This long read is a must read gem!
I guess Facebook made us all feel anxious about being the product while using a free community service. Many people don't want to be the product and are ready to dive into the niche communities or digital campfires as @wilsonspeaks puts ithttps://twitter.com/tobyshorin/status/1283498282715684864 …
I think game industry figured what users think is the best balance of free/paid product. And the new gamified @discord monetisation took an inspiration there.
And I think it makes sense.pic.twitter.com/DEP3eXoYVi
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ummm
@discord and/or@Twitch ? Again, I feel this works in gaming community alreadypic.twitter.com/0qnz1YyaUt
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Then again, the deeper I dive into voice-first communities, the more opportunities I see. Opportunities to bring more value to the community members, help the community bond and help create the magic moments that are so hard with asynch nature of fast-typed text from a mobile.
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this is such a good question
@tobyshorin. I would however take "it depends" as an answer for a very basic reason: "interact regularly" very much may not apply to new communities that are just being formed. Unless we want to call young communities something else.pic.twitter.com/Fa4yvm74rQ
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Le chargement semble prendre du temps.
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I have written an essay about the emerging class of paid communities, and how they make it possible to design and run profitable, sustainable social networks