Let’s say that I actually cared about that shithole. And that my goals were the same as the current shareholders’: I want to cash in.
- Delay the IPO in two or three years. As it is now, nobody will cash in.
- Undo trust damage caused by the previous CEO. I probably won’t be able to do everything, but I need to show to the users that Reddit has “magically” became a user-friendly platform - it’s bullshit though. I need those suckers to make and moderate content for free for me, better if they’re happy.
- Pause the API price changes and resume talks with third party app developers. Ultimately the goal is still to get them off my platform; however I need a convincing bullshit to do so, not exorbitant prices.
- Actually develop the official app, until it reaches a reasonable feature parity with the third party clients. That includes text-to-speech built-in ability and decent moderation tools, as that is what the protesters are complaining the most about.
- Slowly use the opportunity to seize control from the powermods, in a way that the community will take my side, not theirs. Context is king here; for example the community would love to vote its own moderators, as well as sub limits per mod, if this wasn’t blatantly associated with the current changes. Perhaps restructure how mod hierarchy works, in a way that people loyal to the brand organically reach the top.
- Address bot usage; both through API and scrappers. I want a chunk of the LLM money, so I can’t give this for free.
All of those things should be done in a way that reasonable users cannot connect the dots, through a wide amount of time.
In the meantime, I’d officially communicate “Hi, I’m the new CEO. We screwed up. We’re fixing issues now.” Nothing more, nothing less. No “I’m sorry” because this screams “corporate apology”; the idea is to sound the complete opposite of spez, and let him become the piranha cow.
Wake up, a new conspiracy theory dropped!
Find the most likely strategy to piss off the user base, and then somehow say the dumbest things I can to make it worse when asked about it.
I mean, that’s the job right?
Found spez’ Fediverse account!
Nice try u/spez
And fuck /u/spez too
Delete the entirety of new reddit, reinstate old reddit as the one and only UI, federate with ActivityPub, open source everything, make the API free, and cancel the IPO.
Delete the entirety of new reddit, reinstate old reddit as the one and only UI
A better approach would be to develop the new reddit in a way that supersedes the old user interface, potentially being able to mimic it.
Other things that you’ve mentioned are good for the users, but bad for the company. It kind of highlights how much we cannot rely on it.
But I like the new Reddit UI :(
I liked
.compact
and used it even on desktop.
Open source everything then sell my stocks and retire
I’d probably do what spez is doing and make a lot of money tbqh
deleted by creator
Make serving the same ads part of the API TOS, and let 3rd party apps go about their business
Problem is they probably want to make Reddit a “cool” and “quirky” place to do everything except what it’s supposed to. E.g. RPAN, r/place, Reddit Chat, and surely more to come.
Monetize the data.
Reddit is sitting on a huge pile of gold, the user aren’t happy, fine, but they still have their data
Well, here’s my take:
The first thing that Reddit should probably do is stop supporting video uploads. Don’t delete the videos uploaded so far, but just retire that feature. The cost/benefit for video streaming and developing their own video player has got to be completely unjustifiable.
Second, coordinate with moderators of major subs and let them become ad partners. Moderators can approve ads functioning like pinned posts that are targeted to their communities, and if they do then a cut of the ad revenue is split evenly among all the moderators in a community with payment info and with an ad payment permission that is managed the same as existing permissions. This tackles two problems at once: First, you can charge a premium for ads, because you can target them to very specific self-selected interests, and second, you actually compensate the people who are doing the bulk of the work of maintaining a community. Make sure the ads are unintrusive, and make sure moderators have the final say in whether an ad is appropriate for their community. Let it work like banner ads in niche internet forums used to, before social media took over. Nobody got mad about an unintrusive banner ad for something that was actually relevant to their community.
Third, hire some community managers. (Or, if Reddit has any already, then they are severely underutilizing them.) Why was the absolutely unhinged CEO conducting an AMA, instead of dedicated community managers? There need to be people whose actual job it is to communicate with the people who use the website, especially the people who moderate and post the content, who have the necessary expertise to not come across like a complete moron in the process.