[Foundation-l] Quick thoughts on fundraising

Erik Moeller erik_moeller at gmx.de
Sun Sep 26 03:58:00 UTC 2004


Donations are still coming in, but not at a very high rate. We can  
probably make the $50K goal, but we should still consider how to make our  
fundraising campaign more effective.

One as of yet unanswered question is how many subscriptions we will get  
because of this campaign, which may well play a substantial role in  
supporting us in the long run. However, from cursory checks, the  
subscription rate appeared to be fairly low.

I have studied online fundraising campaigns a bit. Here are some quick  
thoughts. Some of these things can be done right now, some require  
technical changes.

1) Real-time updates. We now do manual updates within regular intervals,  
which is good, but real-time updates generate TV-like excitement.  
Kuro5hin.org raised $35K in a few days using a realtime-updated progress- 
bar shown on every change. (K5 is much, much smaller than we are, but of  
course there's the added novelty effect when they did it.) This can be  
combined with..

2) Immediately visible donation comments, increasing the community feel.

3) Progress-meter and PayPal link must be visible on every page, not just  
a separate page, i.e. like this:

   [====================          ] $50K                Last 5 comments
                                                        Wikipedia rocks!
   Donate [10 ] [^ EUR] [ via PayPal ] [Go]             Keep it coming ..
                                                        ...

(You are using a non-proportional email font, right?) Note that this  
example includes all the form elements to make a donation with one click,  
with a reasonable value prefilled into the entry field. This is essential  
- click-through forms result in hesitation and second thoughts, and then  
there is the essential laziness of the web surfing process. Also, people  
like to click on buttons.

This will take up a fair bit of screen estate, which is annoying, but I  
consider it necessary. We can still support turning it off via CSS, but  
for the duration of the campaign, we really need to grab people's  
attention.

For extra funkiness, one could us something like mod_pubsub:
http://www.mod-pubsub.org/
to do actual *real-time* real-time updates, i.e. the bar moves and  
comments come in even as you stay on one page. This would probably be best  
reserved for a separate fundraising page, though.

4) Make the form/progressbar available to external sites - if we have  
real-time updates, we should try to make it reasonably easy to include a  
graphical bar + donation form elements in your blog, on your personal  
homepage etc. This way we can get the whole blogosphere involved in the  
fundraising process.

5) Surprises - to keep the campaign exciting, surprises could be unveiled  
at certain milestones: articles, images, links, anything. Or maybe a "Meet  
the Wikimedians" series where different Wikimedia users are introduced  
every $1000. I'm sure we can come up with lots of ideas.

Effectively, the fundraising camapign itself has to be so interesting that  
people will want to check it at least once daily, if not multiple times.  
This worked very well for the Dean campaign where they had an ongoing blog  
that tied directly into the fundraisers.

6) E-mail - the Dean campaign also used a huge list of email addresses for  
fundraising alerts. This of course has to be strictly opt-in, but could  
have an additional outreach effect.

I'm reluctant to propose other mechanisms used by the Dean campaign, such  
as affiliate donation boxes on user pages, because I don't think we should  
target the Wikimedia contributor community too much.

---
Caveat:

We are in the position where the people who *should* support us often  
don't know who we are. They may only have a vague idea what Wikipedia is  
based on reading Wikipedia articles from various mirrors and occasionally  
from our site - they may consider us equivalentto fact-index.com,  
thefreedictionary.com etc. They may be just as willing to donate to these  
sites as to us.

The people who are most targeted by any fundraising campaign are  
unfortunately our regular contributors, because they generate many  
pageviews. How to solve this dilemma? Ideas:

* Give signed in users a convenient [hide] link for obnoxious fundraising  
headers
* Raise awareness of the Wikipedia brand by
 - more strictly enforcing the GFDL
 - petitioning Google (first privately, then publicly) to give us better  
treatment, since we are the original source
 - creating an official Wikimedia affiliate program for mirrors, which  
would include some logos etc. to make people more aware that articles are  
from Wikipedia -- in return, give member sites easier ways to update their  
database

---

Technical notes:

Real-time stuff of course makes caching harder. However, using Edge Side  
Includes (ESI), we should be able to mark-up only the relevant part of the  
page as dynamic, and cache the rest.

Existing code:
This Drupal module contains some PHP code on PayPal IPN handling that may  
be useful: http://drupal.org/project/paypal_framework

- - - - - - - -

Now, one might make an argument that unobtrusive ads are preferable over  
frequent obtrusive donation campaigns. Right now I have no strong opinion  
either way, but based on the data available to me, I believe that a high- 
profile fundraising campaign could be over fairly quickly with high  
returns.

One big problem this year is of course that it's a hotly contested US  
election, so many Americans have given hundreds of dollars already and  
don't have much money to spare for things like Wikimedia. We should  
consider this a good thing, because we need to put our donation model to  
the test properly, and this is a good opportunity to do so.

Oh, and we of course need to still go for the big money in the form of  
institutional grants and corporate donations. The collaborative volunteer  
model may not be good enough here - it's fairly meticulous work where it's  
often a good idea to have one person on the job. Paying someone a couple  
grand to do this properly may provide huge returns that make our $50K  
campaign pale in comparison.

Apologies if I've missed previous discussions on these matters - as ever  
so often, I'm just throwing ideas out there in the hope of contributing to  
finding better solutions.

A final suggestion that Anthere should like: I believe that after the  
fundraising campaign, we should do an international poll among Wikimedians  
to figure out
- why they donated, if they did
- why they didn't donate, if they didn't
- whether they told anyone else about the campaign
etc.

Regards,

Erik



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