Just thought the Wikipedia Review community might like to hear how things are going with past volunteer article creation, past and present paid article creation, and past and present "covering fire" article creation on Wikipedia, from Wikipedia Review.
While a user in good standing on Wikipedia, I created over 30 new articles that still reside today in Wikipedia. In the month of October 2010, they collectively garnered a total of 37,178 page views, with the leading articles being about the Czech Air Force, Carolina Ardohain, line management, Avia, Resorts Atlantic City, and job sharing.
In over four years, I have also created at least ten articles in exchange for payment, which have garnered nearly 9,200 page views in the month of October 2010. Of course, I have also worked extensively on at least as many other articles in exchange for payment, but they were already-existing pages that needed client-driven modifications. I wish I could share the list of these various articles, but there is a teeny, tiny chance that might possibly subject them to retaliatory editing by Wikipediots. Sorry!
Also over those four years, I have created a few additional new articles for free, but only as "cover" for the paid-article user accounts, so as not to look too suspicious. These articles have drawn more than 1,550 page views in October 2010. Again, while they weren't paid output, I still can't reveal them.
One more recent paid project asked for an external link from various Wikipedia articles to the client's web site. They were having trouble getting them to stick, because they lacked the reputation of an existing active account in good standing (such as the several that I maintain). So far, the links I've gotten to stick are driving traffic from Wikipedia articles that net over 170,000 page views per month.
This is the productivity and content influence of a "Founder-banned" user of Wikipedia. How are the rest of y'all doing?
Any questions?