I'd like to make a hypothesis on most of the Webmasters and Admins who visit FP.
Most of you guys are going about your strategy completely backwards. You built a website first. Then you promote it. That's the premise of Forum Promotion, from what I can tell.
The pro is that you feel accomplished because, well, you've 'built' something overnight. It was quick, easy, and your $35 theme looks awesome. The con is that, unfortunately, what you've built isn't useful, popular, or serve any audience.
What if you did it backwards? What if ... You spent several months visiting related groups, communities, and social clubs. You interacted with other users, you built connections, and you surveyed your niche. In the process, you find out what they're interested in, you grow an audience, you find what's missing in the niche and what's growing, and you can target content that will be immediately popular. And then you launch your community.
The pro is that you'll have a viable community with an active audience and relevant content. The con is that, well, this takes hard work, deep involvement, and crafting an actual strategy.
Thoughts?
Most of you guys are going about your strategy completely backwards. You built a website first. Then you promote it. That's the premise of Forum Promotion, from what I can tell.
The pro is that you feel accomplished because, well, you've 'built' something overnight. It was quick, easy, and your $35 theme looks awesome. The con is that, unfortunately, what you've built isn't useful, popular, or serve any audience.
What if you did it backwards? What if ... You spent several months visiting related groups, communities, and social clubs. You interacted with other users, you built connections, and you surveyed your niche. In the process, you find out what they're interested in, you grow an audience, you find what's missing in the niche and what's growing, and you can target content that will be immediately popular. And then you launch your community.
The pro is that you'll have a viable community with an active audience and relevant content. The con is that, well, this takes hard work, deep involvement, and crafting an actual strategy.
Thoughts?







