Reach/Wikimedia users/en
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Wikimedia penetration
Wikimedia penetration by country
One way to think about expanding reach is to increase the number of Internet users who use Wikimedia projects. By examining Wikipedia, the most popular project, it is clear that there is ample opportunity to increase the number of Wikipedia users simply by expanding its use amongst people already online. The following table provides estimates for the percentage of the online population using Wikipedia for all regions of the world and select countries. This table shows that even amongst countries such as the United States, Germany, and Japan whose population speaks the languages of the three largest Wikipedias and serve as home to many of the most active Wikipedia community members, there is still some room for expansion. However, the greatest opportunities for growth are amongst Asian countries such as China, Korea, and India where below 10% of the online population is currently using Wikipedia. An estimate of the total global population that uses Wikipedia is between 17 and 25%.
Region | Country | Estimated range of Internet users who use Wikipedia |
---|---|---|
Asia & Pacific | 10-16% | |
Australia | 21-27% | |
China | 1% | |
India | 8- 20% | |
Japan | 26-38% | |
South Korea | 5-7% | |
Taiwan | 10-13% | |
Middle East & Africa | 12-30% | |
South Africa | 14% | |
Europe | 26-37% | |
France | 36-39% * | |
Germany | 25-42% | |
Russian Federation | 18% | |
United Kingdom | 28-37% | |
Latin America | 15-30% | |
Argentina | 22-26% | |
Brazil | 9-22% | |
Mexico | 19-35% | |
North America | ||
Canada | 45-50% | |
United States | 24-32% |
Wikimedia penetration by language
The following table displays the top 11 languages by number of native speakers and the number of Wikipedia articles in that language. It also shows the number of language speakers per Wikipedia article. This is one possible way to measure penetration by language, with higher numbers meaning that there is less content available per speaker. It is clear from this table that some of the most widely spoken languages such as Arabic, and Hindi and Bengali have significantly smaller Wikipedias.
Language | Number of Speakers (millions) | Number of Articles (thousands) | Number of speakers/Number of articles |
---|---|---|---|
Chinese | 1'213 | 255 | 4,757 |
Spanish | 329 | 440 | 748 |
English | 328 | 3'048 | 112 |
Arabic | 221 | 99 | 2,232 |
Hindi | 182 | 34 | 5,353 |
Bengali | 181 | 20 | 9,050 |
Portuguese | 178 | 496 | 359 |
Russian | 144 | 440 | 327 |
Japanese | 122 | 603 | 202 |
German | 90 | 925 | 97 |
Javanese | 84 | 108 | 778 |
Articles per number of speakers
The following chart provides another take on the penetration of Wikipedia by language.
The main resource to create Wikipedia articles are speakers of the language. Drivers to contribute might differ per culture or language.
In the table below are listed the Wikipedia in descending order of number of articles per thousand speakers of the language. This table might change your view on the reach and participation. Included are languages with 20 million speakers or more. Also included are Wikipedias with more than one hundred thousand articles. Please note that English is not within the top 10 of this list.
Warning: The number of speakers are rough estimates of vernacular language speakers (secondary language speakers have apparently been ignored). The effective source of data should be retrieved from an accurate and maintained source, such as the Unicode CLDR extra data, which also includes data about the literacy level (in order to estimate the number of readers of the language).
