How Wikimedia Foundation unlocked $3+ M in measurable ROI in its first year with Gr4vy

For years, the Wikimedia Foundation’s payment infrastructure was a constraint on its mission: expensive to maintain, slow to adapt, and spread across providers, with no single view of performance. Partnering with Gr4vy changed that. Within 12 months of consolidating on a single orchestration platform, Wikimedia recorded more than $3 million in measurable returns from overhead reduction, donation growth, processing cost savings, and payment optimization.

About Wikimedia Foundation

The Wikimedia Foundation is the nonprofit organization behind Wikipedia and a suite of free knowledge projects, collectively among the most-visited websites on the internet. Operating across 145 countries and more than 60 currencies, Wikimedia funds its mission entirely through donations from millions of individuals worldwide. With no advertising revenue and a mandate to keep knowledge free, the efficiency and reliability of its donation infrastructure are directly tied to its ability to serve that mission at scale.

We knew Gr4vy would change how we managed payments. What we didn’t fully anticipate was the scale of the financial impact: three million dollars in measurable returns in the first year.

We used to spend 80% of our time building infrastructure. Today, we are increasingly able to invest  in innovation.

— Evelyn Martin, Sr. Manager Donation Processing at Wikimedia Foundation

The Challenge

Over decades of growth, the Wikimedia Foundation assembled a payment stack that reflected the complexity of its ambition: multiple payment service providers, dozens of payment methods, and connections built and maintained by its own technology team. The system worked, but it had become a significant constraint on their ability to move quickly, reduce costs, or adapt to a fast-changing payments landscape.

The total annual cost of donation processing had exceeded $8 million. Every dollar spent on processing fees, integration maintenance, and engineering overhead was a dollar not directed toward Wikimedia’s core mission. Adding a new payment service provider required, on average, 18 months of development effort, while a new payment method took between three to six months.

As the fundraising landscape evolved and new payment methods, providers, and localization requirements emerged, the team found itself spending more capacity sustaining existing infrastructure than building the features and tools that could directly improve fundraising outcomes.

Key constraints

  • Time to market: new PSP integrations averaged 18 months; payment methods three to six months.
  • Engineering overhead: the team’s capacity was heavily consumed by payment maintenance, reducing availability for other key improvements.
  • Fragmented operations: service teams had to log in to 6-8 payment consoles to access transaction data, resulting in inefficiency and longer response times.
  • Limited routing control: without the ability to dynamically direct traffic across providers, Wikimedia had limited leverage to optimize conversion rates or reduce real-time processing costs.
  • Operational risk: dependence on a complex, internally maintained stack with limited failover capability posed a material risk heading into peak fundraising season.

The Solution

A single orchestration layer across the entire payment stack was the answer to these constraints. Gr4vy’s cloud-native, dedicated-instance architecture provided Wikimedia with a unified layer through which all PSP connections, payment methods, routing logic, and operational tooling could be managed without having to rebuild every integration from scratch.

The migration was executed ahead of peak fundraising season. Wikimedia processed its entire peak season on the new platform without a single payment issue being reported.

Gr4vy didn’t just reduce our costs and improve our conversion rates. It gave us back the capacity to focus on what actually matters.

— Evelyn Martin, Sr. Manager Donation Processing at Wikimedia Foundation

Faster access to providers and payment methods

With Gr4vy’s pre-built connections covering 400+ PSPs and payment methods, Wikimedia’s path to adding new providers shifted from an 18-month engineering project to a configuration exercise. Since going live, the team has onboarded two additional PSPs with minimal involvement from internal developers, and new payment methods are now added within hours, not months.

Flexibility to test, optimize, and reduce costs

Gr4vy gave Wikimedia control over how donation traffic was distributed across payment providers, making it easier to test new providers, compare performance, and allocate transaction volume based on business priorities. Prior to orchestration, evaluating alternative providers or shifting traffic often required significant development effort and operational overhead.

By introducing a flexible routing layer and failover capabilities, Wikimedia gained a practical way to assess provider performance across different markets, geographies, and payment scenarios. This is helping improve resilience while creating opportunities to reduce processing costs and increase approval rates over time.

A consolidated operational view

Through Gr4vy’s single console, Wikimedia’s teams gained unified visibility across all payment activity for the first time. Where previously teams logged in to  6-8 provider portals to run inquiries or reconcile transaction data, a single view now covers most of the flow. The operational time saving across teams is substantial, particularly during peak fundraising periods.

The result is a payment operation that increasingly depends less on engineering cycles to evolve. Wikimedia can now try new providers, activate new payment methods, and respond to performance data in real-time. As Evelyn Martin, Principal Payments Officer at Wikipedia, put it: “We process donations in 145 countries across dozens of currencies. The complexity of that operation had become a real constraint on our ability to move quickly or optimize performance. With Gr4vy, we added new payment providers with minimal engineering work and came through our peak season without a single payment issue.”

Results: $3+ M savings in year one

After one full year of running 90% of its payment volume through orchestration, the Wikimedia Foundation conducted a comprehensive ROI analysis and identified the primary areas where value was created.

  • Donation growth: greater visibility into transaction performance and fraud patterns helped the team improve donation conversion rates, contributing more than $2 million in additional donation revenue.
  • Faster time to market: new market-specific payment methods, such as Vipps, Pix Automático, and Blik, went live in days rather than months, and PSP onboarding dropped from an 18-month project to a no-code process completed in clicks.
  • Driving performance: new payment providers can now be onboarded and evaluated rapidly, enabling continuous experimentation and faster, data-driven decisions without development overhead.

Gr4vy platform features

  • Multi-PSP routing: Gr4vy connects merchants to multiple PSPs through a single integration, without additional development work for each new provider.
  • Failover routing: automatic failover ensures that if a PSP becomes unavailable or applies a policy restriction, transactions are routed to an alternative provider in real time, eliminating the single point of failure that previously put the business at risk.
  • Future-proof payment architecture: instantly add, test, and deploy new payment methods and create dynamic workflows that are directly deployed into your checkout without writing code.
  • Infrastructure as a Service: a dedicated instance that can be deployed and scaled across regions to meet data privacy laws and mitigate the risk of shared servers slowing down your business performance.

Beyond ROI: An Operational Transformation

The financial returns are the most directly measurable outcome of the Gr4vy deployment. But the operational shift is equally significant for Wikimedia’s longer-term trajectory.

Wikimedia’s technology team is now engaged in Wikimedia’s FY27 annual planning cycle, working on a priorities list that is, for the first time in years, largely unrelated to upgrading or maintaining payment connections.

The payments treadmill has been seriously diminished. In its place: a platform where new providers are onboarded in clicks, new payment methods are live in hours, and the teams responsible for donor experience, finance, and operations have the tools and visibility they need without depending on an engineering queue.

Gr4vy is the cloud-native payment orchestration platform built on a dedicated Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) model. With a single integration, businesses access 400+ payment methods, PSPs, and anti-fraud tools, all managed from a no-code dashboard. Built on dedicated cloud instances, Gr4vy eliminates the risk of a single point of failure while maintaining full data sovereignty, resilience, and performance at scale.

Gr4vy’s payment orchestration platform empowers you to optimize and scale your stack, unlock new revenue streams, and expand to new markets, giving you full control over your payment strategy. Built on an IaaS model, Gr4vy allows you to customize and optimize every checkout experience through one simple, universal integration.

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