• Frank J. Zamboni
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    5611 months ago

    Creating a community is easy. Being the sole content creator and marketing your community until it becomes self-sustaining is very very hard. Moderating it once it becomes sustainable is moderately hard (pun intended)

  • gabe [he/him]
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    2911 months ago

    A community? No, you just gotta be dedicated to starting conversations and promoting it.

    An instance though? Can be hit or miss.

    • Dee
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      1611 months ago

      I keep seeing you pop up in comment sections. I almost finished my book last night just a few chapters left and I promise I’ll post something to your instance to promote activity lol

      • gabe [he/him]
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        1411 months ago

        Aw I appreciate it. It’s all good, slow organic growth is better than unsustainable rapid artificial growth. I hope you’re enjoying your book and I’d love to hear your thoughts on whatever it may be (and maybe add another book to my ever growing TBR 👀)

        • Dee
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          11 months ago

          I’d be surprised if you hadn’t read it already, it’s Mort by Terry Pratchett. I’ve been meaning to start Discworld for ages but kept finding excuses and finally started my journey reading them in chronological release order. I really wish I started this series sooner. What an absolute delight it’s been!

  • @kadu@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Creating a community is super easy.

    The initial moderation is also quite easy, though you need to dedicate some time to build the initial userbase and write clear, concise, reasonable rules.

    What I can tell you from personal experience though is that maintaining a community after it grows is hard, and time consuming, and you’ll absolutely need extra moderators and moderator tools.

    Right now, today, on Lemmy no communities are big enough for this to be a concern. However, Reddit also started small. Be prepared.

  • @Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1311 months ago

    Maintaining is the hard part. Feels like shouting in the abyss for a while.

    Then unfortunately other people start to post as well

  • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝
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    911 months ago

    It’s not difficult but you need perseverance to just get your head down and keep a trickle of content going in the hope that it’ll gain momentum. That means you can’t worry too much about initially being the only one posting to your community and you should make sure you have your newsfeeds up and running, and well trained, to keep feeding you potentially interesting links. Also keep an eye out for enthusiastic posters who does be potential moderators - as someone on here said: you can make a good poster a mod, you can’t make a mod a good poster.

  • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    611 months ago

    Yeah its hard. Finding interesting stuff to post and the consistency is tough.

  • CosmicSploogeDrizzle
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    11 months ago

    Depends on the type of community. I am the PS5 community creator. There is constant news available for discussions but you have to be consistent and patient. For other types of communities it is probably harder to even generate content. It helps to make friends with other mods also if your community has “neighbors” so to speak. For me that would be other console communities and gaming communities.

    If you’re gonna start something like c/birdswitharms you’re probably gonna have a harder time gaining traction.

  • @twistedtxb@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    I personally post relevant information to the communities I’ve created and moderate, but I’m not here to be an entertainer. I get a handful of upvotes so I guess it’s useful to some people.

    If Reddit fucks up even more I might have a bigger role, but so far it pretty feels like that Milhouse GIF playing frisbee with himself, and I’m sort of okay with that.