It's easy to set up a bare-bones wiki installation on a web site. It's very hard - much more difficult than most people imagine - to turn that into a successful wiki.

Making a successful new wiki is hard

Challenges include:

  • protecting from spam and vandalism
  • continuing to develop the site
  • finding content
  • creating community[1] and resolving disagreements among participants
  • managing the content for quality and structure
  • building the infrastructure: templates,W categories,W help pages,W policy/guideline/procedure pages, etc. to foster productive collaboration

These things take a huge amount of collective skilled work.

It is a rare community that has even one obsessive wiki admin/contributor, let alone the half dozen or more that are needed to make a successful wiki. Building up the community and participation needed will take a serious commitment.

If we build it will they come?

Having built it several times, I have realised that even if you do built it, they usually won’t come. Are we suffering from confirmation bias? Wikipedia is absolutely successful but given the colossally high failure rate of other wiki-based projects... we may well find that it is the exception... rather than the rule itself.

If they come, will they edit?

  • It is possible to get editors - e.g. Appropedia and Greenlivingpedia have had a large number of contributions. Appropedia has had 1,122,584 edits since May 2006 (increasing over time) and page views.
  • Appropedia has had 129 views per edit; Greenlivingpedia has had 157. On the English Wikipedia about 0.02% of the unique visitors actually edit,[2] and yet it is extremely active and comprehensive. With these figures, a community-wide or a global wiki clearly has a much better chance. A locally based wiki will at best be moderately successful, and that only if there is someone very committed to editing the wiki.
  • The large comparison table of wikis at Green wikis and development wikis[3] shows a profusion of wikis, but a high proportion of them are inactive. Only a very small number have grown to a useful resource, mainly thanks to the dedication of a small, committed group of people - sometimes it is just one committed person, which is enough to create something useful but it is often not very visible, and does not contribute to encouraging broader collaboration by the viewers (to be precise, that tiny proportion of a large number of viewers).

Conclusion: Your wiki needs to engage with a very large number of people to get a significant absolute number of contributors. This is a classic manifestation of the Pareto principle,W also known as the law of the vital few.

How successful wikis started

  • Wikipedia started as a commercial effort, only later being made a non-profit.W
This page or section needs to be expanded.You can help Appropedia by adding information on this topic. Thanks!Read more...
  • wikiHow is commercially operated, with paid staff.
  • Appropedia has a core of a number of people who work on the site daily, and academics who have their students (a large number in total) engaged with creating content on Appropedia (see Appropedia:Learning institutions on Appropedia).
  • Fan wikis seem able to draw on the enthusiasm of their fans. Those on "geeky" themes such as science fiction, anime and comic book characters seem to be most active, with those targeting a relatively young audience also doing well. Examples include Battlestar Wiki, Wookieepedia, with more examples at Wikia:Entertainment (note also the Entertainment menu at top for more specific examples).

Think globally - collaborate don't compete

Collaboration and competition are both powerful creative forces in nature and society. They each have their place - but the nature of wikis is radical collaboration.

See Permaculture wiki #Think globally: A call to collaboration

See also Green wiki, Appropriate technology wiki and Wiki synergy.

Advice from Jimmy Wales

Jimmy Wales, the co-founder of Wikipedia, lists five elements he considers essential to the success of a large-scale collaboration:[4]

  1. Mechanisms for effective collaboration (wiki software provides revision control, ability to revert unconstructive edits; but there must be a dedicated community of users to continuously monitor a wiki).
  2. Online identities (pseudo-identities are fine as long as they are stable).
  3. Shared vision. The community of participants must share the same vision of what they are trying to build.
  4. Flat hierarchies, with the fewest possible barriers to participation.
  5. Speed. People must be able to see results from their work with the least administrative delay.

See also

Notes

  1. Online communities on the Coalition of the Willing wiki lists very valuable resources for building online communities.
  2. For Appropedia statistics see Special:Statistics; for Greenlivingpedia see Greenlivingpedia:Special:Statistics; and for Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects see meta:User:Stu/comScore data on Wikimedia (the figures are obtained in a different way since the Wikimedia view counters are turned off).
  3. The initial comparison was carried out as part of a study for Akvo and UNESCO-IHE, on collaboration in appropriate technology and related areas.
  4. Lynch, C.G. (2007-06-28). "Five Things Wikipedia's Founder Has Learned About Online Collaboration". CIO. Archived from the original on 2011-03-06. Retrieved 2008-10-14.

Interwiki links

  • Online community Coalition of the Willing. Lists essential reading for building online communities.

External links

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