If You Build It, They Will Come

28 points | by barry-cotter 2 hours ago

8 comments

  • sam_lowry_ an hour ago

    Do not expect a reward, dude. I spent 15 years building a local community, I had 10,000 daily users once, people recognized me on the street, then everyone left on a whim when Facebook made it easier to hang in one's own echo chambers.

    I still think it was worth it.

    Once in a while, I bump into a stranger, and they tell me how the found their only true love because of me, or how they landed a job that made them loads of money because I facilitated communication in our community. Other times... I barely escaped molestation by a disgruntled member once, and someone threw a glassful of Orval at me (yes, it really happened).

    It was still worth it.

      customguy 28 minutes ago

      A bit of a tangent, but it's fascinating how often you hear these stories (and I experienced one, myself), of communities "moving to Facebook" and basically dissolving as a community. I would like to see a collection of such anecdotes, but I can see why it doesn't get compiled, because it would essentially just be [description of community] and then [Facebook], with no specifically interesting thing to report other than "it petered out". Same for Amazon, come to think of it. You can describe what used to be, and that it's now longer there, but there isn't really any compelling tale in it.

      NeutralForest 35 minutes ago

      Wasting Orval is the biggest sin of all.

        fredland 18 minutes ago

        not if it was open source

  • crab_galaxy 22 minutes ago

    You really have to do it for the love of the game. It can be surprisingly vulnerable to be the social fabric, and it’s super easy to fall into various toxic inner dialogs when you’re busy and others don’t pick up the slack, or if others don’t reciprocate the effort, or worst of all when others don’t include you for whatever reason.

  • mattmaroon an hour ago

    “I’ve come to believe that part of today’s problem of social alienation is a problem of too many free riders.”

    I started planning street festivals a few years ago. It’s now a lucrative and growing business for me. The demand for events at all scales vastly outstrips supply, and I think growing social isolation is part of the reason.

    The free riders might seem like a problem to someone who just wants there to be events, but it is a huge opportunity to us who throw them.

  • sebastianconcpt 17 minutes ago

    Reminds me of 2013 when I organized a TEDx, gosh so much work for absolute zero return. Also risk, what was I thinking?

  • triprjt 21 minutes ago

    no offence but i dont know what is this article doing on hackernews. looks like a diary entry at best.