From my experience and from what I’m seeing there are two ways of how people get on the platform in general:

  • slowly, over time - this results from people getting to know the platform through various ways
  • rapidly, which basically results from some fuckup of other players, and it has to be a pretty big fuckup cause the strength of the bonds that people developed with FB, TT and reddit and the established network effect is huge.

I try to grow my instance. Obviously I’m doing approach number one, cause we are not in the middle of any fuckup currently. And it’s tedious. People just ignore you. Cause your communities are basically empty. But they won’t grow without people. And it’s a vicious circle. And so when I’m doing that I don’t have time to create content on the other hand. But creating content when nobody is reading is also tedious. But without content people won’t come here. Another vicious circle!

And of course, in my case I’m alone. But we could assume that there is more than one person, maybe there are 2 or 3 or more. They might still struggle with similar problem.

So there is option number two - wait for the next fuckup. But you have to be prepared. So try to build content. Without engagement obviously. Talk to an empty wall. Like many succesful content creators did in the beginning. And then fuckup happens. And when you suddenly have a wave of new users, they see that you at least try to make a good content. This content might attract the wave.

Idk, I’m just wondering how I should invest my time and energy. Maybe we need to be flexible. Maybe do a little bit of both right?

What do you think about it? How do you grow your communities? Especially in the beginning? There should be some 101 article on this with some list or something. Or even a lemmy community “growing_fedi_community”

  • SorteKaninA
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    8 months ago

    It’s a very good question. I think whatever happens, we need to be patient. The Fediverse is not going to be big tomorrow. We need to make it nice to be here despite that.

    I think trying your hardest to find stuff to post and comment on other posts as much as you can without it being artificial is the way to go.

    I’ve also personally tried talking to people in real life about the Fediverse. Not about any particular instance but just starting with a conversation how social media sucks and there are alternatives out there. I think raising awareness like that is good, but it’s slow of course.

    Slow can also be good. Fast growth is very chaotic and can be quite disruptive.

  • Elle@lemmy.worldM
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    8 months ago

    This is only somewhat related, but posting without a language selected may help across Lemmy at least. Defaults should allow seeing all languages, but for those trying to curate their feeds more to the languages they know, having a language selected that they’re filtering out means lower visibility for your posts.

    Also, at least in this post’s case, the language selected doesn’t match, so it doesn’t make much sense anyway. 😅

    More to your point, however, I honestly don’t know. There has to be an interest from those for a different community/online space to go to, and then it has to meet whatever they’re interested in posting and discussing. I kind of think more topic-focused or themed communities/instances might have more of a draw for some people, as something more open-ended may leave them at a loss of what to post about and discuss. Whereas, something a little more focused that they may know about, want to discuss, or ask and learn about, might provide an easier orientation/onboarding experience.

    Simple examples being like communities related to sports, games, tv/movies, books, music, events related to each like upcoming sports events, concerts, awards shows, etc. Keeping in line with what I mentioned above, you might make these related to those in your country, letting federation take care of seeing and keeping up with international sports, media, and events, providing your instance with more of a distinct local feed that is genuinely local.