Other Added
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Forums > Forums: How DO You Get People to Post!?

Tags

  • going
  • something
  • herself
  • people joined
  • sized group
  • confusing process

  • Links

  • Are Inexpensive Web Site Templates Worth The Cost?
  • African Travel Tips When Visiting the Maldives
  • Article Writing - How to Write an Article - From the First Paragraph to the Conclusion
  • Other Added - Forums: How DO You Get People to Post!?

    Online Paid Surveys Scams - Smell Them From Afar
    Online paid surveys are rewarding businesses for survey companies. Consumer goods manufacturers and branding companies are always interested to hear what you the consumer and survey taker have to say about their products. It does not matter what market segment or product line. Consumer opinions and emerging market trends are equally important. This is where online paid surveys companies fill the gap by finding such market research information for the companies. And this is also why online survey takers are valuable to them. Unfortunately, unscrupulous online marketers seeing how lucrative the
    as utter pandemonium. My friend relayed the scandal to me.

    "That's so dishonest!" she said of the marauding forum leader.

    Dishonest? Well, maybe a little sneaky, yes. But in rating Shameful and Admonishable Networking Behaviors on a scale of 1 to 10, how much of a sin is it to incite constructive discussions for the betterment of a group?

    When you consider that, 1. the woman wasn't being paid, and 2. she only wanted to help other moms along in the confusing process, it really wasn't such a terrible thing that she did.

    I pointed out to my friend that this lady had smartly tapped into a marketing and communication tactic that's widely used and really works.

    Who do you th

    Affiliate Marketing – Is it a Good Money-Making Opportunity?
    In the last decade, the Internet has exploded from a niche product used by a few techie types to a mainstream tool used by just about everyone. The World Wide Web, once used merely as another promotional device by companies looking to advertise, has become a mainstream force in conducting business. There are now more than a billion Websites and many of them exist only to conduct business, offering products directly to the public without the necessity of a conventional storefront. The market for all products on the Internet has become quite competitive, however, and companies are always look
    Running a web forum is no easy task. If you own one, you know how labor-intensive it is. You spent hours perfecting your forum. You thought up dozens of categories and topics. You customized the interface, set user permissions, sent out welcome emails. Tons of members signed up and logged in. Time for the payoff, right? Wrong. People log in to your forum daily, yet no one posts. Why?

    1. People are lazy. They'd rather be entertained than contribute.
    2. People feel shy. They're afraid of saying the wrong thing or initiating a conversation.

    Don't get discouraged because nothing's happening on your website forum. The time has come to take matters into your own hands. How?

    You're going to have to do some marauding as other people.

    "What? Sneak around and pretend to be a random forum poster?"

    YES.

    As an experiment, I set up a posting forum "just to see what would happen." I chose to make it a rant and rave forum; everybody's got something to complain or cheer about, right? It took me the entire Memorial Day weekend, minus time out for evening social events, to set this thing up. Within two weeks of putting it out there, I had ninety members. NINETY! That's a pretty decent-sized group. You'd think there would be lots of chatter, right?

    No! No chatter. Out of ninety, want to know how many people took the time to post? FOUR. One of them was a friend of mine, who I begged to help me out... and even she only posted twice.

    So, that was when I committed the dastardly deed. I began logging in as other people, posting fake stories and perspectives. This got confusing after a while. Was Jenny the all-lowercase poster, or the girl with bad grammar? Was I logged in as Joe D., but telling stories from some girl named Mitsy's perspective again?

    It didn't matter that much, as this was only a test anyway. But it did work. Once I got the conversational ball rolling, other people joined in. I even had to be controversial, pass some remarks that would incite people emotionally and jar them to action. That got folks posting as well.

    Here's a related story, but with an unfortunate ending. A girlfriend of mine joined an online group of adoptive moms. The forum leader, an experienced adoptive mother herself, generously offered an information exchange forum where all the moms could converge and discuss.

    A few months in, members noticed some weirdness on the forum, so they went snooping. What they learned was that the forum leader had multiple forum personalities! She would log in as one person, ask a question, log back in as herself, then answer it.

    All hell broke loose. A mass of email back-and-forths ensued. The forum leader cracked under the accusations and started spamming every member, begging for forgiveness. It was utter pandemonium. My friend relayed the scandal to me.

    "That's so dishonest!" she said of the marauding forum leader.

    Dishonest? Well, maybe a little sneaky, yes. But in rating Shameful and Admonishable Networking Behaviors on a scale of 1 to 10, how much of a sin is it to incite constructive discussions for the betterment of a group?

    When you consider that, 1. the woman wasn't being paid, and 2. she only wanted to help other moms along in the confusing process, it really wasn't such a terrible thing that she did.

    I pointed out to my friend that this lady had smartly tapped into a marketing and communication tactic that's widely used and really works.

    Who do you thi

    Think - Don't React
    How you think, your relationship with yourself is what decides how well you communicate with your customers and relate to your team.The most important relationship you'll ever have is the one you have with yourself so you've got to get that right.Henry Ford said, (he was the guy who started all the traffic chaos)- "Thinking is the hardest work there is, that's why so few people do it". Too often we don't think and just react to how we feel. The successful business person doesn't react - they - "think"Successful people have a deep understanding of their own minds. They're
    re going to have to do some marauding as other people.

    "What? Sneak around and pretend to be a random forum poster?"

    YES.

    As an experiment, I set up a posting forum "just to see what would happen." I chose to make it a rant and rave forum; everybody's got something to complain or cheer about, right? It took me the entire Memorial Day weekend, minus time out for evening social events, to set this thing up. Within two weeks of putting it out there, I had ninety members. NINETY! That's a pretty decent-sized group. You'd think there would be lots of chatter, right?

    No! No chatter. Out of ninety, want to know how many people took the time to post? FOUR. One of them was a friend of mine, who I begged to help me out... and even she only posted twice.

    So, that was when I committed the dastardly deed. I began logging in as other people, posting fake stories and perspectives. This got confusing after a while. Was Jenny the all-lowercase poster, or the girl with bad grammar? Was I logged in as Joe D., but telling stories from some girl named Mitsy's perspective again?

    It didn't matter that much, as this was only a test anyway. But it did work. Once I got the conversational ball rolling, other people joined in. I even had to be controversial, pass some remarks that would incite people emotionally and jar them to action. That got folks posting as well.

    Here's a related story, but with an unfortunate ending. A girlfriend of mine joined an online group of adoptive moms. The forum leader, an experienced adoptive mother herself, generously offered an information exchange forum where all the moms could converge and discuss.

    A few months in, members noticed some weirdness on the forum, so they went snooping. What they learned was that the forum leader had multiple forum personalities! She would log in as one person, ask a question, log back in as herself, then answer it.

    All hell broke loose. A mass of email back-and-forths ensued. The forum leader cracked under the accusations and started spamming every member, begging for forgiveness. It was utter pandemonium. My friend relayed the scandal to me.

    "That's so dishonest!" she said of the marauding forum leader.

    Dishonest? Well, maybe a little sneaky, yes. But in rating Shameful and Admonishable Networking Behaviors on a scale of 1 to 10, how much of a sin is it to incite constructive discussions for the betterment of a group?

    When you consider that, 1. the woman wasn't being paid, and 2. she only wanted to help other moms along in the confusing process, it really wasn't such a terrible thing that she did.

    I pointed out to my friend that this lady had smartly tapped into a marketing and communication tactic that's widely used and really works.

    Who do you th

    Small Business Email Advertising - 3 Keys To Success
    If you’re a small business person and you would like to use the power of email to communicate your sales message to your prospects and customers, here are three keys to doing it the right way and being effective.The first key to successful small business email advertising is to collect the email addresses of your customers. To do this you must establish systems within the framework of your business. No matter how your staff comes into contact with your customers, they must ask for the email address at the point of contact.Whether that contact involves working a cash register, by
    d of mine, who I begged to help me out... and even she only posted twice.

    So, that was when I committed the dastardly deed. I began logging in as other people, posting fake stories and perspectives. This got confusing after a while. Was Jenny the all-lowercase poster, or the girl with bad grammar? Was I logged in as Joe D., but telling stories from some girl named Mitsy's perspective again?

    It didn't matter that much, as this was only a test anyway. But it did work. Once I got the conversational ball rolling, other people joined in. I even had to be controversial, pass some remarks that would incite people emotionally and jar them to action. That got folks posting as well.

    Here's a related story, but with an unfortunate ending. A girlfriend of mine joined an online group of adoptive moms. The forum leader, an experienced adoptive mother herself, generously offered an information exchange forum where all the moms could converge and discuss.

    A few months in, members noticed some weirdness on the forum, so they went snooping. What they learned was that the forum leader had multiple forum personalities! She would log in as one person, ask a question, log back in as herself, then answer it.

    All hell broke loose. A mass of email back-and-forths ensued. The forum leader cracked under the accusations and started spamming every member, begging for forgiveness. It was utter pandemonium. My friend relayed the scandal to me.

    "That's so dishonest!" she said of the marauding forum leader.

    Dishonest? Well, maybe a little sneaky, yes. But in rating Shameful and Admonishable Networking Behaviors on a scale of 1 to 10, how much of a sin is it to incite constructive discussions for the betterment of a group?

    When you consider that, 1. the woman wasn't being paid, and 2. she only wanted to help other moms along in the confusing process, it really wasn't such a terrible thing that she did.

    I pointed out to my friend that this lady had smartly tapped into a marketing and communication tactic that's widely used and really works.

    Who do you th

    Leisure Industry Executives – Look for New Parents
    New parents are excellent prospects for the $2.1 trillion dollar U.S. leisure industry. In 2006, there were more than 4 million families that welcomed new babies into their homes. This robust and renewable prospect source presents a tremendous revenue opportunity for leisure executives willing to target them.Families with newborns have many obvious needs; leisure industry executives can tap the hidden opportunities to find new revenue.New parents buy all the obvious baby things: baby furniture, diapers, toys, mini-vans …but what else are they buying? What marketers need to kn
    related story, but with an unfortunate ending. A girlfriend of mine joined an online group of adoptive moms. The forum leader, an experienced adoptive mother herself, generously offered an information exchange forum where all the moms could converge and discuss.

    A few months in, members noticed some weirdness on the forum, so they went snooping. What they learned was that the forum leader had multiple forum personalities! She would log in as one person, ask a question, log back in as herself, then answer it.

    All hell broke loose. A mass of email back-and-forths ensued. The forum leader cracked under the accusations and started spamming every member, begging for forgiveness. It was utter pandemonium. My friend relayed the scandal to me.

    "That's so dishonest!" she said of the marauding forum leader.

    Dishonest? Well, maybe a little sneaky, yes. But in rating Shameful and Admonishable Networking Behaviors on a scale of 1 to 10, how much of a sin is it to incite constructive discussions for the betterment of a group?

    When you consider that, 1. the woman wasn't being paid, and 2. she only wanted to help other moms along in the confusing process, it really wasn't such a terrible thing that she did.

    I pointed out to my friend that this lady had smartly tapped into a marketing and communication tactic that's widely used and really works.

    Who do you th

    Mortgage Advisers Wanted
    We see adverts for mortgage advisers wanted in newspapers, magazines, the Internet and wonder if we could be successful in applying for those advertised positions.Are you looking for an opportunity in the UK mortgage industry and finding it hard to get on to the mortgage advisor jobs ladder? The key to being successful in the mortgage industry is persistency but getting fixed up with work requires something else, EXPOSURE.Do you want to apply for a mortgage advisers wanted advert? We all aspire to the nice things in life but rarely do we find the ideal job that give
    as utter pandemonium. My friend relayed the scandal to me.

    "That's so dishonest!" she said of the marauding forum leader.

    Dishonest? Well, maybe a little sneaky, yes. But in rating Shameful and Admonishable Networking Behaviors on a scale of 1 to 10, how much of a sin is it to incite constructive discussions for the betterment of a group?

    When you consider that, 1. the woman wasn't being paid, and 2. she only wanted to help other moms along in the confusing process, it really wasn't such a terrible thing that she did.

    I pointed out to my friend that this lady had smartly tapped into a marketing and communication tactic that's widely used and really works.

    Who do you think sought advice from Erma Bombeck, Dear Abby and Emily Post before they ran well-known columns? No one did... because no one new who they were yet! So with each new release of their respective publications, internal writers had to pretend to be advice seekers, fabricate dilemmas, and then solve them.

    Now, if your public forum is clearly a conversational hot spot, yet you're still logging in as five different people because "you're becoming attached"... well, I'd say that's a problem. Consider getting out more.

    But if things are totally stagnant on your forum, this is really your only alternative to get it going.

    I know a woman on one Ryze forum who asks nearly every day, "Why aren't you guys posting?"

    No one ever answers her. That's because she's not giving anyone an incentive. That incentive must be emotional, and it must come in the form of riveting conversation. If there isn't any existing conversation, well, you're just going to have to invent some.

    I wish I knew that adoptive mom with all of her imaginary forum friends. Because if I did, I would tell her, "Hey! You did a good thing."

    Who knows, I might even have hired her to run my web forum.

    Copyright 2005 Dina Giolitto. All rights reserved.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.otheradded.com/article/63964/otheradded-Forums-How-DO-You-Get-People-to-Post.html">Forums: How DO You Get People to Post!?</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.otheradded.com/article/63964/otheradded-Forums-How-DO-You-Get-People-to-Post.html]Forums: How DO You Get People to Post!?[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Postcards Printing - Way for Essential Marketing

    Business Networking Essential - Their Name

    Affiliate Marketing- What To Write In Your Email After You Have A List

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com