan Group, where he has spent the past year leading the Bridgespan team supporting Wikimedia with its strategic planning process. For the past six years, Barry has led Bridgespan's work in education innovation and social technology, which mainly consisted of working with CEOs on strategy development, organizational development and leadership issues. Prior to joining Bridgespan, he spent eight years at The Boston Consulting Group, where he worked with global clients in the financial services, media and energy sectors on global strategy, organizational restructuring, change management and post-merger integration.
Barry was born in Cape Town, South Africa, and raised in Toronto, Canada. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Western Ontario, and a master's degree in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
In this new role with us, Barry will be our Chief Global Development Officer (CGDO), the position formerly known as the Chief (Global) Programs Officer. As CGDO, Barry will be responsible for our activities focused specifically on increasing readership and supporting editor self-organization in the Global South, for our messaging to the general public and the media, and for our activities aimed at supporting and developing chapters. The people who will report to him are Jay and his direct report Moka, plus Kul, plus a number of new hires dedicated to supporting new activities that have come out of the strategic plan. You'll hear more about that in coming months, once Barry has joined us.
We are really lucky that Barry got engaged in our work, and is willing to now join us. His extensive background in organizational development particularly will be useful to us, as we all collectively further evolve our thinking about how to structure Wikimedia as an international movement. He'll also be terrific with the global development work due to his extensive international background. And, his background as a consultant has trained him to be a great listener and facilitator, which is important in our work.
I want to take a minute to offer my thanks to everyone who helped with the process of bringing in both Zack and Barry, which has been ongoing for many months. Dozens of people –including board members, advisory board members, editors, friends and supporters-- helped us source candidates for these roles. Our board members spoke at length with the recruiting firm m|Oppenheim, gave me good feedback on potential candidates, and helped with the interviewing. Several staff participating in the interviewing as well, including Erik, Veronique, Daniel, Rebecca, Rand, Sara and Jay.
And of course, a big thanks to m|Oppenheim. In recruiting for these roles, m|Oppenheim spoke with hundreds of people over a period of about six months, to develop a midlist of 65 candidates, of whom eight reached a “final interview” stage. m|Oppenheim did really great work and I'm very pleased with this outcome.
This completes the C-level hiring, with the exception of the Chief Human Resources Officer, which we're in the middle of recruiting for. That's is currently underway with m|Oppenheim, with support from our friends at Omidyar Network. I expect we'll be able to announce the new CHRO within six weeks or so.
Before closing – I wanted to talk a little about how these roles have evolved through the hiring process. Originally, as you may remember, we had set out to hire a Chief Program Officer and a Chief Development Officer – however, during the hiring process, those roles morphed into a Chief Global Development Officer and a Chief Community Officer. It's not unusual for that kind of thing to happen: it's normal for thinking to evolve, and it's normal for roles to be customized a little to suit people's particular skills and experiences. But I did want to call out one particular aspect of my thinking that might be interesting for people here on this list.
Setting out to hire a Chief Development Officer is a “normal” thing for a non-profit organization to do: in most non-profits, fundraising is structured as a distinct department, separate from the rest of the work of the organization. As we went through the hiring process though, it became increasingly obvious to me that that conventional structure doesn't really suit us. Most non-profits provide special access and privileges to donors, and pay them special attention, because they are the fuel that powers the organization. Donors are of course our fuel too, and we're deeply grateful for their help. But --unusually in the world of non-profits-- we have an additional group of supporters without whom the work couldn't be done --- which is you: the volunteers who build and maintain the projects. And our readers are another special group, in part because we hope to persuade them to join us as editors and donors.
Given the importance of all three groups to our work, I believe it doesn't make sense for us to treat donors as distinct: rather, we should invite them into our larger community, and treat them as a part of that greater whole. This means, among other things, speaking with donors in the same tone and style, and with the same substance and the same type of information, as we speak with readers and editors. During the hiring process, Zack pointed out to me that the CDO job as then-structured didn't support that vision. He argued that by siloing off donors into a separate department, we were making it more difficult to achieve the level of authenticity I wanted. That was an important observation, and I took it seriously. I believe that restructuring the CDO job to create a department that includes all our key relationships is an unusual thing to do, and it's arguably a bit risky. But I think it's the right structure for us, given who we are, and the unique nature of our work.
I'd be happy to talk further about Zack and Barry, and I'm sure they –and other staff-- would be too. This is an important moment for Wikimedia: please join me in welcoming them officially to our world.
