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There are many campaigns in the Wikimedia movement, such as Wiki Loves Monuments, WikiGap, #1Lib1Ref, and more. However, there is no robust, on-wiki registration system for campaign events. For this reason, the Campaigns team aims to create an easy way to join Wikimedia campaigns.

We invite you to read our analysis below and share your feedback on the talk page. Your feedback will directly impact the direction of our project. Thank you in advance!

Project vision

With this new feature, campaign organizers will save time, since they will no longer need to develop alternative registration solutions. Also, they will be able to collect better data on campaign participants and their needs while respecting participant privacy. Meanwhile, campaign participants will be able to join campaigns with minimal effort, and their first point of contact in the campaign will be fun and inspiring.

We have big plans for the future of registration. First, we hope to integrate the registration feature with existing tracking tools, like Programs & Events Dashboard and Event Metrics. This means that, after participants have registered, their usernames will be automatically pushed to the tracking tool specified by the organizer.

Second, we hope that an on-wiki registration solution fosters a greater sense of community. Right now, many campaign participants don’t know who else has registered, especially if they register through third-party platforms. With a new registration solution, participants can see who joined the campaign and who shares common interests or motivations with them.

Third, we envision the registration system being a part of a larger event platform in the future. This platform could include additional features for organizers and participants, such as an event creation tool and a global Wikimedia events calendar. Once we have built registration, we can use the tool as a building block for later projects and features in the platform.

Finally, we want this project to be a deeply collaborative effort. In preparation for this project, we consulted with about 50 campaign organizers. We want to sincerely thank these organizers, who provided us with a richer understanding of the organizer experience and its greatest challenges. Now, we invite all campaign organizers to share their feedback on the project talk page!

Why we want to improve registration

We believe that registration is a strong project choice for the team for the reasons listed below.

  1. There is currently no standardized, on-wiki system. The Wikimedia movement needs a robust registration system designed for its needs.
  2. The current registration alternatives used by organizers have many issues, including being:
    • Time-consuming and tedious for organizers to configure and manage.
    • Data-light. They provide minimal information on participant needs and make it hard for organizers to understand who participated in what events.
    • Technically challenging and confusing for newcomers to register.
    • Difficult for participants to edit information after registration.
    • Not preventing multiple registrations of the same person from occurring.
    • Not multilingual or built for diverse language communities.
    • Not fostering a sense of community and inclusion among participants.
    • In conflict with Wikimedia values (i.e. many tools require disclosure of private information on a third-party platform).
    • Not integrated with any wiki pages or platforms, adding additional complexity for newcomers.
    • Not integrated with existing tracking systems, like the Programs & Events Dashboard.
  3. Organizers, affiliates, and other movement stakeholders want better data on participants and their needs. Developing a registration system is the first step in making this possible.
  4. Registration is the building block for future work. Once we improve registration, we can begin to integrate other features into the campaigns workflow, such as improved tracking tools or improved communication tools.
  5. The project is manageable and within scope for the team.

Nearly every organizer we have spoken to has designed their own registration solution. Some of these solutions are learned from other organizers and some come from previous organizing experience. Others are designed around specific technical requirements. Our goal is not to design the first registration system, but to provide an improved solution that helps create a consistent workflow for organizers in different contexts.

How campaign registration currently works

We have identified several registration solutions that are currently being used, including:

On-wiki solutions

Manually adding username

Some registration processes require participants to manually add their username or signature on-wiki. For example, see Wiki for Human Rights 2021 in Morocco or Women in Red events in the screenshot examples below. The advantage of this approach is that it is integrated into existing wiki workflows, and information on registrants is publicly available (example). The disadvantage is that it gives minimal information to organizers on participant needs, and it's not intuitive for newcomers.

