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Posted by Tom_C
So this weekend I had a bit of free time so I decided to learn how to play Go (narrowly beating chess I might add). Now as anyone who’s familiar with Go will know, it will probably take me more than a weekend to learn how to play but still, you have to start somewhere right!? Of course, being an internet junkie one of the first things I did was Google around to find some information online about Go. It didn’t take me long at all to find my first Go forums and it was at this point that an idea for a blog post came to me.
Online communities are the same whichever niche you’re in. There’s really nothing different about them. Expanding this train of thought further I realised that any online community worth it’s salt has all of the characteristics below and realising this I’ve listed some SEO applications of these facts at the bottom of the post (so keep reading if you think it doesn’t apply to you!)
Respected Members
Communities are, essentially, groups of people who share a common passion. Of course some people are either more passionate than others or have been passionate for longer. This leads to respected members of the community – those that contribute heavily, are wise beyond their years and generally everyone likes.
Moderators (or Mods as they’re affectionately known)
Of course, as communities grow inevitiably they become too big for one person to control and so often there are appointed moderators assigned to help out managing the communities. Usually these will be resonsible for a particular sub-forum each though the specifics varies. It’s interesting to note that mods have a love/hate relationship with the community. While they are loved if they do a good job generally they also get a lot of abuse whenever they have to implement new rules or ban certain members or delete offensive content. Acting as arbitrator this is no different to real life where the people who have to make the decisions always get stick regardless of which decision they choose.
God Bless Photoshop
One thing which is common to all online communities I’ve ever seen is photoshops. Taking an image which is relevant to the community and photoshopping some kind of in-joke over the top almost always results in the most popular threads of all time. This happens even in our own dear little SEO community but happens a lot more out in the wild.
In Jokes FTW
Of course leading very closely off the existence of photoshops is the existence of in-jokes. In-jokes in forums from my experience usually come from one of 3 things:
Graphs
This is a curious phonomenon and one I didn’t fully expect to tell you the truth. Graphs are an integral part of poker forums (check out this thread where you’ll see graphs like this or this) but I didn’t expect them to be so big in other forums. Turns out that there’s something about graphs though that the internet loves. Regardless of which niche you’re in you’ll see graphs like this (audio frequency response of someone’s room) and this (someone’s Go rank charted by number of games played) wherever you go! The interesting application of this is that there is huge scope for internet marketers who are savy and niche enough to profit from this (see bottom of the post).
Profile Pictures (and Gifs)
If you’re thinking this is just confined to ridiculous forums full of teenage boys providing no value then you need to revisit the avatars of SEO people on twitter! Actually – I’m not sure that disproves my point… Ah well. The point is that people like to brand themselves with avatars and often in online communities your avatar is all you’ve got for people to recognise you. Hence people like to have something funny and/or memorable. The problem is that of course most people are incapable of coming up with something original so if you can create something funny and or memorable as a gif or image that members of the community can use as an avatar.
Stupid little arguments
I was in two minds about adding a section for flame wars and arguments but seeing as they happen ALL THE TIME in online communities I can’t really leave it out. What I won’t do is link to any though as I’m sure that’ll only fuel the fire but suffice to say that these are always going to spring up and it’s often surprising which side of the argument different members of the community come down on. While I’ve resisted linking to any here flame wars are, by nature, controversial and hence can be used to drum up links. Use this tactic with caution though – it’s on the same level as getting sued for links!
Summary
So what does that leave us? Hopefully the clever ones among you have already spotted (or already knew about) ways of leveraging these ideas for fun and profit but here’s a few seeds to get you started:
Hopefully that will get you started thinking of ways to engage with forums and online communities to build some links. If you’re on the other side, however, and want to grow an online community – remember that the above things are going to spring up whether you like them or not so better to plan ahead of time and go with the flow. If you’re in the business for starting or maintaining an online community I strongly recommend you check out Feverbee. It’s a great blog on exactly this topic!
Feel free to leave comments with other ideas and aspects of online communities that I’ve missed
Continue Reading: The Nature of Online Communities
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