My observation is that a community needs continual input in order to survive. Just like a physical-world community needs energy and resources, a virtual community needs content - information, news, opinions. Some few communities manage to get this input from their members (communities like Slashdot and Digg) but most require someone to be generating these resources on a regular basis. The EdNA Network Forum has been on life support since the moderators stopped moderating. And how many Ning communities have the dead shark problem? The problem is - it is very difficult to generate this input without ownership - which is why, for a community to succeed, it must be owned by its members. Genuinely owned, which (among other things) means it won't be arbitrarily shut down if it no longer meets some purpose.
Today: 0 Total: 1748 [Share]
] [