مجموعة عمل تطوير القيادة\خطة تطوير القيادة\القسم 1
The Wikimedia movement comprises many individuals, projects, and groups, all of which are influenced by leadership in one way or another. As a result, awareness of the roles of leaders and the necessary skills for effective leadership is important. This section aims to answer the following questions:
- What is effective leadership in the Wikimedia movement?
- What leadership roles exist?
- What are the skills needed to lead effectively?
In this section, we provide a framework for understanding different types of leadership roles and skills. We then share a guide for assessing one’s own leadership skills.
Defining Leadership in Wikimedia
The Leadership Development Working Group defines leadership in the Wikimedia movement as a collective effort. Through the lens of collective leadership, leaders are not only people and positions but also groups. Effective leadership is “the ability to guide, inspire, build autonomy, encourage and motivate a group of people towards a shared goal or common vision.”
It involves demonstrating leadership qualities and actions such as empathy, trust-building, and abilities to create supportive environments for others to thrive. These leadership skills and qualities are attainable and available to everyone, no matter one’s position or experience level, and they are necessary for all leaders across the movement – whether you are in an affiliate, governance position, admin function, or organizing role.
Leadership Skills
Leadership skills are a set of soft skills that allow one to encourage, motivate, and develop others. In contrast to hard skills, which are technical, administrative, task-specific or role-specific skills[1], soft skills are personal attributes and social skills such as empathy, integrity, trust-building, and decision-making. Leadership skills are also distinct from management skills, which focus on overseeing the work of a team or organization. While effective managers need to be leaders, leaders do not need to be managers. In this resource, we argue that there exist core leadership (soft) skills that apply to all Wikimedia leaders, regardless of roles or responsibilities. For example, for an affiliate leader or an organizer to support their communities and initiatives well, they need to display empathy and be accountable to their commitments. What may differ between the roles is their hard skills. A leader of an established affiliate may need to know how to plan and manage multi-year strategies and budgets for their organization, for example, while organizers may need to know how to manage event logistics.
Based on the leadership definition, leadership skills in the Wikimedia movement include internal qualities such as courage, resilience, focus, and accountability[2]; and outward actions such as trust-building, setting shared vision, and guiding collaborative decision making.
To help you visualize this concept, we created a Leadership Skills Diagram (see image) depicting the internal qualities and outward actions. We acknowledge that this is not a comprehensive list of leadership skills. It’s also worth noting that the ability to act with both soft and hard skills is necessary for effective leadership. There are overlaps and different interpretations of hard and soft skills. Our intention in this definition is to establish a common understanding of leadership skills and narrow the focus of this resource to leadership (soft) skills, which are relevant across contexts. This resource can complement others which focus on the hard skills that are needed for different leadership roles.
Leadership Roles
In the Wikimedia movement, leadership appears in different contexts and leaders hold different roles. While there are formalized leadership roles, there are also many informal ones. In the following table, you will find leadership roles categorized by context and function. The information provides an overview of known and common movement roles that require leadership.
It is not meant to be a prescriptive or exhaustive list but rather to raise awareness and conversation. There are certainly leadership roles in the movement that are not widely known, named, or recognized. Lastly, it is worth acknowledging that people or groups do not always easily fit into categories, leadership roles can overlap, and roles may differ based on language or regional communities.