Participants asked to manually add their username in Wiki for Human Rights Morocco
A separate participants section, where users manually add their signatures, for a Women in Red August 2021 event

Technical hybrids

Some organizers have built elaborate technical fixes for registration. For example, CEE Spring has a multi-wiki bot that aggregates data across multiple local events. Al Maarifa Project requires each user to generate a subpage that is then queried by a script. These solutions can be useful for specific campaigns, but they are hard to adapt or reuse across communities. They also depend on maintenance by “in the know” technical volunteers, who may eventually stop maintaining the tools, creating challenges for long-term technical support.

Off-wiki, proprietary solutions

Third-party registration forms

Some organizers use third-party forms, like Google Forms, to register participants. The advantage is that the forms are easy for organizers to configure and for participants to fill out. The disadvantage is that they are removed from Wikimedia workflows, and they have varying privacy and open source policies. Participants cannot see registrant information either, so they have little understanding of how to connect with other registrants. Also, these platforms are not universally supportive of languages and cultural contexts. In smaller language communities or at-risk contexts, these tools often prove challenging to use in an inclusive and safe way.

For example, a Black History month event to Celebrate Women Leaders in the African Diaspora, organized by Wikimedia Nigeria, African Women on Board, and AfroCROWD, used a Google Form for registration. See screenshot example below.

Registration instructions on a Black History Month Women Leader's event page, which directs users to a Google Form.

Third party registration platforms

Some campaigns use third-party platforms, such as Eventbrite or Meetup, for registration. The advantage is these platforms offer feature-rich and highly customizable experiences. The disadvantages are the same as those for third-party registration forms.

For example, in the screenshot below, the Vaccine Safety Edit-a-thon, organized by Wikimedia District of Columbia and Wikimedia Mexico, provided a link to register on Eventbrite.

Event page that links that links to an Eventbrite registration page.

Tools built for campaign tracking

Programs and Events Dashboard

The Programs and Events Dashboard, developed by the Wiki Education Foundation, is a tracking tool. Some organizers use a third-party tool, which is followed by registration on the dashboard. For example (screenshot example below), you can see these steps in the Africa Wiki Challenge. In other cases, organizers use the Dashboard as their one and only registration tool.

The advantage of the Dashboard is that it's a metrics tool, so it's already integrated with tracking. The primary disadvantage is that it's not an actual registration tool. It provides minimal information about participants to organizers, and it provides minimal support to participants. Also, the dashboard is not used as a metrics tool for all campaigns, since many campaigns prefer different tracking systems.

Instructions on how to participate provided by the Africa Wiki Challenge event page

Fountain

Fountain (documentation), developed by Le Loy, is a tracking tool used by some campaigns, such as Wikipedia Asian Month. The advantages and disadvantages are the same as those found in using the Programs & Events Dashboard. Additionally, the tool, similar to on-wiki registration, is challenging for newcomers and is best used with experienced editors.

Example of using the Fountain tool to search for campaigns related to "women"

No formal registration

Some campaigns do not include a formal registration process, but instead track participants through some consistent action in an on-wiki workflow.

Registration via upload process

This is especially common for photography contests, such as Wiki Loves Monuments or Wiki Loves Folklore, in which registration is essentially built into the tracking process. When someone uploads a photograph and tags it for campaign tracking, they are effectively registered. This format works for some campaigns, but it’s not useful for all campaign types, especially for those targeting newcomers or writing articles. It also doesn’t collect additional information on participants, which may make communication and follow-up especially challenging.

Screenshot example Upload Wizard used for Wiki Loves Monuments (after competition)

Registration via Hashtag

For #1lib1ref and Wikipedia Pages Wanting Photos (#WPWP) and a handful of other program activities, the Hashtags Tool acts as a default registration tool. Like with the upload process, there is benefit in that it captures contribution data. However, because hashtags are not deeply integrated in the editing interface, it’s difficult for newcomers to understand the action, and even experienced editors may forget to add the hashtag because it is not part of their regular workflow. Additionally, it is difficult for organizers to keep track of contributions in real time, and no information is directly provided on participants and their needs.

Example of using a hashtag in an edit summary, which can be used for tracking later via the Hashtag Tool
Hashtag tool, which can be used to search for edits based on hashtags

Open questions

Thank you for reading our analysis. Now we want to hear from you! We kindly request that you respond to the questions below (or share any other feedback!) on the project talk page:

  1. What do you think of our plan to create a campaign registration system? Do you think it would be useful to you, as a campaign organizer and/or participant?
  2. What do you think of our analysis of the current registration processes? Are we missing anything important to you?
  3. If you are a campaign organizer, what registration system do you use? What does and doesn't work well with that system? If you could change one thing about it, what would it be?
  4. If we create a registration system, how would you like it to work? Please provide as many details from what you would like or, if you have them, examples from other registration tools you have used before!
  5. We are a new team (check out the new landing page). What are your hopes, questions, or concerns for our team?
  6. Anything else you would like to add?

Your feedback is very important to us and it will directly impact the choices we make as a team. Thank you, and we look forward to reading your comments!

Status Updates

June 14, 2024ː Release to Swahili Wikipedia

The CampaignEvents extension has been enabled on Swahili Wikipedia.

June 7, 2024ː Release to Igbo Wikipedia

The CampaignEvents extension has been enabled on Igbo Wikipedia, and we will be releasing to more wikis soon. Our next release will be for Swahili Wikipedia.

May 23, 2024: New feature improvements

In the last few months, we have released some feature improvements to Event Registration, which include:

Event List

There is now a global list of all events that use Event Registration, which can be found at Special:AllEvents. We plan to improve the Event List over time by adding more search filters, such as the wiki(s) of the event and the event topic. To learn more about the Event List and future work we may do for the feature, you can check out T355666 and T362881.

Grant ID support

Organizers will now see a Grant ID field when they configure or edit Event Registration. The Grant ID is found in the Grantee Portal (Fluxx), and it is assigned to programs or events that receive grants from the Wikimedia Foundation. Now, with this update, organizers can associate their Grant ID with Event Registration data, so that it is easier to analyze the impact of their events.

Optional participant questions for organizers

Organizers can now choose which participant questions to enable when they configure registration. They can choose to enable some, all, or none of the questions.

Support for translated pages

For events that use the Translate extension, they can now see the same Event Registration header for the event, regardless of which translated version of the page is being viewed. Meanwhile, organizers can still create separate subpages with different event registration headers.

February 5, 2024: Update to management of the organizer right

The organizer right has been renamed to be "Event Organizer," and we have updated how it is managed. From now on, all volunteer requests for the right on Meta-Wiki will be managed by Meta-Wiki admins. Meanwhile, staff requests will be managed by the WMF Trust & Safety team. This work was completed as part of Changing Management of Event Organizer Right, with discussion with the admins. You can read documentation on the current process and its management.

November 15, 2023: Participant Questions released

The Participant Questions feature has been released to Event Registration. With this feature, organizers can now include questions for participants in the registration process if they agree to a clickwrap agreement. The questions are optional for participants to answer, and the response data is displayed to the organizer. Some of the information is Personally Identifiable Information (PII), so it is displayed in the aggregate only. The PII information is the gender identity, age, and profession of the participant. Other information is not PII, so individual responses can be viewed. The non-PII information is the affiliate membership of the participant (if any) and their level of confidence in contributing to Wikimedia projects.

October 7 & 10, 2023: office hours & upcoming features

We would like to invite everyone to our upcoming community office hours on October 7 and October 10, where we will demo the latest version of the Event Registration tool. We will discuss the new, already released features (multiple organizer support and P&E Dashboard integration) and upcoming features (organizer can email participants and optional participant questions).

July 21, 2023: Registration tool now integrated with Programs & Events Dashboard

The event registration tool now supports integration with the Programs & Events Dashboard. This means that an organizer can specify the link to their Programs & Events Dashboard event when they configure registration. Then, usernames of publicly registered participants are automatically sent to the specified event on the Programs & Events Dashboard.

April 27, 2023: Registration tool now allows multiple organizers

The event registration tool now includes support for more than one organizer.

