Improvements/Ideas for the SINGASTRO forum
Posted: Mon Nov 23, 2009 8:22 pm
Been thinking long and hard in this, and as the forum matures beyond its decade of providence of astronomy information and service to the community, there are a few areas worth thinking about (and hopefully put into action) about improving the forum. However there are a few preliminary thoughts that is worth looking into why there is a constant need to do this.
As the internet community evolves, there are emerging challenges to sustain the attention and interest of subscribers in keeping SINGASTRO alive, relevant, and well. There are increasingly more forums, more literature centres that subscribers can easily tune themselves into for more up-to-date information, participating in active centres of discussion, relevant literature, and pursuing greater information depth. Will our subscribers prefer to google and search for a related astronomy subject or ask the question in our forum? Will our subscribers prefer to buy/sell their astronomy items in our forum or elsewhere where they could reach a larger potential base? Will our subscribers seek our forum for upcoming events, or go to other alternate sources of information? These questions are not intended to give hint to any emergent fallacy in the forum, but it is always good to be constantly aware and keep ourselves to date with what the local (and of recent, even regional) community wants/desire. If we are to continually keep the forum alive and bustling, it has to be a hive of active activities, both in depth of content, ease of gathering information, and a reliable source to depend on (minimal down time, etc).
The first impression of the forum is always important to the first-time subscriber. As the forum matures, and more people come to know of it, it is easy to overlook the fact that complacency of the thought (of always telling ourselves that new subscribers will remain actively subscribing rather than passively) will lead to subscriber boredom and predictability. The former is easy to understand - the first few days (or weeks or even months) of subscription is always an exciting one, as one runs through the threads, curiosity prevailing, a sense of enthusiasm entails, but as time passes, one will eventually see how the forum is really like, and this leads to the second point - predictability. Successful platforms of exchanges (which are miraculously matured!) on the internet always has an element of unpredictability, to keep subscribers interested and to also have them contributing. If nothing happens, the forums will eventually be a mundane search engine of archival information, and the occasional "look and see if there is any upcoming event" should somebody posts. The forum will no longer be THE source of information, and subscribers will tend to look elsewhere, and just come back to their "home" forum for occasional "peaks". Is this what we really want? That the forum is just an auxiliary tool of information that worse still, lead to the lack of stimulus in veteran subscribers (for example) contributing anymore? Thus it is important to find out what keeps both new and veteran subscribers coming back to our forum, and what it takes for this to happen continuously over time.
What captures our attention?
Is it the always changing face of the forum? Are there any substantial contributors present in the forum that keeps it going? Or do subscribers come back to the forum to look for upcoming events? Or do subscribers simply use the forum to buy/sell their wares? Are there reliable articles that can provide the subscribers with their needs, there are unique to elsewhere on the internet? Perhaps unique in the sense that it is tailored specially for our region (for example, equatorial stargazing, doing constructive things beyond the threat of worsening light pollution, etc). Or even perhaps, the forum has an X factor that keeps subscribers constantly glued to it. However, recognizing the X factor(s) takes time and keen observation (though sometimes a bit of intuition helps).
With this, here are some suggestions and they are not listed in order of importance:
1) We all know that as human beings, everyone likes to buy things at bargain prices, or sell away their equipment quickly and with ease. And as time passes, the forum seem to be having an increasingly heavier buy/sell traffic that it might be a good time to think about organizing these buy/sell data effectively. We could follow like what other forums are doing, separate the astronomical buy/sell section to certain types of equipment (for example, Telescopes and Binoculars, Eyepieces, Accessories, Imaging Equipment, etc).
2) The frontal face of the forum needs to be in constant change and dynamism. This greatly helps to maintain a sense of curiosity and wonder not just for the newbies but have the veterans coming back constantly. For example, if there is going to be a new impact scar on Jupiter, the front face should have this information. Or should there be an upcoming big event in Singapore, it should be made obvious. Take www.spaceweather.com for example, even tough it is not a forum, it is an active source for new celestial events because it has an almost voluntarily base of amateur astronomers ever willing to post new information to the website.
