Grants:APG/Proposals/2013-2014 round1/Wikimedia UK/Staff proposal assessment

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Wikimedia UK received a funds allocation in the amount of £353,000 (equal to about US$570,000) in 2013-2014 Round 1. This funds allocation was recommended by the Funds Dissemination Committee on 15 November 2013 and approved by the WMF Board of Trustees on 31 December 2013.

Applicants should read this document to familiarise themselves with the assessment criteria; however, it should be edited only by FDC-related staff. The staff will use the document to set out their objective assessment of each funding request from eligible entities – specifically, to determine the extent to which plans align with the mission goals of the Wikimedia movement, and the extent to which the entity is well-placed to execute those plans effectively. The staff will base this report on proposals from entities and input from the community and other stakeholders (including, where required, deeper due-diligence on the entity's previous track record within the Wikimedia movement). The staff will provide completed reports to the FDC, which will then make a recommendation to the Board of Trustees on funding allocations. See a note from FDC staff explaining the process is more detail here: FDC portal/Note on staff proposal assessments 2013-14 Round 1.


Methodology behind the 2013-2014 Round 1 FDC staff assessments

The FDC staff assessments provide a snapshot of the staff review of Annual Plan Grant (FDC) proposals, and identify both strengths and concerns with the work proposed.

  • We did this through both portfolio analysis - looking across proposals and calibrating across different organizations - as well as assessing the context of each individual organization and its proposal. We did our best to be as nuanced as possible. For example, we understand that an organization that is beginning to formalize structures and bring on staff may have far fewer resources for learning and evaluation processes than an organization with a longer history and full-time staff. At the same time, a larger organization is also likely to have complex program structures and processes, that reflect in its use of metrics and measures.
  • We significantly increased the inputs to the staff assessment process from last year. They include:
    • The proposals themselves, with the attached documents (strategic plans, annual plans, detailed budgets etc)
    • Past and current reports (FDC quarterly progress reports, grant reports etc)
    • A portfolio view of financials across proposals: FDC_portal/Proposals/2013-2014_round1/Financial_overview.
    • Internal financial, evaluation and compliance inputs from the WMF Finance, Programs, Legal and Grantmaking teams.
  • We used a few key principles for the assessment, across all proposals. These are not new, and are detailed in the narrative and scoring sections of the assessment. They include:
    • Impact on Wikimedia projects and the global movement. We looked for the rationale behind the work organizations do, aligning them to the Wikimedia strategic priorities and goals. We looked particularly for direct and indirect impact of this work on Wikimedia projects; for example, growth in contributors and content donation. Most importantly, we looked at whether the funds requested were justified in the context of current and potential impact of the proposed work.
    • Organizational strategy, leadership and governance. We looked for evidence that an organization had a good understanding of its own context, and the needs, opportunities and challenges of the communities it seeks to serve or partner with. We looked for board, staff and volunteer leadership that is committed, effective and engaged with these communities and practising movement values of openness and transparency.
    • Rates of growth and financial management. In this round, only two returning applicants asked for funds within the recommended maximum growth rate in movement resources (annual plan grants/FDC allocations) of 20%, which is itself a significant rate in many contexts. In addition, many organizations are underspending on previous grant allocations and/or have extensive reserves, which makes overall growth rates even higher. We appreciated organizations that were not spending for spending’s sake, and being careful and prudent about resources; we hope this continues. However, significant underspends (particularly on programs) across a number of organizations flag the challenges of budgeting, planning and program design. It may be that the most effective and impactful programs do not always need significant resources. We specifically looked at the nature of long-time underspends in the context of organizations with a history of overbudgetting and underspending.
    • Program design, learning and evaluation. We recognize that the Wikimedia movement at large is still developing a more nuanced understanding of how we measure our impact, as volunteers and as organizations. We looked at each organization’s self-defined metrics and measures for success, both qualitative and quantitative. We searched for indicators that went beyond process (or outputs) and looked at intended outcomes and specific goals or targets. We recognized, however, that many organizations are in the process of establishing baselines for their work, and incorporating learning into program design and re-design. We appreciated organizations that were open about these challenges and were honest and reflective about their own capacities and systems.

Note: We shared our nearly final draft assessments with all FDC applicants a day ahead of publishing them, so that organizations had some lead time for sharing these with their Board and staff. We then took all responses into consideration where possible, making factual changes and clarifying our statements where necessary. We encouraged organizations to note all substantive comments and concerns on the Discussion pages of these assessments.