December 5, 2022: Office hours and feedback requested

Now that we have enabled the CampaignEvents extension on Meta-Wiki, we would like to invite everyone to our upcoming office hours and to share their feedback on the tool, either on our project talk or in a survey (which is available in Arabic, English, French, and Swahili).

During the office hours, we will demo the tool, answer any questions people may have, and share how people can test the tool on either test wikis (such as the beta cluster, testwiki, or test2wiki) or with real events on Meta-Wiki. The office hours dates and times are:

Session 1:

Session 2:

We hope you can join us!

Additionally, we want to hear your feedback. You can share your feedback on the project talk page, in our V1 feedback survey, or by reaching out to team members directly. The survey and the project talk pages have the same questions, which are available in four languages (Arabic, English, French, and Swahili). Thank you!

November 30, 2022: Meta-Wiki release

We have enabled the CampaignEvents extension on Meta-Wiki, which we will demo in the upcoming office hours.

November 3, 2022: Test wikis release & other updates

We have enabled the CampaignEvents extension on testwiki and test2wiki. This now means that you can test out the tool on these two wikis, in addition to the beta cluster.

Additionally, we have updated our release schedule. Our next release plan is to enable the CampaignEvents extension on Meta-wiki, roughly scheduled for the end of November. You can check out our release plan page for the latest details.

We have written a comprehensive guide on the event registration tool, which will be updated as we release new features for the tool. Additionally, we have posted a blog post on Diff related to our work and plans in Arabic, English, and French.

If you have any feedback on our latest updates, please share them on the talk page. Thank youǃ

October 3, 2022: V0 learnings and V1 launch

Hello, everyone! We have many updates to share with you, including:

  • A summary of learnings from our V0 test phase
  • An update on the launch of V1 work
  • Open questions that we have for volunteers and community members

Please read below to learn more, and we look forward to reading your feedback on the talk pageǃ

V0 learnings

In July 2022, we released V0 on the beta cluster. We collected feedback on V0 in a variety of formats, including: a Google Form, multilingual presentations at office hours and Wikimania, discussions on this project page, communication in off-wiki chat groups, and direct emails sent to us. People provided responses in Arabic, English, French, Portuguese, and Swahili. In total, we heard from over 30 Wikimedians.

We received a lot of positive feedback on V0. For example, when we asked people if they would use the tool, over 80% of the respondents to the question said yes. When we asked Wikimedia organizers if they think access to the tool would make them more likely to organize events in the future, 90% of the respondents said yes. Some common forms of positive feedback included: the tool was intuitive and easy to use, it would save time for organizers, and it would improve organizers’ abilities to collect information on participants. Since this is only an early test version (and we plan to release further enhancements in later versions), it was very exciting for the team to hear that even this version pleased many Wikimedians.

We also received information on how we can improve the event registration tool. Some people said that they already had registration solutions that they preferred or that they only wanted to use the tool after they had more time to test it. We also received many feature requests. Below, we have shared a list of the requests and a note for when we plan to implement the feature, if we do have any plans:

  • Integration with the Programs & Events Dashboard (planned for V1)
  • The ability for multiple organizers to be associated with an event (planned for V1)
  • Geocoding support (planned for V1)
  • Automatic confirmation emails after participants have registered (planned for V1)
  • Event reminder emails for participants (we will be creating the ability for organizers to email participants in V1; automated reminder emails are not yet in the roadmap, but we may consider them later)
  • The ability to set limits on the number of participants (planned for V2)
  • Support for creating event pages (planned for a future project focused on event creation)
  • An improved event calendar system (planned for a future project focused on an event calendar and/or event promotion support)

These suggestions were very helpful for us, and we plan to incorporate many of them as features in the V1 and V2 release. So, with that being said, you can read a more full breakdown of V0 feedback and a final summary of the V0 work.

