Wikimedia Product/Perspectives/Scale/Content

Summary
''"topics about the global south are not as strong in English Wikipedia… [Getting more content in these gaps…] that has an important effect for us as a movement, broadly. the more content there is in Wikipedia that is relevant to people in a certain part of the world, the more likely they are to use it and engage with it. It's sort of a self feeding cycle."

Wikimedia is many things: a software platform, a global movement, a collaborative community. But for the vast majority of our daily users Wikimedia means one thing: informational content. Readers come to Wikimedia (and largely Wikipedia) for many reasons, primarily to satisfy an intrinsic curiosity, or to become more informed about something they see in other media. But no matter the motivation their satisfaction rests, finally, on one thing: relevant content. Satisfying this need for new users in new markets will be the key to encouraging growth in readership, just as it did in the early growth phase of Wikipedia.

This core user need also aligns with our strategic direction. That is, locally relevant content is not only a potential engine of growth in new markets, but filling these gaps in the content is core to combating the larger inequities in the knowledge that historically has been stored and shared on Wikimedia. By encouraging and enabling new content and topic growth in previously excluded areas, Wikimedia can drive not just growth for its own sake but equitable growth: growing specific audiences and content which have previously not been able or allowed to participate in global knowledge production and distribution.

White Paper
[link to paper coming soon]

Resources
C. McMahon, I. Johnson, and B. Hecht, 2017 The Substantial Interdependence of Wikipedia and Google: A Case Study on the Relationship Between Peer Production Communities and Information Technologies https://aaai.org/ocs/index.php/ICWSM/ICWSM17/paper/view/15623