Thanks, Sue
-- Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
415 839 6885 office
Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. Help us make it a reality!
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
On 37-01--10 03:59 PM, Sue Gardner wrote:
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer.
Congrats to the Foundation, and to Zack and Barry! By the quality of recent hires, it looks like you're giving m|Oppenheim a workout :D
During the hiring process, Zack pointed out to me that the CDO job as then-structured didn't support that vision. He argued that by siloing off donors into a separate department, we were making it more difficult to achieve the level of authenticity I wanted. That was an important observation, and I took it seriously.
That's very interesting to hear. Given how strange a universe the Wikimedia universe is, and how strange a non-profit the WMF it, I've often wondered how likely it is that new hires would have any depth of understanding of us or how we operate. Agree or not (I'm undecided) I think this shows a level of insight that should be exciting to harness.
- -Mike
Mike.lifeguard wrote:
On 37-01--10 03:59 PM, Sue Gardner wrote:
During the hiring process, Zack pointed out to me that the CDO job as then-structured didn't support that vision. He argued that by siloing off donors into a separate department, we were making it more difficult to achieve the level of authenticity I wanted. That was an important observation, and I took it seriously.
That's very interesting to hear. Given how strange a universe the Wikimedia universe is, and how strange a non-profit the WMF it, I've often wondered how likely it is that new hires would have any depth of understanding of us or how we operate. Agree or not (I'm undecided) I think this shows a level of insight that should be exciting to harness.
+1
Brava! & Bravo!
Yours,
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 10:23 PM, Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org wrote:
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
Aye grats both to the two new hires and to the Foundation they look like great choices.
Without trying a risk a sidetrack to much: I have to agree with the idea of the fundraising being with everyone else here and I'm really happy to see that. With the possible exception of the major/foundation gifts (which you could I guess separate off but it would be odd to have them separate from the rest of fundraising I think) our donors OUR our community in all ways. Not only do our readers and editors donate themselves (from what I understand that is the majority (i.e the annual campaign) but also the volunteers themselves are donors at least in my mind even without any monetary support. Their time is what makes us good.
James Alexander james.alexander@rochester.edu jamesofur@gmail.com
James, you're right. I did back-of-the-envelope calculations last year, which don't bear scrutiny but are useful for ballparks. If you assume every word added to the projects is worth a dollar (it isn't, for a variety of reasons, but it's what professional journalists are often paid) -- then I believe volunteers contributed about 700 million dollars of work to the projects in 2008-09. I think --but am not sure-- that that number excluded talk pages.
It's not a number we would ever use publicly, because as I said it doesn't bear scrutiny -- but it does suggest that the value of editors' time vastly outweighs the value of donated cash. It's not a competition, and we value every contribution of any kind..... But it's obvious that in our unique context, editors are the main source of value, and the main contributors to impact.
I liked that Zack understood that, and I liked that he wanted the organization to appropriately understand and value both types of contributors. (Not to mention contributions of code, PR work, organizational work, and so forth.)
Thanks, Sue Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
-----Original Message----- From: James Alexander jamesofur@gmail.com Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2010 22:54:45 To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing Listfoundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: Announcing new Chief Global Development Officer and new Chief Community Officer
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 10:23 PM, Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org wrote:
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
Aye grats both to the two new hires and to the Foundation they look like great choices.
Without trying a risk a sidetrack to much: I have to agree with the idea of the fundraising being with everyone else here and I'm really happy to see that. With the possible exception of the major/foundation gifts (which you could I guess separate off but it would be odd to have them separate from the rest of fundraising I think) our donors OUR our community in all ways. Not only do our readers and editors donate themselves (from what I understand that is the majority (i.e the annual campaign) but also the volunteers themselves are donors at least in my mind even without any monetary support. Their time is what makes us good.
James Alexander james.alexander@rochester.edu jamesofur@gmail.com _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
Hoi, An other nice back-of-the-envelope calculation compares developers and localisers. Suppose that for a particular job a developer costs 100 and a localiser for one language costs 1. What is more expensive / valuable, the development of software or the localisation of the same software?
At translatewiki.net we localise in over three hundred languages ..
This does not take into account the internationalisation and other management that needs to be done as well. Thanks, GerardM
On 3 June 2010 16:04, susanpgardner@gmail.com wrote:
James, you're right. I did back-of-the-envelope calculations last year, which don't bear scrutiny but are useful for ballparks. If you assume every word added to the projects is worth a dollar (it isn't, for a variety of reasons, but it's what professional journalists are often paid) -- then I believe volunteers contributed about 700 million dollars of work to the projects in 2008-09. I think --but am not sure-- that that number excluded talk pages.