V1 launch

We have now officially begun working on V1 of the event registration tool. The engineers are currently working on building out the core features and improvements of V1. We have not set a specific release date yet, but when we do, we’ll be sure to update the release page. However, we can let you know that some core feature improvements in V1 include:

  • Support for the organizer to specify an event timezone
  • Geocoding support
  • Automatic confirmation emails after participants have registered
  • The ability for the organizer to email participants (if they email addresses associated with their accounts)
  • Integration with the Programs & Events Dashboard
  • The ability for multiple organizers to be associated with an event
  • Private registration: the option for participants to register and only display their registered username to organizers of the event

To learn more details about our V1 vision, we invite you to check out the V1 summary subpage, which lays out our work in greater detail.

Open questions

  • We are currently working on V1 of the event registration tool. You can check out our summary of the project. Is there anything you would like to share with us about the plan, or anything you suggest we do differently?
  • In the future, who should be able to access our organizer tools? In other words, how should someone be able to become an organizer with certain privileges on the wikis? For example, should it be a user group? Should it be a right that people automatically receive after making a certain number of edits?
  • In the future, we plan to build a feature for organizers to collect information on participants. In that case, what information would you (as an organizer) want to collect on participants before they join an event (such as gender, location, topics of interest, etc)? Do you have any examples of registration forms you have created that ask some of these questions? If yes, please do share them with us!

July 21, 2022: Feedback form ready

Hello, everyone! We now have a feedback form (available in Arabic, English, and French) for people to submit feedback on V0 of the registration tool! We invite you all to fill out the form and/or share feedback on the project talk page. As a reminder, we will be hosting two community office hour sessions to provide training on how to use the tool. The first session will be today at 5 pm UTC, and the second will be on July 23 at 12 pm UTC.

We thank everyone who has provided feedback or support at any point in this project, and we truly look forward to learning from you all during the V0 test phase! Our goal is to continue improving the tool with two more release phases (V1 and V2), so we will be continuing to update this project page throughout the process. In the meantime, we sincerely hope you fill out the feedback form and attend our community office hours. We look forward to hearing from many of you!

July 18, 2022: V0 released on beta cluster

We are very pleased to announce that the registration tool is now available for testing on the beta cluster! You can read Help documentation on how to use the tool on Mediawiki.org.

As a next step, we will be providing training on how to use the tool. For this reason, we cordially invite volunteers to meet the team and participate in a training in one of our upcoming community office hours, which will be taking place on Thursday, July 21 at 5 pm UTC and/or Saturday, July 23 at 12 pm UTC. You can visit the office hours page on Meta-Wiki to sign up for one or both sessions and learn more details.

We are currently finalizing our volunteer feedback form on the registration tool. We will share the feedback form in the upcoming office hours, and we will share it on this project page very soon too. In the meantime, feel free to share your feedback on the talk page, if you would like to check out the tool before the office hours.

In the meantime, thank you to everyone who has collaborated on this project so far, and we hope to see many of you in our upcoming office hours!

8. července 2022

The team is preparing for the release of V0 to the beta cluster, which will be happening soon. We will update this project page when the release is up on the beta cluster. After the release, we will host two community office hours to provide training and support to anyone who would like to try out the tool and share their feedback. For the most up-to-date information, please visit the Release and training schedule page for the project.

May 23, 2022

Hello, everyone! First, thank you to everyone who has participated in our talk page feedback, office hours, or chat group conversations. Your feedback and insights have been absolutely crucial to our project, and we deeply appreciate it. We also have some exciting updates (and new questions!), which we’ll share below:

Engineering update

The team engineers are continuing to work on building the event registration system. They have built the majority of the back-end infrastructure, and they are now focused on building the front-end (i.e., the user interface). We predict that an early testable version of the registration solution will be available on the beta cluster in July 2022. To learn more about the engineering work, you can check out the definition of our schema on Gerrit.

Prototype updates

We have an updated prototype, which was created by our team designer, for you to check out (see links below). This prototype is for V0 (the first version of the tool that we will be releasing). Please note that these are only prototypes; they are not working software on live wikis. These prototypes give a general sense of how the finished product may look, feel, and function once we do release the registration solution, although there will probably be some changes.