Language | Wikipedia | Speakers (million) |
Articles (thousand) |
Articles per speaker (thousandth) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Volapük | vo | 0.00003 | 120 | 4,000,000.0 |
Esperanto | eo | 2 | 117 | 58.5 |
norsk bokmål | nb | 5 | 225 | 45.0 |
svenska | sv | 9 | 325 | 36.1 |
suomi | fi | 6 | 213 | 35.5 |
Nederlands | nl | 20 | 553 | 27.7 |
català | ca | 7 | 192 | 27.4 |
dansk | da | 5 | 114 | 22.8 |
slovenčina | sk | 5 | 109 | 21.8 |
polski | pl | 50 | 627 | 12.5 |
čeština | cs | 12 | 134 | 11.2 |
Deutsch | de | 105 | 943 | 9.0 |
italiano | it | 100 | 596 | 6.0 |
English | en | 510 | 3,000 | 5.9 |
română | ro | 26 | 130 | 5.0 |
日本語 | ja | 130 | 609 | 4.7 |
українська | uk | 44 | 158 | 3.6 |
français | fr | 270 | 839 | 3.1 |
português | pt | 180 | 500 | 2.8 |
Türkçe | tr | 60 | 134 | 2.2 |
Bahasa Melayu | ms | 23 | 46 | 2.0 |
ไทย | th | 30 | 49 | 1.6 |
español | es | 320 | 504 | 1.6 |
русский | ru | 280 | 422 | 1.5 |
Tiếng Việt | vi | 68 | 96 | 1.4 |
한국어 | ko | 78 | 108 | 1.4 |
srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски + српски / srpski + hrvatski + bosanski |
sh + sr + hr + bs |
21 | 24 | 1.1 |
فارسی | fa | 70 | 66 | 0.9 |
azərbaycanca | az | 31 | 25 | 0.8 |
తెలుగు | te | 70 | 44 | 0.6 |
Bahasa Indonesia | id | 180 | 109 | 0.6 |
Sunda | su | 27 | 14 | 0.5 |
العربية | ar | 250 | 100 | 0.4 |
मराठी | mr | 68 | 24 | 0.4 |
മലയാളം | ml | 35 | 11 | 0.3 |
中文 | zh | 900 | 270 | 0.3 |
தமிழ் | ta | 66 | 19 | 0.3 |
Jawa | jv | 75 | 20 | 0.3 |
ಕನ್ನಡ | kn | 35 | 7 | 0.2 |
贛語 | gan | 21 | 4 | 0.2 |
ગુજરાતી | gu | 46 | 8 | 0.2 |
اردو | ur | 60 | 10 | 0.2 |
粵語 | zh-yue | 71 | 11 | 0.2 |
閩南語 / Bân-lâm-gú | zh-min-nan | 46 | 6 | 0.1 |
বাংলা | bn | 185 | 20 | 0.1 |
हिन्दी | hi | 360 | 36 | 0.1 |
မြန်မာဘာသာ | my | 32 | 2 | 0.1 |
吴语 | wuu | 77 | 4 | 0.1 |
پښتو | ps | 23 | 1 | 0.0 |
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ | pa | 57 | 2 | 0.0 |
ଓଡ଼ିଆ | or | 32 | 1 | 0.0 |
客家語 / Hak-kâ-ngî | hak | 34 | 1 | 0.0 |
湘語 (Xiang) | hsn | 36 | 0 | 0.0 |
मैथिली | mai | 30 | 0 | 0.0 |
भोजपुरी | bh | 26 | 0 | 0.0 |
Hausa | ha | 24 | 0 | 0.0 |
Sister projects global penetration
Sister project | Number of contributors[3] | Contributors over total (%) | Monthly page views (millions) | Page views over total (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wikibooks | 12,942 | 1.28 | 35.6 | 0.33 |
Commons | 6557[4] | 0.65 | 173 | 1.63 |
Wikinews | 2969 | 0.30 | 12 | 0.11 |
Wikipedia | 962,555[5] | 95.44 | 10,175 | 95.71 |
Wikiquote | 5963 | 0.59 | 33.5 | 0.31 |
Wikisource | 4605 | 0.46 | 34.1 | 0.32 |
Wikispecies | 633[6] | 0.06 | 8 ca.[7] | 0.08 |
Wikiversity | 2329 | 0.23 | 6.6 | 0.06 |
Wiktionary | 10,021 | 0.99 | 151 | 1.42 |
Total | 1,008,574 | 99.7[8] | 10,631 | 99.97[8] |
With regard to share, Wikiversity and Wikibooks seem to have a number of contributors which is "four times" the number of page views, Wikinews "three times", Wikiquote "twice", Wiktionary "two thirds", Commons almost "one third" (but the figure is wrong), other projects quite balanced. What does this mean? If
- the total number of edits / number of active contributor ratio is more or less the same in all projects, and
- if the number of edits is an indicator of the total effort of the community more or less equal in all projects,
then we can consider that
- we have some projects where the community does a better focused work (i.e. less work, more useful to readers), either
- because the community is better directed/more able,
- or because the whole project is more needed than another (i.e. maybe a dictionary is more needed than a wiki newspaper),
- or because the project is more difficult and needs more effort to achieve some critical mass to be useful,
- or we have an unequal distribituon of:
- readers: some projects should be more advertised or linked from other projects/other web resources/other offline resources (e.g. schools);
- editors: some projects fail to attract the needed editors, either because they're "wasted" on another projects which needs them less, or because they are not able to attract new wikimedia editors (i.e. editors who don't arrive from another project) for some reason (see Participation).
