Hey folks,
I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for the Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our new head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on 14 April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access, she was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She also handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats to digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning, and was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute. Earlier, she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in low-bandwidth environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media spokesperson and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more. She is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French, Arabic and German.
The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow about Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement and outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that work. Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users and communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process: Geoff Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller, Lisa Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer than we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping Katherine get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their guidance and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC.
Thanks, Sue
--
Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
_______________________________________________ Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
Welcome, Katherine.
Communications are a big challenge in Wikimedia as I'm sure you know. We have information running in many dimensions and directions, we work in multiple languages, and some information about how we run this place is undocumented tribal knowledge. Welcome to the tribe.
Pine
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 22:03:05 -0700 From: sgardner@wikimedia.org To: WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org CC: katherine.maher@gmail.com Subject: [Wikimedia Announcements] Katherine Maher joins the Wikimedia Foundation as Chief Communications Officer
Hey folks, I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for the Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our new head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on 14 April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access, she was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She also handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats to digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning, and was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute. Earlier, she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in low-bandwidth environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media spokesperson and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more. She is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French, Arabic and German. The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow about Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement and outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that work. Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users and communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process: Geoff Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller, Lisa Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer than we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping Katherine get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their guidance and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC. Thanks,
Sue -- Sue Gardner
Executive Director
Wikimedia Foundation
_______________________________________________ Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
You forgot to mention that those who are found unworthy are fed to Rory. No pressure, Katherine :-)
Cheers, Craig
On 28 March 2014 15:59, ENWP Pine deyntestiss@hotmail.com wrote:
Welcome, Katherine.
Communications are a big challenge in Wikimedia as I'm sure you know. We have information running in many dimensions and directions, we work in multiple languages, and some information about how we run this place is undocumented tribal knowledge. Welcome to the tribe.
Pine
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 22:03:05 -0700 From: sgardner@wikimedia.org To: WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org CC: katherine.maher@gmail.com Subject: [Wikimedia Announcements] Katherine Maher joins the Wikimedia Foundation as Chief Communications Officer
Hey folks, I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for the Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our new head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on 14 April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access, she was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She also handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats to digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning, and was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute. Earlier, she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in low-bandwidth environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media spokesperson and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more. She is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French, Arabic and German. The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow about Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement and outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that work. Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users and communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process: Geoff Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller, Lisa Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer than we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping Katherine get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their guidance and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC. Thanks,
Sue
Sue Gardner
Executive Director
Wikimedia Foundation
Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l _______________________________________________ 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
Congratulations to Katherine, who I know will love her work for WMF, and to the Foundation for finding such an able Chief Communications Officer in Katherine, with whom it has been my pleasure to work in DC. This is good news for everybody.
--Mike
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 1:03 AM, Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hey folks,
I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for the Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our new head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on 14 April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access, she was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She also handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats to digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning, and was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute. Earlier, she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in low-bandwidth environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media spokesperson and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more. She is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French, Arabic and German.
The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow about Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement and outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that work. Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users and communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process: Geoff Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller, Lisa Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer than we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping Katherine get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their guidance and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC.
Thanks, Sue
--
Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
Welcome, Katherine! Congratulations!
David Parreño Mont Communication Amical Wikimedia
2014-03-28 6:03 GMT+01:00 Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org:
Hey folks,
I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for the Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our new head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on 14 April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access, she was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She also handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats to digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning, and was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute. Earlier, she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in low-bandwidth environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media spokesperson and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more. She is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French, Arabic and German.
The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow about Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement and outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that work. Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users and communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process: Geoff Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller, Lisa Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer than we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping Katherine get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their guidance and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC.
Thanks, Sue
--
Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
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Hi Katherine, Congratulations & Welcome!
-- Nurunnaby Chowdhury Hasive User: nhasive Sent from my Android Tablet On Mar 28, 2014 6:21 PM, "David Parreño Mont" david.parreno@gmail.com wrote:
Welcome, Katherine! Congratulations!
David Parreño Mont Communication Amical Wikimedia
2014-03-28 6:03 GMT+01:00 Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org:
Hey folks,
I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for
the
Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our new head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on
14
April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access,
she
was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She also handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats to digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning,
and
was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute. Earlier, she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in
low-bandwidth
environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media spokesperson and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more.
She
is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French,
Arabic
and German.
The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow
about
Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement and outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that
work.
Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users and communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process:
Geoff
Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller, Lisa Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer than we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping
Katherine
get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their guidance and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC.