It's not a number we would ever use publicly, because as I said it doesn't bear scrutiny -- but it does suggest that the value of editors' time vastly outweighs the value of donated cash. It's not a competition, and we value every contribution of any kind..... But it's obvious that in our unique context, editors are the main source of value, and the main contributors to impact.
I liked that Zack understood that, and I liked that he wanted the organization to appropriately understand and value both types of contributors. (Not to mention contributions of code, PR work, organizational work, and so forth.)
Thanks, Sue Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
-----Original Message----- From: James Alexander jamesofur@gmail.com Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2010 22:54:45 To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing Listfoundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: Announcing new Chief Global Development Officer and new Chief Community Officer
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 10:23 PM, Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org wrote:
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
Aye grats both to the two new hires and to the Foundation they look like great choices.
Without trying a risk a sidetrack to much: I have to agree with the idea of the fundraising being with everyone else here and I'm really happy to see that. With the possible exception of the major/foundation gifts (which you could I guess separate off but it would be odd to have them separate from the rest of fundraising I think) our donors OUR our community in all ways. Not only do our readers and editors donate themselves (from what I understand that is the majority (i.e the annual campaign) but also the volunteers themselves are donors at least in my mind even without any monetary support. Their time is what makes us good.
James Alexander james.alexander@rochester.edu jamesofur@gmail.com _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org Date: 2 June 2010 19:08 Subject: Announcing new Chief Global Development Officer and new Chief Community Officer To: WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Hi folks,
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
Congratulations to both Zack and Barry! Exciting indeed. I realize these roles will be formed as they are taken on, but it seems that there is quite a bit of (intentional?) overlap. I am curious how you see that working... both roles seem to involve supporting & growing the communit(ies), perhaps in new ways. There are lots of questions that I have regarding these job descriptions too -- what does supporting the chapters mean? What does supporting the reader community mean? And so on :)
Also as I'm sure you're aware it's definitely time to update http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/File:Org_Chart_Without_Names.png ! (from [[wmf:staff]]
-- Phoebe
On Jun 2, 2010, at 9:40 PM, phoebe ayers wrote:
Also as I'm sure you're aware it's definitely time to update http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/File:Org_Chart_Without_Names.png ! (from [[wmf:staff]]
-- Phoebe
Hi Phoebe,
I was waiting for the new C level hires to be announced before finishing my work on revamping the Org chart and the WMF Staff page in general. I'm planning to get an updated version up in the coming week. ;)
-Daniel
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 10:26 PM, Daniel Phelps dphelps@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Jun 2, 2010, at 9:40 PM, phoebe ayers wrote:
Also as I'm sure you're aware it's definitely time to update http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/File:Org_Chart_Without_Names.png ! (from [[wmf:staff]]
-- Phoebe
Hi Phoebe,
I was waiting for the new C level hires to be announced before finishing my work on revamping the Org chart and the WMF Staff page in general. I'm planning to get an updated version up in the coming week. ;)
-Daniel
That is, as Erin McKean would say, awesomepants. :)
phoebe
Hi, Daniel
On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 2:26 PM, Daniel Phelps dphelps@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Jun 2, 2010, at 9:40 PM, phoebe ayers wrote:
Also as I'm sure you're aware it's definitely time to update http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/File:Org_Chart_Without_Names.png ! (from [[wmf:staff]]
-- Phoebe
Hi Phoebe,
I was waiting for the new C level hires to be announced before finishing my work on revamping the Org chart and the WMF Staff page in general. I'm planning to get an updated version up in the coming week. ;)
-Daniel _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
And then please remember updating [[m:Translation_requests/WMF/Staff/Pronunciation]] along: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Translation_requests/WMF/Staff/Pronunciation
It helps greatly translators whose scripts are non-latin and no mechanical transliteration cannot be allowed. All recent and major hiring are expecting to be added to the table.
Thanks :)
Hi Aphaia,
I'll keep that in mind and plan to update it when I roll out the changes to the staff page.