3) Being an astronomical forum, it is good to have "live" information embedded, such as the current lunar phase, solar activity, online almanac display/calculator, etc. This helps to give the local subscribers relevance and also enable them to make plans at "first glance" (such as if they noticed from the forum that it is new moon, they will want to take a look at the events section to see if there is any session on, etc).
4) Articles/Reviews should be kept within the forum website. This lessens the chance of information facing unforeseen/unexpected alterations/deletion and makes the forum full and as complete as possible. It is always a challenge having to find contributors writing new articles/reviews all the time, but sometimes whether they are keen to contribute also depends on the health of the forum. If they know there is a large active audience, they will be more inclined to contribute and have their efforts and time spent paid off. This is a win-win situation for both the contributor and the reader.
5) Live chat sessions. Depending on the possibility of the forum hosting package, having an occasional area for special online live discussions would be an interesting activity for active exchange and bonding between subscribers. This could be in the form of for example, if a notable meteor shower is coming, or if an overseas manufacturer has released a new product that is of great/potential interest to the local community, or simply a discussion about an upcoming local event, etc.
6) A calendar of events located within the forum website area for subscribers to have a "one look" live view of what they can expect in the current month or next to come, rather than to sieve through the Events sections for potential events that may or may not happen (due to last minute bad weather, etc). This is not to say that the Events section is passe, but having a calendar further reinforces the Events sections and provide a summary of event data for the month.
7) Updated links and have them better organized, kept up-to-date as well.
8) This is not really important but it helps to keep the forum face interesting - the top banner should reflect upon astronomical current activity happening locally or globally, such as if this is the year of Astronomy, the top banner should reflect this. This helps to keep the forum (again) in relevance, and create a sense of activeness.
There are still many more to list, but the above are just some areas to keep everyone putting on their thinking cap and where possible (at best) actioned upon. I know it takes time and energy and resources to keep the forum alive, but hopefully the above has given triggered an engine start to keep things going towards a brighter future for our beloved forum - SINGASTRO.
Cheers,
Remus
As the internet community evolves, there are emerging challenges to sustain the attention and interest of subscribers in keeping SINGASTRO alive, relevant, and well. There are increasingly more forums, more literature centres that subscribers can easily tune themselves into for more up-to-date information, participating in active centres of discussion, relevant literature, and pursuing greater information depth. Will our subscribers prefer to google and search for a related astronomy subject or ask the question in our forum? Will our subscribers prefer to buy/sell their astronomy items in our forum or elsewhere where they could reach a larger potential base? Will our subscribers seek our forum for upcoming events, or go to other alternate sources of information? These questions are not intended to give hint to any emergent fallacy in the forum, but it is always good to be constantly aware and keep ourselves to date with what the local (and of recent, even regional) community wants/desire. If we are to continually keep the forum alive and bustling, it has to be a hive of active activities, both in depth of content, ease of gathering information, and a reliable source to depend on (minimal down time, etc).
The first impression of the forum is always important to the first-time subscriber. As the forum matures, and more people come to know of it, it is easy to overlook the fact that complacency of the thought (of always telling ourselves that new subscribers will remain actively subscribing rather than passively) will lead to subscriber boredom and predictability. The former is easy to understand - the first few days (or weeks or even months) of subscription is always an exciting one, as one runs through the threads, curiosity prevailing, a sense of enthusiasm entails, but as time passes, one will eventually see how the forum is really like, and this leads to the second point - predictability. Successful platforms of exchanges (which are miraculously matured!) on the internet always has an element of unpredictability, to keep subscribers interested and to also have them contributing. If nothing happens, the forums will eventually be a mundane search engine of archival information, and the occasional "look and see if there is any upcoming event" should somebody posts. The forum will no longer be THE source of information, and subscribers will tend to look elsewhere, and just come back to their "home" forum for occasional "peaks". Is this what we really want? That the forum is just an auxiliary tool of information that worse still, lead to the lack of stimulus in veteran subscribers (for example) contributing anymore? Thus it is important to find out what keeps both new and veteran subscribers coming back to our forum, and what it takes for this to happen continuously over time.
What captures our attention?
Is it the always changing face of the forum? Are there any substantial contributors present in the forum that keeps it going? Or do subscribers come back to the forum to look for upcoming events? Or do subscribers simply use the forum to buy/sell their wares? Are there reliable articles that can provide the subscribers with their needs, there are unique to elsewhere on the internet? Perhaps unique in the sense that it is tailored specially for our region (for example, equatorial stargazing, doing constructive things beyond the threat of worsening light pollution, etc). Or even perhaps, the forum has an X factor that keeps subscribers constantly glued to it. However, recognizing the X factor(s) takes time and keen observation (though sometimes a bit of intuition helps).
With this, here are some suggestions and they are not listed in order of importance:
1) We all know that as human beings, everyone likes to buy things at bargain prices, or sell away their equipment quickly and with ease. And as time passes, the forum seem to be having an increasingly heavier buy/sell traffic that it might be a good time to think about organizing these buy/sell data effectively. We could follow like what other forums are doing, separate the astronomical buy/sell section to certain types of equipment (for example, Telescopes and Binoculars, Eyepieces, Accessories, Imaging Equipment, etc).
2) The frontal face of the forum needs to be in constant change and dynamism. This greatly helps to maintain a sense of curiosity and wonder not just for the newbies but have the veterans coming back constantly. For example, if there is going to be a new impact scar on Jupiter, the front face should have this information. Or should there be an upcoming big event in Singapore, it should be made obvious. Take www.spaceweather.com for example, even tough it is not a forum, it is an active source for new celestial events because it has an almost voluntarily base of amateur astronomers ever willing to post new information to the website.
3) Being an astronomical forum, it is good to have "live" information embedded, such as the current lunar phase, solar activity, online almanac display/calculator, etc. This helps to give the local subscribers relevance and also enable them to make plans at "first glance" (such as if they noticed from the forum that it is new moon, they will want to take a look at the events section to see if there is any session on, etc).
4) Articles/Reviews should be kept within the forum website. This lessens the chance of information facing unforeseen/unexpected alterations/deletion and makes the forum full and as complete as possible. It is always a challenge having to find contributors writing new articles/reviews all the time, but sometimes whether they are keen to contribute also depends on the health of the forum. If they know there is a large active audience, they will be more inclined to contribute and have their efforts and time spent paid off. This is a win-win situation for both the contributor and the reader.
5) Live chat sessions. Depending on the possibility of the forum hosting package, having an occasional area for special online live discussions would be an interesting activity for active exchange and bonding between subscribers. This could be in the form of for example, if a notable meteor shower is coming, or if an overseas manufacturer has released a new product that is of great/potential interest to the local community, or simply a discussion about an upcoming local event, etc.
6) A calendar of events located within the forum website area for subscribers to have a "one look" live view of what they can expect in the current month or next to come, rather than to sieve through the Events sections for potential events that may or may not happen (due to last minute bad weather, etc). This is not to say that the Events section is passe, but having a calendar further reinforces the Events sections and provide a summary of event data for the month.
7) Updated links and have them better organized, kept up-to-date as well.
8) This is not really important but it helps to keep the forum face interesting - the top banner should reflect upon astronomical current activity happening locally or globally, such as if this is the year of Astronomy, the top banner should reflect this. This helps to keep the forum (again) in relevance, and create a sense of activeness.
There are still many more to list, but the above are just some areas to keep everyone putting on their thinking cap and where possible (at best) actioned upon. I know it takes time and energy and resources to keep the forum alive, but hopefully the above has given triggered an engine start to keep things going towards a brighter future for our beloved forum - SINGASTRO.
Cheers,
Remus