Based on patrolling thousands of speedies and prod deletions at enWP,
of the people whose articles get rejected at enWP, I would say that
fewer than 20% of them have even the least likelihood of becoming
helpful regular editors. (and I've the reputation of taking an
extremely broad view of what m
Hi all;
I think we can compare our retention rate with other communities like Wikia.
If its retention rate is higher, we can learn from them, otherwise they can
learn from us.
Also, some months ago I read about a Facebook study which said that
"Facebook users who edit their profiles in the first
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 18:49, David Gerard wrote:
> It would take a major effort to get individual wiki communities to
And by that you mean communities on enwp? :-)
People bite everywhere, and the reasons are the same as well, as you
properly pointed out. Enpw is the largest so people bite ther
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 1:55 AM, Lennart Guldbrandsson
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
> English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all new
> accounts never edit! Interestingly, this percentage vary very much from
On 9/22/2010 3:55 AM, Lennart Guldbrandsson wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
> English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all new
> accounts never edit! Interestingly, this percentage vary very much from
> language
On 22 September 2010 17:26, Robert Rohde wrote:
> Currently, only about 1.1% of account registrations reach the level of
> 100 edits. That conversion rate is tiny. Even if there are many
> different reasons that such people abandon editing, I have to imagine
> that a significant portion of the
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 1:27 AM, Andre Engels wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 9:55 AM, Lennart Guldbrandsson
> wrote:
>
>> Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
>> English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all new
>> accounts never edit!
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 4:39 AM, Risker wrote:
> I think Andre is right, and this is the reason for so many non-editing
> accounts, especially since SUL. I am sure someone can run a script to
> determine how many "non-editing" English WP accounts have a partner
> "editing" account on another proj
2010/9/22 Risker :
> On 22 September 2010 04:27, Andre Engels wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 9:55 AM, Lennart Guldbrandsson
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
>> > English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all ne
On 22 September 2010 04:27, Andre Engels wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 9:55 AM, Lennart Guldbrandsson
> wrote:
>
> > Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
> > English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all new
> > accounts never edit!
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 9:55 AM, Lennart Guldbrandsson
wrote:
> Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
> English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all new
> accounts never edit! Interestingly, this percentage vary very much from
> language
Hello,
Did you know that less than a third of the users who create an account on
English Wikipedia make even *one* edit afterwards? Two-thirds of all new
accounts never edit! Interestingly, this percentage vary very much from
language version to language version.
Now, the question is not: "what c
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