Today my creative and knowledgeable friend Bernajean Porter sent me an interesting link after I interviewed her about how to present Webinars. The Web page is called "Participation Inequality: Encouraging More Users to Contribute." Worth a read if you want to increase online participation. Excerpt:
All large-scale, multi-user communities and online social networks that rely on users to contribute content or build services share one property: most users don't participate very much. Often, they simply lurk in the background.
In contrast, a tiny minority of users usually accounts for a disproportionately large amount of the content and other system activity. This phenomenon of participation inequality was first studied in depth by Will Hill in the early '90s, when he worked down the hall from me at Bell Communications Research (see references below).
Click to read the rest.




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