Thanks, Sue
--
Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
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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Welcome on board Katherine! I'm looking forward to see you at work.
Lodewijk
2014-03-28 15:10 GMT+01:00 Nurunnaby Chowdhury nh@nhasive.com:
Hi Katherine, Congratulations & Welcome!
-- Nurunnaby Chowdhury Hasive User: nhasive Sent from my Android Tablet On Mar 28, 2014 6:21 PM, "David Parreño Mont" david.parreno@gmail.com wrote:
Welcome, Katherine! Congratulations!
David Parreño Mont Communication Amical Wikimedia
2014-03-28 6:03 GMT+01:00 Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org:
Hey folks,
I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer for
the
Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our
new
head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us on
14
April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At Access,
she
was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She
also
handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats
to
digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic planning,
and
was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute.
Earlier,
she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in
low-bandwidth
environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media
spokesperson
and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many more.
She
is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French,
Arabic
and German.
The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow
about
Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement
and
outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that
work.
Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users
and
communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare and directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process:
Geoff
Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller,
Lisa
Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to Geoff, who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer
than
we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping
Katherine
get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their
guidance
and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC.
Thanks, Sue
--
Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be immediately directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
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Welcome Katherine! Regards from Mexico. El mar 28, 2014 5:37 p.m., "Lodewijk" lodewijk@effeietsanders.org escribió:
Welcome on board Katherine! I'm looking forward to see you at work.
Lodewijk
2014-03-28 15:10 GMT+01:00 Nurunnaby Chowdhury nh@nhasive.com:
Hi Katherine, Congratulations & Welcome!
-- Nurunnaby Chowdhury Hasive User: nhasive Sent from my Android Tablet On Mar 28, 2014 6:21 PM, "David Parreño Mont" david.parreno@gmail.com wrote:
Welcome, Katherine! Congratulations!
David Parreño Mont Communication Amical Wikimedia
2014-03-28 6:03 GMT+01:00 Sue Gardner sgardner@wikimedia.org:
Hey folks,
I'm pleased to announce we've hired a Chief Communications Officer
for
the
Wikimedia Foundation, replacing Jay Walsh who left us in October. Our
new
head of communications will be Katherine Maher, and she will join us
on
14
April, reporting to me.
Katherine comes to the WMF from Washington DC, where she was Advocacy Director for the global digital rights organization Access. At
Access,
she
was responsible for all media and communications work, including communications between the organization and its 350,000 members. She
also
handled coalition work and advocacy efforts and urgent global threats
to
digital rights, participated in the organization's strategic
planning,
and
was deeply involved with the production of RightsCon.
Before Access, Katherine worked on the launch of the Open Development Technology Alliance at the World Bank, and was a program manager for internet freedom projects at the National Democratic Institute.
Earlier,
she worked on the UniWiki initiative for the UNICEF Innovation team, intended to improve MediaWiki's usability for people who were new to computer use, using early-model technology, or connecting in
low-bandwidth
environments. Through her career she's been a frequent media
spokesperson
and writer of op-eds and other media materials.
Katherine has lived and worked in nine countries and visited many
more.
She
is a native speaker of English, and has a basic knowledge of French,
Arabic
and German.
The purpose of the CCO role is to ensure fast, easy information flow
about
Wikimedia in multiple languages, both internally within the movement
and
outside of it, and I think Katherine will be a wonderful fit for that
work.
Her experiences advocating for the rights of ordinary internet users
and
communicating with a large global volunteer community are both rare
and
directly relevant. She's got a solid understanding of internet technologies. She's a crisp, clear communicator, and an experienced spokesperson.
I want to thank the people who helped with the interviewing process:
Geoff
Brigham, Jove Oliver, Gayle Karen Young, David Gerard, Erik Moeller,
Lisa
Gruwell, Frank Schulenburg, and Jimmy Wales. A special thanks to
Geoff,
who's ably overseen our communications functions for the past several years, and to Jay, who's generously filled in when it took us longer
than
we expected to hire for this role. Geoff and Jay will be helping
Katherine
get on-boarded, and I know she'll benefit enormously from their
guidance
and support.
Please join me in welcoming Katherine, who's on CC.
Thanks, Sue
--
Sue Gardner Executive Director Wikimedia Foundation
Please note: all replies sent to this mailing list will be
immediately
directed to Wikimedia-l, the public mailing list of the Wikimedia community. For more information about Wikimedia-l: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l _______________________________________________ WikimediaAnnounce-l mailing list WikimediaAnnounce-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaannounce-l
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