Forums have never been more popular.
Let's look at this from a different angle and consider the definition of 'forum':
a meeting or medium where ideas and views on a particular issue can be exchanged.
I also noticed the term 'social media' banded around in this thread, the definition of which is:
websites and applications that enable users to create and share content or to participate in social networking.
There are many parallels that run between forums and social networking. Facebook pages are forums, where posts pertinent to a subject matter are posted and other users comment. Twitter is a forum where individuals are connected through a common subject matter (eg: A trending hashtag) and comment on each other's status'. Any website or page that has a comments section is a forum.
I think the question in this thread shouldn't be "Are forums dying?", but rather: "Are CMS platforms where categories are listed vertically down a page and each category contains threads and posts dying?" The answer? Absolutely not. As long as people want to connect and exchange thoughts / ideas on a common knowledge area, standalone 'forum' CMS' will always exist and be popular.
However, the main challenge to the standalone CMS format we all know and love is supply & demand. Community members demand things to be easy. Facebook (or other mainstream social platform) login is revolutionising the way we integrate with websites across the internet. I'm sure we've all tried signing up to a website at some stage and feel relieved when we see a "Login with Facebook" button. The idea of 'registering' to sites with an email address is rapidly becoming a thing of the past, 'forums' in the context of this topic (phpBB,etc) need to embrace this technology to ensure a sustainable future. Nobody wants to remember a new set of login details any more.
zackredsox said:
I think this is website is a great indication of the fall of forums. Years ago this site had twice as much activity.
These comments are really interesting, I have two responses.
Firstly, ForumPromotion.net's decline is simply accounted for by many things, including but not limited to: Too frequent ownership changes, poor [no] succession planning, too many team members, too many kids and no innovation.
Secondly, I wouldn't let the caliber of forums advertised on ForumPromotion.net serve as a general indication for the health of forums across the internet. The problem as I see it is that FP largely consists of self-nominated 'Admins' that start a forum for all the wrong reasons. Running a community satisfies many natural human needs, including:
- Our need for significance: feeling unique, important, special or needed
- Our need for connection: a strong feeling of closeness or union with someone or something
- Our need for contribution: a sense of service and focus on helping, giving to and supporting others
The problem is that many FP members start forums exclusively to satisfy the need for significance, and not because they just want a place to hang out and talk about something they love. We have all seen many, many forums repeatedly launched by the same FP members and quickly fail. This isn't because forums are dying, it's just that they're not being opened for the right reasons.