Title: PowerPointpresentatie
1Lurkers in Online Communities
2- Main Source
- Tim Pickles
- tpickles_at_sift.co.uk
- Sift Best Practice Director
3Lurkers?
- 1980s BBS gt accessed by a single phone line gt
expectation everybody contributes - Dictionary
- lying in wait, often with malicious intent.
- Users which stay inactive
- Lurkers gt viewed negatively might be barred
from access by the sysop - Various synonyms gt
- Salmon browser
- McDonald legitimate peripheral participant
- Williams ROPs -Read Only Participants
- Lee vicarious learner
- asynchronous groups have lurking rates around 75
4Lurkers definitions
- No messages sent during a three month period
(Nonnecke, 2000) - regular visits to the community but reticence or
very seldom posting (Rafaeli et al) - a persistent but silent audience (Rafaeli et
al) - members who had never posted in a community at
any time. (Nonnecke et al) - one who posts occasionally or not at all but is
known to read the groups postings regularly
(Jargon Dictionary in Nonnecke Preece) - someone initially reluctant to commit themselves
fully to public participation in conferencing
(Salmon) - peripheral participation, done until a topic of
interest is spotted (Whittaker in Rafaeli) - In common gt Level of participation
5Lurkers vs active members
- Preece
- two groups very similar
- lurking was not higher among a particular age
group, sex, education level or dependent on
employment status. - posters and lurkers go online for similar reasons
- to improve their understanding of a topic
- both value privacy and security.
- Characterises of a lurker? (Katz)
- are less hostile than posters
- are more tolerant to open discussion
- are technically sophisticated
- are uncomfortable with language that demonstrates
disrespect and/or hostility - feel alone in their opinions and feel isolated.
6Communities as icebergs
There is far more to OC than users/managers can
see
7Leaders
Lieutenantsregularly active
Leavers
Libellers Trolls etc
Lobbyists Self-promotion
Loners, potential OC audience
Learners
Lurkers
8Numbers of
Community members
Support required (no big attention for lurkers)
Lurkers
Learners
Leaders
Lieutenants
Level of involvement
9Why participation is important
- Within commercial sites, community members
account for one-third of all users, but
two-thirds of all transactions - Active posters make nine times as many visits to
a website as passive users - Active contributors are twice as loyal to a site
as all other users - Source McKinsey and Co, 2001
10Paretos Rule
- A rule-of-thumb about where to focus management
priorities . - 80 of business comes from 20 of the customers
- 80 of satisfaction derives from 20 of the tasks
- 80 of the problems arise from 20 of the people
- but does Paretos Rule apply online ?
- Does 80 of participation come from 20 of
members?
11Active members
Passive members
Gaming Communities Learning communities Self-hel
p communities Professional communities Commerce
communities
12Why lurkers lurk
- Just reading/browsing is enough (57.0)
- Still learning about the group (29.7)
- Shy about posting (28.3)
- Nothing to offer (22.8)
- No requirements to post (21.5)
- Others respond the way I would (18.7)
- Want to remain anonymous (15.1)
- Had no intention to post to this group (13.2)
- Of no value to me (11.0)
- Not enough time to post ( 9.1)
- Do not know how to post to this group ( 7.8)
- Poor quality of messages or group ( 7.8)
- Wrong group for me ( 7.3)
- Long delay in response to postings ( 6.8)
- Concern about aggressive or hostile responses (
5.9) - There are too many messages already ( 4.6)
- If I post, I am making a commitment ( 4.1)
- Group treats members badly ( 1.4)
- My work does not allow posting ( 1.4)
13Lurkers
- Need time to familiarise themselves with the
community - Dont want to be noticed too quickly
- Want to check the rules and procedures before
committing themselves publicly - Are not doing any harm to anyone else
- Dont want to be made to do anything
- Are typical of the vast majority of real-world
communities in that they dont want to stand out - Provide a substantial body of support to the
community, without requiring any effort from the
organisers
14Techniques for managing Lurkers
- Must be gaining some benefit if they return to
the community - Are not causing any harm to anyone else
- Need support in finding their own way in, when
theyre ready - Give them easy signposts
- Create anonymous posting facilities
- Dont require any significant effort to maintain
their lurking presence
15Moving lurkers to posters
- There is no magic answer to engage all lurkers
you will need to develop a repertoire of
strategies drawing on your intuition and
improvising as required - The facilitator must model the behaviour
- It is critical that the facilitator accesses the
site frequently to motivate the participants. The
lurker will not be motivated to access the site
frequently if the information is not changing. - Lurkers are not publicly asking questions BUT
want detailed answers - Provide clear expectations of participants
- a set of clear norms and standards for sharing
information - Display a clear statement of purpose for the
group and articulate the communitys goals - Avoid wrong expectations
- Include a privacy statement up-front.