Proposal overview

Name of eligible entity Wikimedia UK
Summary staff assessment [substantial concerns: none/some/many] Many concerns
Total amount proposed to the FDC for the upcoming year annual plan in currency requested 442,217 GBP
Estimate of total amount proposed to the FDC for the upcoming year annual plan in US dollars 714,755 USD
Exchange rate used to calculate estimate in US dollars and date accessed (mm/dd/yy) 1.6163 US dollars to 1.00000 Great British Pound (calculated 1 October 2013)
Date of proposal submission 1 October 2013
Adherence to proposal process [yes/no] Yes
Adherence to legal, regulatory, and policy regulations [yes/no] Yes
Adherence to US anti-terrorism laws [yes/no] Yes


Financial summary

A detailed summary of the financial information from all proposals is here: financial overview document. Movement resources are defined as what the entity received through FDC allocations or grants or what the entity retained via payment processing in the prior funding cycle.

Projected 2013 Proposed 2014 Proposed change (as a +/− %)
Movement resources* 331,768 GBP 442,217 GBP 33%
Overall budget 701,057 GBP 768,363 GBP 2%
Number of staff 9 0 0

Annual plan

Overview of staff assessment

Strengths

What are the top strengths of the plan?

  • Leadership is addressing governance challenges
  • Thoughtful about not growing its current staff of nine
  • Reports its events are popular and well-attended

Concerns

What are the top concerns with the plan?

  • Potential for impact on Wikimedia projects is too low in proportion to funds requested
  • Programmatic strategy is diffused and unfocused in the context of WMUK’s size and history
  • Plan lacks clear metrics or a feasible plan to evaluate work

Strategic alignment

To what extent does the plan address the strategic goals and priorities of the movement?

  • We appreciate the clear table showing alignment between WMUK’s programs and the strategic priorities; however, the rationale for this alignment is not clear. WMUK has provided some helpful information about this on the proposal form discussion page, but detailed rationale for some programs is still lacking. For example, it is unclear how delivering project grants bringing new volunteers in will increase Participation in Wikimedia projects or how media files donated as a result of activities and volunteer equipment being used will necessarily result in Quality.
  • WMUK’s strategic plan lacks detail, making it difficult to understand how its many programs relate to its larger context or to one another, and sufficient context is not always provided in this proposal.
  • It is unclear why some activities are grouped with others into programs when they do not share common objectives. For example, it is unclear why the following activities in the Community program are grouped together: Volunteer support, Annual conference and AGM, Wikimania 2014, Train the trainers, Development budget.

Context of the entity and community

To what extent does the context of the entity (e.g., community participation, fundraising context, sociopolitical environment) enable or inhibit the entity's potential for impact? To what extent does the entity's experience enable or inhibit the entity's potential for impact?

  • In some ways, WMUK is well-positioned to have impact on a global scale since it may have significant impact on English language projects. There is an active editing community in the UK; however, the impact of the proposed activities on Wikimedia projects is unclear.
  • There are a significant number of internationally recognized academic, research and GLAM institutions in the UK, and so there may be many opportunities for effective partnerships and content donations.
  • WMUK is an experienced entity with staff resources that has been entrusted with a significant proportion of movement resources in the past.
  • WMUK has been working on some of the programs presented in this proposal for several years, without clear results or adequate reflection. WMUK sometimes pursues programs without sufficiently evaluating its impact or adapting its strategies to enable future success; examples include its edit-a-thons and microgrants program.
  • WMUK has been seriously working towards addressing past challenges around governance.

Feasibility and risks for the annual plan

How feasible is the annual plan? Specifically:

  • To what extent are the budget, staffing, availability of volunteers, and other resources realistic for achieving the anticipated outcomes?
  • Are the timelines realistic for the proposed initiatives and associated activities?
  • Are there acknowledged and/or unacknowledged risks in the proposal?

In the current year, WMUK is proposing to grow its movement resources again significantly by 33%: its request is for 442,217 GBP (US$ 714,746). This rate of growth in movement resources is above the maximum increase of 20% recommended in the guardrails.

Feasibility

  • The entity has a committed staff and board.
  • WMUK has had some success with programs like Train the Trainers and Wikimedians in Residence that can support participation and content generation.

