Talk:Wikimedia Foundation elections/2021/Stats
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Japanese and Mandarin Chinese turnout
editNote that the Japanese and Mandarin Chinese Wikipedia both have a very low percentage of eligible users who voted, compared to other projects comprising at least 1% of the eligible electorate. The Japanese Wikipedia especially has an absolutely abysmal percentage, comprising 4.9% of the eligible electorate but only 1.3% of total votes, suggesting that we really need to improve outreach to that project in the future.Jackattack1597 (talk) 23:49, 31 August 2021 (UTC)
- About 100 Japanese users voted in the last day! 4nn1l2 (talk) 05:25, 1 September 2021 (UTC)
Stats ideas
edit- Total turnout, turnout by language, turnout by sister project, turnout by groups of languages. (That is, aggregate the "Turnout by wiki" table into larger groups.)
- Translations: how many languages were how many candidate questions/answers and statements were translated into how many languages? What portion of users had translations available in their home wiki's language? How much did the number increase over the course of the election?
- Traffic to statements/questions/answers (including traffic to translations) relative to previous years? (Ideally this would be uniques, but I don't think those are recorded, so pageviews is a decent proxy.)
- Sources of traffic to the election, if possible. (Are CentralNotice clicks tracked? Maybe check for "bumps" from particular wikis after particular local announcements?)
--Yair rand (talk) 05:13, 1 September 2021 (UTC)
- Turnout by gender by language. --Ата (talk) 16:54, 1 October 2021 (UTC)
Breadth of participation data
editCan we see how this year's 216 Wiki communities that saw voters participate compare to previous elections. Thanks Raju Narisetti (WMF Trustee)
NULL
editWhat is the NULL row in the per-wiki table?
Rich Farmbrough 08:51 8 September 2021 (GMT).
Cumulative preferences
editI made a graph to show what people's first, second, etc preferences were per candidate. This is meaningless in the voting system we use, but its still kind of interesting to look at: