Body & Soul4 mins ago
attracting people to my forum
4 Answers
I've got a website which at present is little more than a forum, sooner or later I am going to add other things to it however I want to build a good following first.
I get a lot of visitors every day and I know people go on the forums but for some reason people dont log in or post things.
Any idea how I can attract people to post and start talking because I'm out of ideas.
I get a lot of visitors every day and I know people go on the forums but for some reason people dont log in or post things.
Any idea how I can attract people to post and start talking because I'm out of ideas.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by merdok. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A forum is a bit like a party where no-one knows anyone. At first everyone is a little shy of posting comments etc. Once you get a few people posting interesting stuff the thing will tend to snowball.
One way of getting the ball rolling is to start a few topics yourself (preferably under pseudonyms). Try to imagine what topics are likely to run for a while, and make sure there are a few provocative ones.
Think about the first edition of a new magazine. They always have letters on the readers' letters page, even though they've never had any readers!
Ease of use is also important. We used to have a fairly active forum on a charity site that I run. When the (free) hosting company that we used went out of business, taking all our postings with it, we switched to another system, and it's never recovered - partly, I'm sure, because it's less intuitive to use.
One way of getting the ball rolling is to start a few topics yourself (preferably under pseudonyms). Try to imagine what topics are likely to run for a while, and make sure there are a few provocative ones.
Think about the first edition of a new magazine. They always have letters on the readers' letters page, even though they've never had any readers!
Ease of use is also important. We used to have a fairly active forum on a charity site that I run. When the (free) hosting company that we used went out of business, taking all our postings with it, we switched to another system, and it's never recovered - partly, I'm sure, because it's less intuitive to use.
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