Our release plan

Our release plan: We now have a basic release plan. We plan to release the registration solution in three parts, which we will explain below:

  • V0: This is the version of the tool, which we are focused on building now. It will be released to the beta cluster, probably in July 2022. We’re calling it V0 because it is a test phase that will not be released to any live wikis (just a test wiki). The purpose of this release will be to collect user feedback in preparation for the V1 release. In this version, organizers will be able to add registration to event pages and see a list of registered participants. This will be a desktop version only. You can view the prototype example in the links provided above (see “Prototype updates”):
  • V1: This version will be an improvement of V0, with the inclusion of more features, such as: the ability for organizers to contact participants, integration with the Programs & Events Dashboard, and geolocation support. We will also incorporate feedback we receive from users in the V0 testing phase. This version will be compatible with both desktop and mobile web versions of the wikis, and we plan to release it to at least 1 live wiki (probably Meta-Wiki). This version is a big upgrade with a lot to discuss, so we’ll dedicate a separate status update to collect feedback on the V1 requirements and prototypes. You can expect this status update on V1 to be posted soon.
  • V2: This version will be an improvement of V1, based on user feedback and the addition of more features. We haven’t fully fleshed out the requirements, and we don’t have a prototype yet. You can expect more updates on this final version in a future update.

Requesting your feedback

We want your feedback on event page behavior: In the open questions section, we have shared some questions on how events and event pages should be handled. We would love your feedback (see below):

  1. For event registration, what is the recommended behavior for blocked users? Should blocked users be able to join campaign events? Why or why not? And does it matter, depending on the type of block (such as hard block, soft block, etc)?
  2. For event pages in the event namespace, should we allow the pages to be moved?
    1. If yes: What happens if an event page gets moved to another namespace and it has registered participants?
    2. If yes: What should be the behavior/warnings to the user if they want to move the page?
    3. If yes: What should happen if an event page is moved to a namespace where event pages are not allowed?
  3. For event pages in the event namespace, should we allow the pages to be deleted?
    1. If yes: Who should be able to delete event pages?
    2. If yes: What should happen if an event page gets deleted and it has registered participants?
    3. If yes: If people have registered, what should happen to the data if the page is deleted?
  4. Is there anything else you would like to add (about the V0 prototypes, release plan, or anything else)?

Thank you in advance for your feedback, and we look forward to reading your responses!

March 4, 2022

Hello, everyone! We have had an eventful past few months, and we are happy to now share some updates. Also, we apologize for the delay in posting an update. Our work slowed down from October to December, both due to the holiday season and new people joining our team. Then, in the new year, we needed time to solidify and finalize our technical plan. However, our work is now picking up pace and the building phase of the project has officially begun. Also, we thank everyone who has shared feedback so far! Now, we invite you to read our new updates and share your feedback on the project talk page. All feedback is helpful, and we hope to continue learning from all of you. Thank you!

Proposal to create new namespaces

The Campaigns team is proposing that we create two new namespaces in MediaWiki, which will be called “Event” and “Event Talk.” You can see the proposal in T302040 on Phabricator. The purpose of this namespace would be a designated place in the wikis for all events, such as campaigns, conferences, meetups, office hours, or other events. We want a way to easily determine what is an ‘event’ page, so that we can:

  • Add registration to event pages (and avoid adding registration to inappropriate page types, such as article pages)
  • Display all events in an event calendar in the future
  • Begin getting more accurate data on event activity as a movement (such as how many events & which types of events are going on)
  • Make it easier for everyone to know what is an event page, since right now event pages often look very similar to article pages
  • Highlight the fact that organizing or participating in events is a critical form of movement activity, and that someone can be an impactful Wikimedian in more ways than just contributing to the wikis

Engineering updates

Between October and January, three engineers and an engineering manager joined our team. Since that time, we have been able to conduct technical planning and to officially launch the building phase of the project. The engineers will be focused on building the core infrastructure of the campaign events platform and the registration tool. Once they have built something that is testable, we will share it with all of you. In the meantime, you can track our work in the Registration project board and project profile on Phabricator.