Risks

  • WMUK underspent very significantly in 2012, and used the remaining funds from 2012 to supplement its 2013 annual plan. In 2013, it plans to underspend by 8%.
  • The FDC recommended about 58% of WMUK’s request to the FDC in 2012-2013 Round 1. However, WMUK reduced its overall budget by only 9% in 2013, and maintained a budget closer to its originally proposed budget by using funds from its 2012 underspend and reserves. This has implications for the long-term sustainability and feasibility of its plans, although WMUK is now acknowledging the FDC’s concerns around aligning resources with planned objectives and impact.
  • WMUK has not yet been able to effectively set and measure long-term goals around outcomes such as editor retention. Given the amount of movement resources requested and WMUK’s size and potential, a continued focus on outputs or process indicators rather than outcomes is a serious concern.
  • WMUK is proposing a very ambitious activity plan for a year in which Wikimania is located in London and WMUK’s time and attention may be diverted towards it.

Summary of expert opinions and/or community commentary

Summary of the opinions of subject-matter experts on the plan

None requested.

Summary of community commentary on the plan

  • For detailed comments from the community, the FDC and FDC staff, as well as responses from the organizations themselves, please visit the proposal form discussion page. The summary offers a brief overview of the questions or comments from community members, and is not an endorsement of the views expressed on the proposal form discussion page.
  • One community member asked WMUK if its activities have been reviewed in terms of cost-benefit and also asked about the exchange rates used in the proposal. In addition, this same member asked about WMUK’s approach to whether the current demographics of Wikipedia have caused the content of Wikipedia to become biased against women.
  • Another community member asked WMUK a series of detailed questions about its proposal, including questions about WMUK’s strategic plan and detailed questions about each program, WMUK’s metrics and targets, and the definitions WMUK uses in this proposal.

Scores, comments and feedback

Scores provide only a preliminary assessment for consideration by the FDC. The rubric for scoring is below.

Dimensions Criteria Score (1–5) Comments and feedback
Potential for impact against strategic priorities (A) The plan addresses the Wikimedia movement strategic priorities of the Wikimedia movement (infrastructure, participation, quality, reach, and innovation) 3.00 Programs in this plan address strategic priorities to some extent, but the rationale presented is not sufficiently clear for an entity of this size; programs are not focused strongly enough on Wikimedia projects. WMUK does not have a detailed strategic plan.
(B) TThe initiatives in the plan have the potential to lead to movement strategic priorities, if executed well 2.50 Potential impact on English language projects is high, with an active editing community, but the proposal is relatively unfocused and may not lead to significant impact on global targets.
(C) The initiatives in the plan have the potential to lead to significant impact, given context and amount of funds proposed 2.00 Programs may lead to some impact in a local context, but the amount requested is too large.
Ability to execute (D) The entity has the resources, skills, and capacity (staff, volunteer, non-staff) for the plan to succeed 3.00 Some relevant staff capacity, but not to execute and evaluate a plan of this size and scope.
(E) The entity has a record of success in similar initiatives 3.00 Building on past programs such as Train the Trainers and Wikipedians in Residence, but have had a mixed record of success with other initiatives.
(F) The entity's leadership is effective, committed, and relatively stable 3.00 Leadership is seriously committed to working through its past governance challenges.
Efficient use of funds (G) The funding requested is reasonable given the proposed initiatives 2.00 Budget is generally not consistent with the potential impact of the intiatives, the budget may be overly focused on administration rather than programs, and there are concerns about whether the budget is sustainable.
(H) The entity has a record of using funds efficiently and staying on budget 2.00 No strong track record of budgetary management; concerns about the long-term sustainability and feasibility of its plans.
Quality of proposed measures of success (I) Clear indicators of success are outlined in the plan 2.50 Clear indicators with targets are in place, but only address outputs, which is not commensurate to the size of this request.
(J) A plan is in place to track the proposed metrics 2.00 While WMUK provides a list of indicators to be tracked, there is not a clear plan in place that is commensurate with a request of this size.
(K) The entity has a feasible plan in place to track the proposed metrics 2.00 May not have the skills to track metrics effectively, especially considering the large number of programs.
Potential to add knowledge and/or other benefits to the movement (L) The initiatives in the plan, if successful, could be helpful and/or productively adapted elsewhere in the movement 3.00 Pursuing a few innovative programs and approaches like Women in Science or Train the Trainers, that may be useful to others.
(M) The entity is ready to share with the movement the lessons learned from the initiatives 3.50 Active within the movement; WMUK learns and shares with other movement groups; but does not always submit clear and reflective reports with detailed metrics commensurate to its size and resources.