Thanks, -Daniel
On Jun 3, 2010, at 3:05 AM, Aphaia wrote:
Hi, Daniel
On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 2:26 PM, Daniel Phelps dphelps@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Jun 2, 2010, at 9:40 PM, phoebe ayers wrote:
Also as I'm sure you're aware it's definitely time to update http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/File:Org_Chart_Without_Names.png ! (from [[wmf:staff]]
-- Phoebe
Hi Phoebe,
I was waiting for the new C level hires to be announced before finishing my work on revamping the Org chart and the WMF Staff page in general. I'm planning to get an updated version up in the coming week. ;)
-Daniel _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
And then please remember updating [[m:Translation_requests/WMF/Staff/Pronunciation]] along: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Translation_requests/WMF/Staff/Pronunciation
It helps greatly translators whose scripts are non-latin and no mechanical transliteration cannot be allowed. All recent and major hiring are expecting to be added to the table.
Thanks :)
-- KIZU Naoko http://d.hatena.ne.jp/Britty (in Japanese) Quote of the Day (English): http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/WQ:QOTD
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
More Canadians to the staff?! I tought we already talk about that!!!
Good luck :)
Itzik Edri | T: +972.54.5878078 | itzik@infra.co.il | Facebook http://www.facebook.com/itzike| Twitterhttp://www.twitter.com/itzike | Flickr http://www.flickr.com/itzike | Linkedinhttp://il.linkedin.com/in/itzikedri%20
On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 5:23 AM, Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi folks,
Forwarding from the announce list, since it does not yet auto-forward :-)
Thanks, Sue
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org Date: 2 June 2010 19:08 Subject: Announcing new Chief Global Development Officer and new Chief Community Officer To: WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Hi folks,
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
There will be a press release going out tomorrow, but the news isn't confidential: please feel free to tell whoever you like.
Zack Exley will be our new Chief Community Officer. Zack joins Wikimedia from the Chicago-based firm Thoughtworks where he oversaw strategy and technology projects for organizations like Obama For America, Rock the Vote, and Global Zero.
Zack has a long history of mobilizing people and facilitating them reaching their goals. During the nineties, he worked as a labour organizer and software developer. In 2002, he joined MoveOn.org as director of organizing, where he ran mobilization and fundraising campaigns – and in the same period, helped the Howard Dean campaign with its online fundraising. Zack left MoveOn.org to become online communications and organizing director for the 2004 Kerry-Edwards U.S. presidential campaign, where he ran the team that raised $125 million online for Kerry, and also oversaw online-to-offline organizing efforts responsible for mobilizing hundreds of thousands of field volunteers. In 2005, he led internet strategy and online fundraising for the UK Labour Party's 2005 election campaign, and since 2005 he has acted as a senior strategist and advisor helping many mission-driven organizations advance their fundraising and mobilization goals, including the American Civil Liberties Union, Amnesty International, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the International Rescue Committee and Greenpeace USA.
Zack grew up in Connecticut and has also lived in Kenya, China and the United Kingdom. He has an BA in Economics from the University of Massachusetts.
As Chief Community Officer, Zack will be responsible for developing the Wikimedia Foundation's relationships with key constituencies including readers, editors and donors. This will include our work aimed at recruiting new editors (including the public policy project) and supporting community health, as well as fundraising. The people who will report to Zack are Philippe, Cary, Frank, Rand, Rebecca and Sara, plus their direct reports.
Zack currently lives in Kansas City: he'll be relocating to the Bay Area in July.
Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Some of you know Barry from Buenos Aires or Berlin, where he attended Wikimania and the chapters meeting, respectively. He comes to us from the strategy consultancy firm The Bridgespan Group, where he has spent the past year leading the Bridgespan team supporting Wikimedia with its strategic planning process. For the past six years, Barry has led Bridgespan's work in education innovation and social technology, which mainly consisted of working with CEOs on strategy development, organizational development and leadership issues. Prior to joining Bridgespan, he spent eight years at The Boston Consulting Group, where he worked with global clients in the financial services, media and energy sectors on global strategy, organizational restructuring, change management and post-merger integration.
Barry was born in Cape Town, South Africa, and raised in Toronto, Canada. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Western Ontario, and a master's degree in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
In this new role with us, Barry will be our Chief Global Development Officer (CGDO), the position formerly known as the Chief (Global) Programs Officer. As CGDO, Barry will be responsible for our activities focused specifically on increasing readership and supporting editor self-organization in the Global South, for our messaging to the general public and the media, and for our activities aimed at supporting and developing chapters. The people who will report to him are Jay and his direct report Moka, plus Kul, plus a number of new hires dedicated to supporting new activities that have come out of the strategic plan. You'll hear more about that in coming months, once Barry has joined us.
