Grants:PEGIndex/Criteria/en

This page documents a process of the WMF Project and Event Grants program. Return to the Grants:PEG page at any time for more information!

Please do not edit this page. If you have a suggestion, please create a discussion page.


Grant requests should support Wikimedia's mission and strategic priorities. The WMF favors high-impact over low-impact requests, tries to break new ground, and seeks to increase each grantee's capacity to develop and execute new programs and partnerships.

Examples of mission-aligned project submissions are: an article contribution competition, outreach activities to recruit and train new contributors, partnership activities with GLAMs or other institutions, and efforts to add local content to the projects. For a list of all past submissions, see Grants:Index/Requests.

The Grant Advisory Committee and WMF staff will review the applications based on the following criteria:

  1. The fit with the mission and strategic priorities of Wikimedia. Remember there are plenty of worthwhile ideas and goals that fall outside our mission.
  2. The potential for impact in the Wikimedia projects that the grant aims to support (e.g. Spanish Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons). How will the grant improve things? What would change, or come into existence, thanks to the work enabled by the grant?
  3. The availability and readiness of volunteers and the availability of other non-financial resources required to implement the grant. Are the applicants reasonably likely to be able to deliver the expected results? Is the scale commensurate to the size of the team and volunteer base? Has this been demonstrated?
  4. The track-record of the group in managing grants (where applicable).
  5. The degree to which the grant will add new knowledge to or spur innovation in the Wikimedia movement. At the same time, ensure the grant is not based on models already proven ineffective.
  6. The efficiency of the proposed use of funds.
  7. The quality of the proposed measures of success. Are they actually measurable? This is hard!
  8. The sustainability of impact beyond the duration of the grant. Will the work keep on giving? Is infrastructure or capacity being created to fuel later work?