16Moving lurkers to posters
- Provide technology induction.
- Non-technically sophisticated communities may be
more affected those facilitators need to
understand the capabilities of both their
audiences and the community tools chosen for the
community - Create a special welcome area
- members could be encouraged to take on the role
of the greeter - Offer mentoring partnerships
- lurkers are gradually introduced to the group
through a mentor and small group activities - Pay special attention to acknowledging and
responding to new members promptly - avoid answering all the questions.
- Lecture vs conversation
17Moving lurkers to posters
- seed discussion
- Start stimulate
- Avoid situations where participants disengage
because of the growing complexity of the
discussions. - Personal information pages
- may encourage newcomers to feel connection to
the group - Ice-breakers
- Eg who are you where are you from?
- create opportunities for newcomers to join
conversations - introducing them to a buddy or asking specific
questions in an area where they may hold
expertise - Ask participants personally to engage in seeking
information, summarising discussions and other
self-directed activities.
18Moving Lurkers to posters
- Dominant contributors need to be managed
- Thanks XXX , that is a very valuable
contribution. Now, what do others think? - using tracking tools can identify lurkers
- send individual messages to lurkers encouraging
them to contribute - Running a contest
- rewarding quality contributions
- the determination of a quality contribution may
be open to interpretation
19Learners
- Members who are starting to become engaged
- People making their very first contribution or
posting - Wary of making a mistake
- Afraid of being recognised
- Worried about behaving inappropriately
- Learners need it to be easy to make that first
posting or contribution - Learners need to feel that its safe to
contribute - Learners need to be able to make mistakes without
criticism
20Leaders
Lieutenantsregularly active
Leavers
Libellers Trolls etc
Lobbyists Self-promotion
Loners, potential OC audience
Learners
Lurkers
21Techniques for managing Learners
- Capture all new members through basic
Registration - Welcome each new member personally (using
automated acknowledgement) - Send a series of Welcome Tips to new members
- Create a well-signed New Users Guide to the
community - Set up a forum specifically for new members to
introduce themselves - Set up a forum for member test postings only
- Appoint a forum co-ordinator responsible for
greeting new members - Create anonymous postings area or forums
- Create simple anonymous voting scales on issues,
22Lieutenants
- Members becoming more regularly involved in the
community - People who are recommending the community to
colleagues - Supporters of the community and its aims
- Users who are finding real benefit from the
community - Lieutenants are developing loyalty to the
community - Lieutenants require re-assurance that they have
made the right choice - Lieutenants are the advocates and leaders of the
future
23Techniques for managing Lieutenants
- Give them public recognition and acknowledgement
e.g. in newswires and stories - Give them on-page credits with links and photos
- Invite them to meet the team events or to focus
group sessions - Develop an informal pool of topic experts
- Build a database of members to contact for
comments and reactions to stories - Ask them for testimonials and case studies
regarding their use of the community - Seek to identify their motive e.g. recognition,
kudos, publicity, status, expertise - Look out for Lieutenants with leadership
capabilities
24Beware Lobbyists and Libellers
- Both lobbyists and libellers are time-consuming
distractions. - Lobbyists are motivated by self-interest not
community-interest they use the community to
promote themselves - Libellers are motivated by criticism of others,
not contribution to community they use the
community to attack others - A key role of Lieutenants is to act as a
peer-check on Lobbyists and Libellers
25Leaders
- Voluntary or fee-paid members undertaking
specific responsibilities within the community - Regular contributors of articles, opinion pieces,
reviews, etc. - Moderators of forums
- Co-ordinators of (online or offline) events
- Potential staff members
- Leaders want to contribute for fun, not
obligation - Leaders are motivated by some form of recognition
26Techniques for managing Leaders
- Seek to identify specific areas of interest e.g.
topics, issues, functions - Create appropriate honorary positions e.g.
reviews editor, forum convenor, Scotland
correspondent - Develop perks for Leaders reduced subscription,
access to closed areas, job titles, tickets to
events, review materials
27- Remember Paretos Rule only a minority of
members will become seriously active - Focus your energy on supporting and recognising
the active members - The active members will be the most likely people
to draw draw in the passive ones - You cant influence the iceberg whilst standing
on its surface, but you can monitor its progress
from above - Spend time developing a helicopter view of your
community