• brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    TBH I think it needs more mods/participants in existing communities before it starts sharding into more.

    In other words, it’s the same problem I observe in many software dev communities: instead of building a new wheel, it’d be better to contribute to existing ones (and facilitate that discovery for others).

    And, on that note, I think Lemmy needs better default algorithms to surface them.

      • Libb@piefed.social
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        3 days ago

        I did that in the journaling community I mod. During 6 months or so I posted almost daily, then weekly content. I had to put it on hold for the last few months. But I had very little feedback all that time. After I put in on hold, at first there was no activity going on at all. Then, a few posts were created, and other members commented. There is still not much going on but it was nice to see nonetheless. Hope to see more :)

        The real odd thing for me is that we gained a lot of new members (when I relaunched the community, there was probably less than 200 members, we’re more than 900 today), and still almost no one is posting. Not sure why.

        • mesa@piefed.social
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          3 days ago

          I think on reddit they said that a vast majority of content “posts” is made by a very small amount of users. I think it was less than 5% made 90% or something like that. I’m seeing the same dynamic on Lemmy/Piefed/ect…

          When it comes down to it, power users are still a thing and getting them onboard on a platform helps quite a bit.