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Wikipedia:Time management

Time management is an essential skill on Wikipedia as in all aspects of life. Since your time reading and editing Wikipedia is limited, you should focus your editing toward the most enjoyable and productive goals.

bg: how much time?

According to Special:Statistics, the English Wikipedia has 2 million articles as of September 2007. There have been more than 10 million pages created, and more than 160 million edits, for an average of 16 edits per page. As new users contribute to Wikipedia, the number of edits and articles continues to expand.

It is worth taking a moment to ponder the vastness of this collaborative undertaking. Each edit to Wikipedia requires time to identify a possible improvement to an article, then time to draft the improvement, and finally a moment to add an edit summary and click "save changes."

Some tasks, such as reverting vandalism on recent changes patrol, require mere seconds to complete, but patrollers sort through several good edits before they find a bad edit. Other tasks, such as writing a featured article with references, require many hours of work.

As a thought experiment, let us assume, ad hoc, that each edit requires an average of two minutes to execute. In reality it probably takes longer, but two minutes provides a reasonable "low-end" estimate for how much time people have spent editing Wikipedia.

A user who produces one edit every two minutes will produce 30 edits per hour, 720 edits per 24 hours, and about 5,000 edits per 168 hours, i.e. one full week. Based on User:Betacommand/Edit count and similar lists, there are probably at least three thousand Wikipedians who have contributed at least 5,000 edits. Each of these Wikipedians has spent the equivalent of one full week, and probably more, logged in to his or her user account.

The collective output of 160 million edits at two minutes per edit would require 320 million minutes. Even if we account for the millions of edits by bots, it seems likely that human editors have expended 5 million man-hours or more. That's a staggering number. If the average human life expectancy is around 70 years, or 610,000 hours, it would take more than 8 full lifetimes to write the English Wikipedia as of September 2007. This reckoning does not account for deleted edits or administrative logs, or time reading Wikipedia without editing it, or edits made to Wikipedia in other languages and to other Wikimedia projects. The sheer immensity of the undertaking makes Wikipedia seem like a real-world incarnation of the infinite monkey theorem.

How not to waste time

Unless you wish to devote your entire life to Wikipedia, you need to use your limited time on Wikipedia effectively. Certain common activities on Wikipedia, though well-intentioned, may cause you or others to waste time.

Bad behavior

Good behavior, but unnecessary

How to use your time effectively

There are many ways you can improve Wikipedia. The Community Portal lists some collaborative projects and maintenance backlogs where you can contribute. You should focus on doing work that nobody else is doing. Taking leadership of deficient articles, projects and portals is probably the most efficient way to spend your time editing Wikipedia.