The leadership contexts described below include:
- Affiliates and Informal Groups
- On-wiki Extended Rights
- Governance Committees
- Organizing
- Programs and Projects
- Community Facilitation
- Mentorship
- Capacity Building
Affiliates and Informal Groups
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Emerging group founders, directors, coordinators[3] | Community members operating newer or smaller groups that require you to wear many hats. You are actively building your operating team and volunteer community. You may organize initiatives, develop partnerships, participate in advocacy work, contribute to Movement Strategy, seek and manage grant funding, and perform other activities related to promoting free and open knowledge. |
|
Established group directors, managers, or coordinators | Community members operating larger and established groups. Through time, effort, and experience, you have formed a functioning team and a community of volunteers. You may spearhead international or regional collaborations, offer grants, host multi-year initiatives, share resources with other groups, cultivate new leaders, and support emerging groups. You get to focus on strategic activities knowing the basics are covered and that the group's commitments are in good hands. |
|
On-wiki Extended Rights
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Extended rights holders (administrators, bureaucrats, stewards, checkusers, etc.) | Volunteer editors who perform technical and governance-related tasks to maintain and protect Wikimedia projects. |
|
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Committee members (Affiliations Committee, Regional Funds Committees, Board of Trustees, Movement Charter Drafting Committee, etc.) | Volunteers who are members of committees tasked with specific governance functions that impact Wikimedia projects, affiliates, funds, and the integrity, health and sustainability of the movement. You wear different hats depending on your committee’s mandate, from providing advisory and strategic guidance to technical implementation. |
|
Organizing
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Event and conference organizers (for editathons, ESEAP Conference, WikiIndaba, Wikimania, Wikimedia Summit, CEE Meeting, etc.) | Community members who are responsible for organizing conferences, events, and meetings. You may be tasked with planning, preparing and hosting the convening, including designing the program, recruiting attendees, managing scholarship funds, supporting facilitation, and evaluating outcomes. |
|
Campaign organizers (Art+Fem, Wiki Loves Women: SheSaid, WikiGap, WikiForHumanRights, etc.) | Community members who organize campaigns that encourage volunteers to contribute content to the Wikimedia projects. Your role may include identifying the campaign’s focus, managing communications, designing campaign events, building partnerships, and obtaining resources. |
|
Programs and Projects
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Project grantees, thematic program coordinators, Wikimedians in Residence | Individuals, groups or organizations working on programs and projects that advance the Wikimedia movement mission through structured initiatives, such as those related to: culture and heritage, research, Movement Strategy implementation, and translation or accessibility. |
|
Community Facilitation
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Thematic facilitators, ambassadors, and liaisons (Art+Feminism Ambassadors, EduWiki Outreach Collaborators, etc.) Governance facilitators, ambassadors, and liaisons (Movement Strategy facilitators, Movement Charter Ambassadors, etc.) Tech facilitators, ambassadors, and liaisons (Tech Ambassadors, etc.) |
Individuals, groups, or organizations that ensure communities are involved, informed, and supported in carrying out their particular activities. Your role may include helping people find answers to their questions or concerns, building bridges between people or initiatives, facilitating meetings and processes, or contributing to the documentation and dissemination of information. |
|
Mentorship
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
On-wiki or technical mentors (Small wiki toolkit mentors, Wikidata: Wiki Mentor Africa, newcomer mentors such as Wikipedia Teahouse, etc.) Off-wiki mentors (Let’s Connect Program sharers, Wikipedia & Education User Group mentorship, Kiwix Mentorship Program, etc.) |
Experienced community members who support newer or less-experienced ones in their growth and development as Wikimedia contributors. Your role may include sharing your experiences and knowledge with mentees, helping them build or improve on relevant skills, or coaching mentees through challenges. |
|
Capacity Building
Leadership Role (Examples) | Overview | Leadership Skills (Examples) |
---|---|---|
Technical or non-technical skills trainers (affiliates and groups conducting training, Reading Wikipedia in the Classroom trainers, etc.) | Individuals, groups, or organizations that carry out capacity building, whether that be through in-person workshops, online courses, comprehensive training programs, podcasts, recorded videos, or another format. |
|
Leadership Skills Assessment
Now that you have a better understanding of leadership roles and skills, it’s time to ask yourself: what are your leadership strengths and areas for improvement? The Leadership Skills Assessment (For Self) is a tool designed for you to assess your own leadership skills. The goal of the self-assessment is to bring awareness to your current leadership abilities and opportunities for further learning. As a companion to this assessment, we also created a Leadership Skills Assessment (For Colleagues) that allows colleagues to assess the leadership skills of others who are either already leaders or have aspirations to develop their leadership.
Notes
- ↑ The importance of soft skills: Education beyond academic knowledge - Schulz, B. (2008)
- ↑ Personality Traits - Edward Diener and Richard E. Lucas (University of Utah, University of Virginia, Michigan State University)
- ↑ “Emerging” and “Established” are used to describe the characteristics and activities of the group, not the official affiliation status or their impact.