Scoring rubric

Dimensions Evaluation criteria 1 = Weak or no alignment with criterion 3 = Moderate alignment with criterion 5 = Strong alignment with criterion
Potential for impact against strategic priorities (A) The plan addresses the Wikimedia movement strategic priorities The plan will not directly address any strategic priorities The plan will partially address strategic priorities or other goals that are closely related to the strategic priorities The plan will directly address several strategic priorities
(B) The initiatives have the potential to lead to the strategic priorities, if executed well The initiatives have no clear connection to strategic priorities Some or all of the initiatives have an unclear relationship to strategic priorities The initiatives have been shown (by the entity or the movement) to lead to strategic priorities
(C) The initiatives have the potential to lead to significant impact, given context and amount of funds proposed The initiatives will have marginal impact in the local community and the broader Wikimedia community, given context and amount of funds proposed The initiatives proposed may have a significant impact in the local community, given context and amount of funds proposed The initiatives could have significant impact at scale, both in the entity's local community and in the broader movement, given context and amount of funds proposed
Ability to execute (D) The entity has the resources, skills, and capacity (staff, volunteer, non-staff) for the plan to succeed The entity has neither the number nor the amount of resources, skills, and capacity needed for success. The entity has some relevant staff and volunteer capacity, but may be under-resourced for some initiatives The entity is well-resourced with the relevant skills and capacity for success
(E) The entity has a record of success in similar initiatives The entity has had trouble succeeding in similar initiatives The entity has not engaged in similar initiatives in the past The entity has conducted similar initiatives in the past and has been successful in achieving desired results
(F) The entity's leadership is effective, committed, and relatively stable Leadership has been unstable (e.g., changing on an annual basis) Current leadership is committed to the entity; some concerns exist around stability or effectiveness of leadership Current and past leaders have demonstrated the ability to develop and execute on strategic plans; leadership team has been stable and transitions have been smooth
Efficient use of funds (G) The funding requested is reasonable given the proposed initiatives Based on FDC experience and relative to other proposals, the plan contains significant over- or under-budgeting, and/or has not thoroughly accounted for costs Based on FDC experience and relative to other proposals, the budget is generally consistent with the initiatives; some initiatives are likely to be over- or under-budgeted Based on FDC experience and relative to other proposals, the budget is reasonable, and rigorous cost projections have been presented
(H) The entity has a record of using funds efficiently and staying on budget The entity has a poor record of budgetary management: e.g., consistently and significantly below budget (such as 50% underspending), and drawing on organizational reserves due to overspending The entity has a middling record of budgetary management; e.g., generally on-budget for its biggest initiatives and cost items, properly recording any over- and under-spending, and with plans in place for improvements The entity has consistently strong record of financial management; e.g., consistently staying on or below budget (within ~5% of budget), and putting surplus funds towards the entity's and/or movement's goals
Quality of proposed measures of success (I) Clear indicators of success are outlined in the plan Initiatives have no associated indicators of success, or the proposed indicators are unrealistic and/or unmeasurable Each initiative has indicators of success, but at least some indicators are unrealistic or are not clearly connected to the initiative Each initiative has a realistic and carefully framed set of indicators of success associated with them, which are rigorous and time-bound
(J) A system is in place to track the proposed metrics The plan does not include methodology or timing for tracking and collecting metrics to measure progress against proposed indicators of success A proposal to track progress against indicators exists, but has flawed methodology or unrealistic timelines and initiatives The plan includes timing and tracking of proposed metrics, and additional initiatives (e.g., surveys, research) to track indicators
(K) The entity has a feasible system to track the proposed metrics No systems are in place to track metrics, or staff or volunteer capacity to manage metrics tracking There is some overall capacity (e.g., staff, volunteers) to track and monitor metrics, but the entity does not clearly have the relevant skills to do this High-quality systems, and the necessary skills and capacity to manage these systems, are in place
Potential to add knowledge and/or other benefits to the movement (L) The initiatives, if successful, could be helpful and/or productively adaptedelsewhere in the movement The initiatives would not be relevant to other movement groups Some initiatives may be relevant to other movement groups Many initiatives proposed are new or have seldom been tried elsewhere in the movement; if successful, other movement entities would benefit from doing similar initiatives
(M) The entity is ready to share with the movement the lessons learned from the initiatives The entity is isolated from other movement groups and rarely shares information; the entity's leaders and members seldom participate in movement-wide functions The entity is somewhat active within the movement, and is developing more relationships with other movement entities with which it could share lessons learned The entity has regular communication with other movement entities, is a regular participant in Wikimedia events, and has a track record of sharing with others

This form was created by: Winifred Olliff (Grants Administrator) talk 00:33, 9 November 2013 (UTC)