Design updates

The design team has developed a new version of the desktop wireframes, based on the feedback we received in usability tests, the project talk page, and other channels. Now, the design team is conducting a second round of usability tests on the new version of the desktop wireframes. Once we have finalized the desktop wireframes, we will share them in a status update. Additionally, the design team is developing the first version of the mobile wireframes, which we plan to share in a future status update as well.

Ambassador updates

Three product ambassadors have joined our team: Antoni Mtavangu (Swahili community ambassador), Georges Fodouop (French community ambassador), and M. Bachounda (Arabic community ambassador). The product ambassadors will be working with the team to conduct outreach and collect feedback from Wikimedia communities, and they will share ideas on the vision and strategy of the project. They will also help us understand the needs of organizers beyond our first project, so we can continue to plan for future work.

Open questions

  • Do you think it would be useful to you (or other Wikimedians) to create two new namespaces for Event and Event talk? Why or why not?
  • What questions or concerns do you have about creating these new namespaces?
  • Is there anything else you would like to share about the status update or project in general?

October 8, 2021

Hello, everyone! We are very excited to share an update on the Campaign Product team’s event registration project. First, we will share our project principles. Second, we will share wireframes for the desktop version (the mobile version will be in the next update). Third, we will provide questions for all of you. Thank you, everyone, and we look forward to reading your feedback on the project talk page!

Project principles

As the project has developed, we have identified several principles that are core to our work:

  • In the long-term, we want to build a platform, rather than one tool: Some people asked why we’re not using an existing open source solution for event registration. We’ll certainly examine the options, and nothing is ruled out yet. However, we’ll probably want to build our own solution. Here’s why: We want to build a Campaign Events platform over time—not just a registration solution. In order to build this platform, we’ll need to develop the core infrastructure, and the registration project is the first step in making this happen. To learn more, you can visit the plans & vision section of our team page.
  • We want to build for multilingual, diverse communities: Organizers have explained that the existing registration solutions lack sufficient support for global, multilingual communities. We completely agree. For this reason, we won’t consider this project complete until we build a solution that is usable for all language wikis and Wikimedia projects.
  • We plan to build in an iterative way: The first version of the registration solution will be very basic. We call it the MVP (or “Minimum Viable Product”), since it will just have the bare essentials to function. We work in this way so that we can collect feedback early on, and we can identify problems before we spend too long on a feature. Once we have released the MVP version, we can develop more advanced versions of the registration feature.
  • The MVP will just have the necessities: For the MVP, our goal is to build a simple registration configuration and management tool. The wireframes we have shared below are for the MVP version.
  • We will add enhancements later on: After we have built the MVP version, we can include the ability for organizers to add optional questions to the registration form, such as asking for the participant’s gender, location, wiki editing experience level, or why they joined the event. We can also add the ability for organizers to write custom questions.

Wireframes: Desktop version

In the wireframes below, we will share how the MVP version may look for desktop users. Wireframes are a step in product development, where we imagine the potential visual design and workflows of a tool. Wireframes are theoretical; the look may change when the engineers begin to develop the tool. Note that we’ll share wireframes for the mobile version in the next status update.

Creating registration for event

Access Organizer Center: We want to create an “Organizer Center,” where organizers can find tools and resources available to them. For this project, we may create a very basic Organizer Center, which will expand over time. The first tool to be featured in the Organizer Center will be the Event Registration tool. To access the Organizer Center, users can go to Contributions > Campaign Events.

Note that, in the future, the Organizer Center will probably be a part of a larger Campaign Events platform. To learn more, you can visit our plans & vision section of our team page.

Accessing Campaign Events platform

Selecting tool to create registration: Once the user is in the Organizer Center, they can choose to create a registration system for their campaign event. To do this, they click “Create registration for your campaigns events.”

Accessing the registration creation tool

Creating registration for campaign event: After the user has chosen to create a registration form, a new interface will appear. The organizer will input the following information: the event URL, event name, date, time, timezone, if it’s online or in-person, which tracking tool will be used, URL of tracking tool instance, usernames of organizers, and a link to the event's chat group. The tracking tool and chat group information will be optional. The user clicks on “Create Registration” when they are finished adding information.

