Talk:2011 Budget
Potential items
Seed for membership merchandise
- Seed money for printing T-shirts etc.
- Can also be used as prizes in competitions, rewards for helping out at events, etc.
Rough estimate might be £200(?), with the aim of becoming largely self-sustaining.
Chapters Conference 2011
We will need to fund the travel for 2 board members to attend this. Weekend of 25-26 March, in Berlin. Should cost ~£0.5K. Would also be good to provide sponsorship for other chapters, or general support for the conference (pending them meeting the requirements of our grant for the 2010 conference...). Perhaps budget £2k in total?
Wikimania 2011 Sponsorship
Scholarships for people to travel to Wikimania 2011 in Haifa, Israel? £1k - or more needed to have a bigger impact? Should liaise with Jessie Wild (WMF's 2011 Wikimania Scholarships Program Manager); their scheme will launch in January 2011 so should probably launch ours at a similar time.
Travel
Funding for board members and volunteers to travel to free content conferences and meetings with current and potential partners. Could also include accommodation and subsistance. £1k might be an underestimate (10 trips of £100 each), but might be a good starting point. This could do with knowing the amount spent in 2010 on this.
Camera
Following a discussion at a London meetup, I propose purchasing a decent (albeit, lower-end of the market) DSLR camera that can be lent to Wikimedians. In particular, I'm told that a low-light lens would be extremely useful for photographing items in museums that either ban flash photography or have items behind glass. The camera and a couple of lenses would probably cost around £1000. We would need to investigate insurance as well. I should ask the amateur photographers I was speaking to about what kind of tripods and things they would like as well. For the sake of argument, let's budget £1,500 total. --Tango 23:31, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- We'd probably want something like the Canon 550d, plus something like a 17-55mm f/2.8 imaged stabilized lens. That's essentially the kit that I use myself for this sort of thing (except newer and with higher performance). Tripods generally can't be used within museums, so it's probably not worth getting one. I'd want to see the demand for this before buying it, though - most (like me) already have kit that can do a reasonable job... Mike Peel 00:54, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
- Most what already have such kit? Most people certainly don't. There were two people at the meetup that were interested. Both had cameras that were substantially more than point-and-click, but not quite good enough to do what they wanted. The bit they were particularly keen on was the low-light lens. And these were people interested enough to be pro-actively asking the question. There will be more people that would be interested in using the camera if it were offered. --Tango 01:21, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
Potential Projects
Wikipedia & Schools (Kenya)
This I believe should be used as a test bed project for supporting the offline use of wikipedia in subsaharan africa. A high priority case.
More Information: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Kenya/Project_for_Kenyan_Schools
Bristol Somali Project
Again, a high priority testbed project to improve sub-saharan resources from the UK. Potential to be rolled out across many languages.
WIKI conference
Follow-up conference to GLAM-WIKI, either on the same topic (GLAM) or on a different one (e.g. education). Budget for GLAM-WIKI 2010 is ~£5k, hence budgeting roughly the same next year.
Printing and distributing Bookshelf materials
Materials from the WMF's Bookshelf Project are starting to become available - see http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/Bookshelf . They would likely need some minor alterations so that they are in British English, after which we could print and distribute copies. Other works could also be created and distributed via the same method.
Could distribute to:
- Libraries
- Schools
- Universities
- Museums
- At events like GLAM-WIKI, annual conference, etc.
Costs would be:
- Printing
- Postage
Rough estimate might be £1k(?).
Other materials that could be printed and distributed:
Backstage Pass events
At least one should be run in the year. For infomation on the BM backstage pass event see: http://uk.wikimedia.org/wiki/Backstage_Pass
Wikipedia 10th Anniversary
Support for these celebrations needs to be coordinated with the community.
Staff
Office Manager
Three possibilities that need to be costed and decided upon:
- Continuation at current level of 8 hours per week? 8x52x£10 = £4,160
- Increasing to ~20 hours per week? 20x52x£10 = £10,400.
- Full time position? ~£20k salary, ~£10k+ overheads.
Events Organiser
- Full time position? ~£20k salary, ~£10k+ overheads, plus individual project budgets?
- Given that we are planning to support numerous projects at this point in time I would rather see this role be more general and for it to support all current projects. As the chapter grows this role can be bifurcated. Seddon 01:34, 28 October 2010 (UTC) 01:31, 28 October 2010 (UTC)
Office
Two desks at CAN Mezzanine for 9 months (assuming we won't be moving in for 3 months after the end of the fundraiser at the earliest) at £348 per month per desk, plus a few additional fees and costs: ~£7,000. Security deposit of about £2000. One-off moving in fee of about £1000. Furniture and computers, etc., about £1000. Total: £11,000.
Rescaling to 5 people: ~£17,500 deskspace, deposit ~2k, moving in fee ~1k, computers ~2.5K. Total: £23k
Other ideas
Other ideas (to be costed):
- Host a backup of the Wikimedia dumps (needs ~10TB storage - cost likely to be ~£10K+location/connection costs). See meta:Mirroring Wikimedia project XML dumps. Mike Peel 08:27, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
I think we should have larger reserves. The current figure for admin (£10k) would not be enough to maintain the office and office manager (even part time) and I think getting rid of those once we've got used to having them would be extremely difficult. Everything will be set up with them in mind and switching back to board members doing everything would be very hard. It would also mean that board members aren't able to devout their time to solving whatever problem has resulted in us not being able to fundraise. --Tango 23:39, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- If we're hiring staff, then definitely. We should have a 'wind-down' plan for the organisation in mind, according to the worst case scenario: what happens if we get no more funding in the future? Plus, of course, some degree of scenario planning for the numerous other possibilities. Mike Peel 00:47, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
- Ideally, yes, but I think just having enough to maintain basic operations for a year would be sufficient preparation. We can decide what to do about the rest of the future during that year. Our time can be better spent than going through lots of disaster scenarios that will probably never happen. --Tango 01:17, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
Comparison budgets
From other chapters, or similar organisations: