eia says: ++++++++ I'm sorry, but at least in your e-mail you mainly make a lot of statements that I can imagine are worded in such a way that they don't really ask for a reply, and one rethorical question. So if you want information, I suggest you try to put your questions down a little more constructively and maybe consider asking the right people directly.
eia ++++++++ Part of your advice ("asking the right people directly") is sound, and that's why I reached out on November 14 to Rand Montoya via personal e-mail. I received no response. The only constructive response I've received since August was from Jpilisuk who said, "Entering the survey in 11 languages is taking much longer than anticipated". My reaction was that 3 or 4 languages would have covered about 98% of the possibly meaningful respondent base, even if some donors would have to navigate the survey in their second language. Don't you think for this survey, it would have been better to field it in 2009 before the fundraising began, in English, French, Chinese, and Spanish, than to be stuck translating it into 11 languages (that weren't even seriously discussed publicly, as I recall) and missing the 2009 window entirely? As the project currently stands, the whole thing is being held up because we're waiting on translations into Arabic, Malay, Occitan, and Taiwanese. Plus, we're waiting for proofreading of the translated versions in Catalan, Czech, Danish, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Japanese, Dutch, and Polish. These were executive decisions, I assume. I strongly disagree with the emphasis that was placed -- as late as August 2009 -- on conducting a pre-fundraising campaign survey that would first be translated into 8 to 11 different languages. I do seek a reply, and my question is not rhetorical. What I've witnessed is a fairly major research initiative come off the rails, I've asked when we might get it back on track, and the response has been pure silence. Literally, no response at all to repeated requests for information, in multiple venues (e-mail, Meta, and Foundation-l). And your concern is that my request didn't sound constructive enough? One constructive recommendation I have is this: When asked a question, try to respond to it, even if the response is "I don't know; but here's how you might help me at this juncture." Lately, I have been seeing multiple examples of initiatives launched, but then fizzled out, even after significant contribution from waves of volunteers. Examples? The Greenspun illustration project. Flagged revisions implementation on English Wikipedia. Release of Episode 45 on Wikivoices. And now this 2009 Fundraising Survey. Future volunteers will look back on these abortive efforts and likely ask themselves, "Do I really want to commit my time and resources to this new Project XYZ, if previous projects seem to come undone so regularly?" You can apologize all you want ("I'm sorry..."), effe, but where I come from, in my two decades plus experience in business operations, it is better to respond to questions about projects that are off-track, than to simply clam up and fail to provide any answer at all. Especially when the person asking has already dedicated many hours to help further the success of said project. My asking is not just a voice from left field -- I have sweat equity invested in the 2009 Fundraising Survey. I want to be assured that it's not abandoned. There is a possibility that this post will be rejected by the list moderators. That's why I've copied others at the Wikimedia Foundation, so that if it is rejected, they can see that the censorship of this problem is quite possibly systemic. Gregory Kohs _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l