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Time Frame for Growing Forum
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 89
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The only advice I can give you is to POST POST POST yourself! I say this a real lot, but I might as well just repeat myself here, at the chance of being repetitive. Members are selfish. They only care that what they have to post gets seen and replied to. So the goal to turning an inactive forum into an active one is to make sure that you instantly reply to every thread or post that is made. One member at a time will see that THEIR own post has been answered right away, and so they'll come back. Don't worry right away about getting conversation going. That will come with time. At first, just focus on making sure that YOU personally answer every single post made within a short amount of time.
My question is "Should I provide/announce any incentives for users to post on the forums?"
Is it a good technique to make the user come again and again?
I started to give the usres Gmail invitations last year and it worked good for me.
Any other suggestion you people can would give to make the user come back regularly?
I am not a fan of giving members prizes in exchange for posting. What ends up happening is your members only end up spending time on your site because they want what you're giving away for free, and they don't really care about the site at all. As soon as the well runs dry, or you can no longer afford to constantly supply members with free gifts everyday, they'll all quickly leave and you'll be back to square one.
Contests are a really good idea and can be used to improve the community aspects of the site. However, contests should encourage members to participate more and bond and encourage community - not give them a reason to be on your site during the here and now when they really don't care about it at all.
Contests are a really good idea and can be used to improve the community aspects of the site. However, contests should encourage members to participate more and bond and encourage community - not give them a reason to be on your site during the here and now when they really don't care about it at all.
I did a limerick contest. People submitted limericks about my site. The prize was a book signed by the author.
Contests should be for community bonding, not to make people come to the site. People who don't want to go to a site shouldn't be forced to visit just for a reward. Although prizes for things unrelated to how much someone posts can help existing members feel more connected to the site.
Contests should be for community bonding, not to make people come to the site. People who don't want to go to a site shouldn't be forced to visit just for a reward. Although prizes for things unrelated to how much someone posts can help existing members feel more connected to the site.
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Originally Posted by cscgal
I am not a fan of giving members prizes in exchange for posting. What ends up happening is your members only end up spending time on your site because they want what you're giving away for free, and they don't really care about the site at all. As soon as the well runs dry, or you can no longer afford to constantly supply members with free gifts everyday, they'll all quickly leave and you'll be back to square one.
Contests are a really good idea and can be used to improve the community aspects of the site. However, contests should encourage members to participate more and bond and encourage community - not give them a reason to be on your site during the here and now when they really don't care about it at all.
Last edited by clarinetalex; Jun 18th, 2006 at 1:35 pm.
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 21
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Originally Posted by Nikolas
That's a very general question, and that really depends on you.
I have a forum with about 300 members, and the forum hasn't yet come to a state that can grow alone.
But for instance I meat today a guy that made a forum with 250 members in 12 hours!
I agree that it is easier to grow a forum when it is attached to an existing website with a good sized following ... although I have never been in that position myself.
I'm a strong advocate that a website can never truly be self sufficient. Comments?
I'm a strong advocate that a website can never truly be self sufficient. Comments?
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 29
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Solved Threads: 3
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Originally Posted by nightwishmaster
i have waited months and paid heaps of advertising and only have 16 members
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Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 29
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Solved Threads: 3
Competitions are good as long as it's applicable to your site. Don't give away a free football if your site is about pets. Maybe a free hamster would be more appropriate :-)
Niche forums tend to be better. I am a very experienced Coldfusion Developer and I chip in on this site a bit, but if I want my questions answered I go to a dedicated Coldfusion forum. I like the Marketing and Promotions section on this site. I haven't come across too many of them.
Niche forums tend to be better. I am a very experienced Coldfusion Developer and I chip in on this site a bit, but if I want my questions answered I go to a dedicated Coldfusion forum. I like the Marketing and Promotions section on this site. I haven't come across too many of them.
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Originally Posted by cscgal
I'm a strong advocate that a website can never truly be self sufficient. Comments?
However, I've left my forum for writers unattended for a month while I did some contract work. The 3 moderators did OK on their own, new members did join, and the conversations kept going just fine.
Of course, I wouldn't leave the forum unattended forever. I felt like a month was very long.
And it does depend upon the forum. A lot. I have another forum that died even with me spending $500/week in Google ads, and posting like crazy, and doing post exchanges, etc. It wanted to die, and nothing I did could stop it.
-Tony
Publisher Database - tools & forums for writers
Outshine - geek blog & free phpBB mods
What Do Women Want? - dating advice for men, from women
Outshine - geek blog & free phpBB mods
What Do Women Want? - dating advice for men, from women
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