We are really lucky that Barry got engaged in our work, and is willing to now join us. His extensive background in organizational development particularly will be useful to us, as we all collectively further evolve our thinking about how to structure Wikimedia as an international movement. He'll also be terrific with the global development work due to his extensive international background. And, his background as a consultant has trained him to be a great listener and facilitator, which is important in our work.
I want to take a minute to offer my thanks to everyone who helped with the process of bringing in both Zack and Barry, which has been ongoing for many months. Dozens of people –including board members, advisory board members, editors, friends and supporters-- helped us source candidates for these roles. Our board members spoke at length with the recruiting firm m|Oppenheim, gave me good feedback on potential candidates, and helped with the interviewing. Several staff participating in the interviewing as well, including Erik, Veronique, Daniel, Rebecca, Rand, Sara and Jay.
And of course, a big thanks to m|Oppenheim. In recruiting for these roles, m|Oppenheim spoke with hundreds of people over a period of about six months, to develop a midlist of 65 candidates, of whom eight reached a “final interview” stage. m|Oppenheim did really great work and I'm very pleased with this outcome.
This completes the C-level hiring, with the exception of the Chief Human Resources Officer, which we're in the middle of recruiting for. That's is currently underway with m|Oppenheim, with support from our friends at Omidyar Network. I expect we'll be able to announce the new CHRO within six weeks or so.
Before closing – I wanted to talk a little about how these roles have evolved through the hiring process. Originally, as you may remember, we had set out to hire a Chief Program Officer and a Chief Development Officer – however, during the hiring process, those roles morphed into a Chief Global Development Officer and a Chief Community Officer. It's not unusual for that kind of thing to happen: it's normal for thinking to evolve, and it's normal for roles to be customized a little to suit people's particular skills and experiences. But I did want to call out one particular aspect of my thinking that might be interesting for people here on this list.
Setting out to hire a Chief Development Officer is a “normal” thing for a non-profit organization to do: in most non-profits, fundraising is structured as a distinct department, separate from the rest of the work of the organization. As we went through the hiring process though, it became increasingly obvious to me that that conventional structure doesn't really suit us. Most non-profits provide special access and privileges to donors, and pay them special attention, because they are the fuel that powers the organization. Donors are of course our fuel too, and we're deeply grateful for their help. But --unusually in the world of non-profits-- we have an additional group of supporters without whom the work couldn't be done --- which is you: the volunteers who build and maintain the projects. And our readers are another special group, in part because we hope to persuade them to join us as editors and donors.
Given the importance of all three groups to our work, I believe it doesn't make sense for us to treat donors as distinct: rather, we should invite them into our larger community, and treat them as a part of that greater whole. This means, among other things, speaking with donors in the same tone and style, and with the same substance and the same type of information, as we speak with readers and editors. During the hiring process, Zack pointed out to me that the CDO job as then-structured didn't support that vision. He argued that by siloing off donors into a separate department, we were making it more difficult to achieve the level of authenticity I wanted. That was an important observation, and I took it seriously. I believe that restructuring the CDO job to create a department that includes all our key relationships is an unusual thing to do, and it's arguably a bit risky. But I think it's the right structure for us, given who we are, and the unique nature of our work.
I'd be happy to talk further about Zack and Barry, and I'm sure they –and other staff-- would be too. This is an important moment for Wikimedia: please join me in welcoming them officially to our world.
Thanks, Sue
-- Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
415 839 6885 office
Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. Help us make it a reality!
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate
foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
Itzik Edri wrote:
More Canadians to the staff?! I tought we already talk about that!!!
Good luck :)
More Canadians on staff can't be all that bad. Noting that he was not born in Canada gives his appointment a more global flavour. :-)
Ray
On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 5:23 AM, Sue Gardner wrote:
Barry was born in Cape Town, South Africa, and raised in Toronto, Canada. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Western Ontario, and a master's degree in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
On 3 June 2010 03:23:06 UTC+1, Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org wrote:
I am really happy to announce two important new Wikimedia Foundation hires. Zack Exley will be Wikimedia's new Chief Community Officer, and Barry Newstead will be our Chief Global Development Officer. Both will start just before Wikimania, and will join us in Gdansk.
Zack and Barry, welcome on board! I hope to have a chance to talk with you both in Gdansk. I'm really pleased about these new appointments, I think the WMF will be able to work much more effectively with such experienced and specialised management.
wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org