I'm just curious. I think to build successful forum you need others other than the moderator to start lots of on point threads. If not most come look around and nothing. First timer's I'd say are more likely to reply to a relevant post than start a new one. Anyone have any ideas on how to get threads started? Rob
You could try posting under user names that aren't a mod / admin to make your forum look busy, at least in the early days. Competitions can help too, and requiring registration to access other parts of the site that people will really want to access might encourage participation - but you risk driving people away if you force them to register. It's a tough balance.
Unless they have a specific question (usually a plea for help) most people prefer to react to what is already on your forum before they post new threads. That is why it is very important to round off many threads with open-ended questions. Also, another way to encourage participation is to create an account or two and earmark them as "dickhead accounts" - and use them to simulate the sort of people who want endless clarification on small, inconsequential matters; they will ask lots of questions like "what do you mean by..." or "in a previous post you said..." or take issue with people on often insignificant matters. This can generate good responses depending on the type of forum.
Personally, I love the adsense revenue sharing forums like here on DP and a few others. I don't get rich or anything, it's just a nice feature that if I write a good post, and lots of people view it, I get a little reward. Here's my thinking: I have a really good idea (content) that I want to share with others. I can: 1) Post it to my blog (but what if I have no readers) 2) Post it to a high traffic and relevent forum that I frequent that shares revenue with me 3) Post it to a high traffic and relevent forum that I frequent that has no revenue sharing 4) Post it to an unfrequented low traffic site where no one is likely to find it (not likely) Think about what situation you may be in: 1) High Traffic but low posters (need ways to convert traffic into posters) 2) Low traffic and low posters (need a way to build more traffic) 3) High Traffic and High Posters (are you monetizing it?) 4) Low Traffic but High posters (do niche marketing) Hope this helps.
Use a php or asp script to automate the process and you can have a forum that looks as busy as DP. I am thinking of doing this myself. Big money to be made from forums. And then they get indexed and you get posts in the top results. Next, just advertise your website on them and boom. Traffic swarm!
The problem with automated posts is that the Original Posters of the thread tend to not reply, which can be a real turn off for potential 'long term' members. I know I'd not stick around on a forum that was full of RSS feeds, or regurgitated yahoo.answers content.... Yeah, I may click into it from a search engine, I may register and possibly post a time or two, but a dead forum is a dead forum regardless of how many posts it has. Once I figure out there are no actual people other then me there I'll likely delete the bookmark and find a real forum. To ultimately be successful with a forum a COMMUNITY must be established. Friends, family, even paid posters are all better then generated content, as at least humans are more inclined to respond to any questions and/or comments.
First thanks to everyone who has replied so far. Alot of good stuff I'll be keeping in mind. Thanks again! Speaking of which, if anyone here has a blog and signs up and helps me out on my forum with posts and threads I"ll give you a free listing as long as your blog is active . (Sorry just taking some suggestions from this thread!). http://www.bloggeries.com/forum Suddenly lots are poping up. Some got mentioned on larger blogs and are happening; mine is an older one and I don't want it to get left behind. I do agree the key is to make it like a community. Somwhere that people feel they belong and are appreciated. Sounds cheesy but it's true
Some people hire posters, they give them so much for each post, and a little more for starting topics. That gets people there, and from there you could advertise and get non paid posters to join. Eventually you could fire the posters, and have a fully running forum.
nice thread here, really learnt a bunch, thanks u guys for sharing. My tips: create a competition. top posters of the month get 100$ etc.
Yeah. Do that and let me know! I'll come and win that $100! One more tip: When a new member does join and create a new post, make sure you respond to it. Agree with them, add more information, and ask them a few questions about the topic. Make them feel like they are adding something valuable and they will come back for more. (It almost sounds like I am giving dating advice!)
It is good advice that is what i've been doing I'm just working on making my last sentence more open ended Rob
There is one other option - find a 'mall' type of forum like my own. This is somewhat similar to the standard ad-revenue sharing that you see here on DP, but constructed entirely differently. The basic concept is you create your forum WITHIN a larger, existing forum that already has hundreds of members, is active, and well indexed by Google. Your own adsense code is applied to all of the ads within your own section and you keep 100% of your own ad revenue. The benefit to you is that you're not starting from scratch, and the traffic isn't costing you a thing. The benefit to the master forum is that it gains a little more content. It's win win for everybody, and it doesn't cost a thing. PM me if you're interested.
so you have. But I guess I was wrong, I don't see a lot of responses to either of your advice posts. Lets give it some time and see if that increases.
Something I've realized and well I'm sorta like that as well is it's best if the threads are started by anyone other than super admin's I find people more hesitant to correct or chime in when the OP is the admin. What are your thoughts?
Be friendly and personable and the long standing members will treat you like a regular member... though this can have it's down sides when you have to actually wear that fancy admin hat. Maybe make a second account, start the threads with that, then reply as the admin? It's a fine line really... the admin MUST be active on the forum, and the admin must also be a MEMBER first...but the admin must also be an admin. Find that line and walk it proudly! Q
And as admin you have twice the job. Not only do you have to stay active with posting and admin functions, but you'll have to be promoting and monetizing the forum also. If you are lucky, your mods will do some advertising for you, but they probably won't be selling ad space, unless you are giving them a cut of the sales profit.