See also Proposal:Make Wikimedia projects scale.
Note that the premises need to be verified:
- a project can attract more very active editors and another can attract more less active editors (e.g. because maybe to collect quotations is less difficult than to write a book);
- some projects may require more "external" preparative work (e.g. a public domain dictionary which is processed offline and then uploaded to Wiktionary by bots) or spread work on many edits (e.g. the uploading of a book full text on Wikisource requires an edit per page plus others for index, metadata etc.).
Demographics of Wikimedia’s main audience
- Age (Wikipedia only)
- Geographic region
- Nationalities (TBD)
- Education (Wikipedia only)
- Income
Demographics of American WP users
The following charts were produced from survey data collected by the Pew Internet & American Life Project Survey in March and February of 2007. The survey data is representative of Americans age 18 and older who have a telephone or cellular phone. [9] All data analysis was performed by the Bridgespan Group, and the Pew Internet and American Life Project bears no responsibility for the interpretations presented or conclusions reached based on analysis of the data.
As of March 2007, approximately 25% of Americans had used Wikipedia according the Pew survey
As of March 2007, Wikipedia users in the United States are younger than internet users who do not use Wikipedia and non-Internet users according to Pew survey data
According to March 2007 Pew survey data, Wikipedia users in the United States are better educated than internet users who do not use Wikipedia and non-internet users
According to March 2007 Pew survey data, Wikimedia U.S. usage is balanced by gender; Somewhat of a skew toward men when compared to averages of Internet users/nonusers
According to March 2007 Pew survey data, Wikimedia U.S. usage is balanced by race; Somewhat of a skew toward white people when compared to averages of Internet users/nonusers
March 2007 Pew survey data affirms that U.S. students use Wikimedia more than non-students
March 2007 Pew data shows that Wikipedia users are more likely to use the Internet daily then Internet users who do not use Wikipedia
March 2007 Pew survey data affirms that people who have more access to the Internet use it more frequently
According to March 2007 Pew survey data, people who use Wikipedia are more likely to have access to the Internet both at home and work compared to people who use the Internet but do not use Wikipedia
According to March 2007 Pew survey data, amongst daily Internet users, people who use Wikipedia have higher education levels
Notes
- ↑ Estimates for upper bound of range from ComScore for the month of December 2008. Estimate on lower bound of range produced by Bridgespan using both ComScore December 2008 figures and the International Telecommunication Union 2008 data on internet use ITU data. In cases where no range is given it is because the two sources converged on the same number. Note that ComScore data is produced though an opt-in panel of two million internet users around the globe and uses a range of statistical techniques to create an internally consistent portrait of the global internet audience. However it is important to note that they do not estimate users who access the Internet via Internet cafés, and people below age 15, therefore, their statistics will not be representative of certain populations. For information on ComScore as well as what countries are included in the regions see ComScore data on Wikimedia (*)Upper bound from ITU and ComScore data. Lower bound from ComScore data.
- ↑ Numbers from Data on language speakers from Ethnologue 2009 http://www.ethnologue.com/ethno_docs/distribution.asp?by=size#3, data on Wikipedia articles from wikistats http://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/Sitemap.htm
- ↑ From WikiStats, authors who edited at least 10 times since they arrived, total number for all subdomains (when appliable), e.g. Wikiquote. August 2009.
- ↑ This figure is wrong because WikiStats does not consider edits to categories and file description pages, and thus considers only 1/30 of the total edits (compared to e.g. 1/3 on Wikipedia).
- ↑ July 2009.
- ↑ June 2009.
- ↑ From WikiSpecial WikiStats figures (August 2009): 11844 views/hour*24 hours*30 days in September/1,000,000.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Approximation error.
- ↑ Pew Internet and American Life Project http://pewinternet.org/ Further information about the survey methodology can be found on pages 21-22 of the following report http://pewinternet.org/~/media/Files/Data%20Sets/2007/Feb.Mar.2007.topline.zip.zip
How do people access Wikimedia?
- Computer
- Mobile device
- Off-line
- Web portal (Google, direct, Yahoo etc)
Why do people access Wikimedia?
We have some stories that people shared when they donated money. Those stories are private, but we could get permission to share more of them.