One thing that is as painful as a kick to the groin is noticing a webmaster begging people to join their website/forum.
I couldn't agree more with general forums generally being a huge failure. Anything that can be discussed on a general forum can be discussed in the various off topic sections of any other forum. The average general discussion forum offers nothing special to the users, and the vast majority of users join a forum due to being interested in a specific niche. The bonding of a community happens because the users joining are all interested in at least one common topic. In a general forum it becomes much harder to have this as there is no main theme to unify the community.The Elite said:In my opinion, if your forum is a General Chat forum. Please stop reading as you will hate me at the end of this. A general discussion forum is terrible, will take you no where, and all in all, WILL waste you money AND time. No one wants to join a general discussion forum where so much effort has been put in, so why do you think they'll join a general discussion forum that offers no content, nothing unique, no active members or ANYTHING. The only way I see a general discussion forum growing for 2-4 weeks is if you pay them. Oh yeah, did I mention that the largest forum(s) ARE general discussion forums.
Sure, but you also had forum advertiser and many of those members followed you over. It's a lot easier to start a forum when you already have a user base. The members there also knew each other from before so that community atmosphere followed over.theezy said:Well I have a general discussion forum and we dont really offer anything special or unique aside from some great members to chat with & a friendly community atmosphere. 🙂
Acorn said:I agree that a general forum is possibly the hardest kind to get off the ground. However, some people prefer small forums over large ones. So there's room for smaller general discussion forums as well. A forum doesn't have to be larger to be a success in its own right. People usually want their forums to be big, but that's really more of a matter of personal preference. I think as long as it's active enough to give a varied discussion and something new every day for people to log on to see then it's quite healthy.
People whose forums do grow big will look back fondly on the early days when it was small.
The Elite said:Why your forum makes me hate the internet.
Please, oh PLEASE don't get me started on terribly designed websites. I've seen some atrocious designs where the colour palette is green and blue. I don't mean to hate, but either your designer is colour blind, or their sense of taste is non-existing. This brings me to my next point for why your forum is failing.
Would you like to walk into your room every day and cringe at the sight of it? NO. Forums that succeed MUST have regular active members that usually log on every day and discuss. So, imagine YOU are that active member that goes on every day. Would you like to cringe at the design of the forum, NO. Studies have shown that visitors spend a maximum of 3 seconds on websites before leaving. I don't know if these studies are correct (maybe not), but I know for a fact that no one will not stay on a badly designed website for more than 3-4 seconds, unless you're paying them. This is why your bounce rate on your google analytics statistics is over 50%
The Pimped Papaya said:Very nice guide. I was going to make a general discussion forum, but realized that most forums have an off topic area anyway.
Can you put a new link to the article. I'd like to read it , but your site says that nothing could be found.The Elite said:I'll bump this up for new members to see.
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