Why stay on a forum you just found?
Okay, now you're a forum junkie - you just LOVE forums. But you're not going to spend your life posting to every forum in existence. So what is the threshold level? What determines a forum worth your time from one that isn't?
I guess what I'm asking is when you find a new forum (be it via the search engines, another site, etc), what specifically about it makes it worth staying on and posting ... or worth dismissing as just another forum?
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
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cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
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Personally I only use a forum thats useful to me, so I guess thats content. The forums I am a regular member are all webmaster forums, not counting my own forum that is.
Content captures guests, while community feel makes them members.
baker011
Junior Poster in Training
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Content captures guests, while community feel makes them members.
I agree! :) Which, unfortunately, seems to be my biggest problem at the moment. Something to strive for, I guess!
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
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Okay, now you're a forum junkie - you just LOVE forums. But you're not going to spend your life posting to every forum in existence. So what is the threshold level? What determines a forum worth your time from one that isn't?
Do I learn things when I think I know everything?
Do I "best" the most knoweldgeable posters, or am I a pale shadow?
Do I find elements of interest, such as a sharp-tongued post which I fully understand the backdrop of?
Are there other things that it seems those most knowledgeable may pass to me while I lurk?
Do my posts fit somewhere in the middle: Am I the sh!t? Or am I teh newb?
Can I post what I want, how I want? Or are there restrictions on content or form that I find annoying ?
Is everyone else here on dope ? Or can I post something of value that can possibly be understood?
Can I teach? Or is this Bullshildt central?
Is there enough traffic, or do I have to wait a week for 3 responses?
Dave Sinkula
long time no c
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WHT's design rocks too, but I digress. To be honest though, you brought up an interesting point. Most of the big boards out there are exclusively forums without the bells and whistles of every hack in the book.
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
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cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
Reputation Points: 1,474
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I'm happy to see you have 20+ posts already and you just registered here today :) I think one of the hardest things to do, especially in a webmaster community, is to ditch the spam factor without having rules that are too hard to enforce, are unwelcome to newbies, or stifle / limit conversation.
For example, I want to tell you guys right now about a bunch of sites that I frequent and what I like and dislike about each one. What made me stay at one and what made me leave. But I won't because I have a self-enforced no tolerance policy of linking to or discussing specific sites in this forum. I've learned from the past, where all that leads to is the owner of any of these forums posting here maliciously defending their site, or (more commonly) other small webmasters replying "my site is better and covers the same thing" ... easily turning an otherwise harmless thread into a spamfest.
My solution has been to not disallow site-specific talk entirely, but instead to confine it all into a single Site-Specific Questions area. If I want to talk about a particular webmaster service I've found, I'll post it in the Web-Based Services forum, for example.
end rant>
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
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<< update >> Sorry to double post, but I just thought of something else I want to ask. How important is site navigation and design on a forum? Would a bad design keep you away even if the content is awesome?
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
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How important is site navigation and design on a forum? Would a bad design keep you away even if the content is awesome?
Long version:
Yeah. If there's a feature I know should be available -- perhaps because I've visited other forums -- and I have to hunt for it for several minutes or never find it (such as a "plain" Reply button that is several pages above/below the post I'd like to reply to; or fonts, colors, or other formatting that are not available or or hard to discover; or extra links to follow that rudely resize my browser window and subsequent links to follow to disable a default behavior I don't care for; or seeing subsequent frequent rearranging of what was once common; or subsequent removing/adding features too frequently), I might lose the feel of awesomeness. Even though initially I might have found great appeal, this might be trampled and the best features -- in my opinion -- may have been ditched.
Short version:
Yes the content is there, but it's becoming a pain to find it. Maybe I'll stick with simplicity.
Dave Sinkula
long time no c
5,058 posts since Apr 2004
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This is a dig at DaniWeb, isn't it? :)
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
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