Once the registration creation is complete, a registration interface will automatically appear on the campaign event page. Please refer to the next section ("Registering participants") for more details.

It is important to note that, with this system, organizers will need to create a few things in advance: the campaign event page, the tracking instance (for example, on Programs & Events Dashboard), and the chat group in advance.

For the first version of the registration system, we will only be asking participants for their usernames. This is because it is much easier to implement. However, after the first version is released, we will look into allowing organizers to create more sophisticated registration forms that can ask participants optional questions about themselves and why they are joining the campaign event.

Creating registration system for campaign event
Registering participants

Registration automatically added to the event page: Once the organizer has created event registration, the registration experience will be automatically added to the event page URL specified by the organizer. The registration experience is a bottom sheet that overlays the event page. We chose the bottom sheet design so that it could work for many different types of event pages. In the bottom sheet, there is a button to “Register as userName.” So, if someone’s username was Lola, it would say, “Register as Lola.” The user can click the button to register.

Example of event page with registration bottom sheet that has been automatically added

More information: If the user clicks “More Information,” they can see more information on the event, such as the date, location, organizers, and list of participants. They can then click “Register as userName” in this view too. After the user registers, they should see the confirmation message.

More information view of registration experience; side panel on event page

Login and account creation support: If the user is not logged in, they will automatically see a pop-up appear when they click “Register as userName.” They can choose to login, if they already have an account, or they can sign up, if they do not already have an account. Once they login or create an account, they will become automatically registered in the campaign event.

Example of login pop-up when user tries to register for campaign event
Example of sign-up pop-up if user tries to register for campaign with no wiki account

Successful registration: After the participant has successfully registered, a pop-up will appear to confirm their registration. The pop-up will automatically disappear after a short time. If they have an email address associated with their account, we would also like an email to be automatically sent, which provides information on the event, such as the chat group that they can join. If participants would like to leave the event, they can click “Edit registration” (via the bottom sheet or side bar), which will then ask them to confirm if they want to leave the event.

In the future, participants may be able to add optional information about themselves when they register (such as wiki editing level, why they are joining the campaign event, etc). If this support is added, participants will also be able to edit this information as well.

View after participant registers on event page with bottom sheet
View after participant registers on event page with side sheet
View for participant who wants to leave campaign
Managing registration

View all registration forms: Once the organizer has created the registration form, they will be able to see all registration forms for their events. They can click on one of the forms to get more registration details, including the participant list. They can also easily delete, edit, or close registration forms via this view.

List of registration forms applicable to organizer

Viewing, deleting, and messaging participants: Once a registration form has been created, any specified as an organizer can view registrant information, including: participant username, and the date and time of registration. They will be able to select some or all of the participants from the list, and they will be able to message them or delete them from the list.

Organizers will be able to send a message to the participants, either on their talk page or to their email address. Depending on the technical difficulty of the work, we may choose to release an MVP version that only sends a message to the talk page, or the MVP version may allow both options. Either way, our plan is to eventually allow both messaging options.

Organizer can view, delete, or message registered participants

Open questions

  1. What do you think of our proposed system for creating and managing event registration, as a campaign organizer? What benefits does it offer compared to your current system? What disadvantages does it have compared to your current system?
  2. What do you think of our proposed experience for registering participants on the event page? What benefits does it offer compared to your current system? What disadvantages does it have compared to your current system?
  3. We first plan to build a lean version (also known as the “MVP,” or minimum viable product version) of the registration tool.
  4. What are the essential features this first version needs to have so that you can use it?"
  5. When you are running a campaign, what information do you typically send to participants, and where do you usually send it (e.g., talk page, email, social media, etc)?
  6. Do you prefer that we build the desktop version first or the mobile version of the registration system first?
  7. Is there anything else you would like to add?

Please share your feedback on the talk page; thank you in advance!