Perhaps a double-edged sword, cutting both ways if one must be registered in order to search… which might open the flood gates (as with digido.com) where “more” is not necessarily better?
"But it seems that the vast majority of Facebook groupies prefer to participate in messy, SHORT, non-threaded discussions. The usual FB group "thread" is not really a thread, it's disorganized and cannot be maintained with more than a few cycles of back and forth before they become useless!"
Sure, overall member number count might increase - BUT you might also end up gaining more “noise-to-signal” ratio postings.
i.e.
“Why won’t my printer work?”
“How can I get louder sound out of my computer.”
“You like Beyonce’? I like Beyonce’.”
And other possibly mundane silliness. I’d say let ‘em continue to search and then if they really have a serious concern, question or comment - THEN let ‘em register to then explore the collective knowledge base or actually, seriously become a part of it. But that’s just my opinion… hoping not to endure similar problems encountered by digido.com (or at least to circumvent such things for as long as absolutely possible).
As it is now, and as it has been for quite a long, long time… many will register, ask their questions and even occasionally offer some insights or even otherwise positive contributions and then simply fade away.
"The "network effect" dictates that you need a critical mass of the right members for a forum to be useful.
If you have too few, nobody shows up regularly and questions go unanswered for weeks.
OTOH, more growth means an influx of basically clueless people.
First, they ask tons of elementary and repetitive questions, answerable by reading the FAQ, the first chapter of any audio engineering text, or a two-minute web search.
Then they start answering questions, often wrongly, and arguing when the pros correct them. It's Dunning-Kruger Effect writ large!
Ultimately, the pros get driven away and the forum's signal-to-noise ratio falls into the toilet."
I really like this Bob Katz guy.
Of the current (nearly 13,500) members here, how many are actually active and contributing?
I’m still a big fan of our old LIKE button - but don’t want this turning into frikken abysmal Facebook.
Don’t destroy the invaluable reference that this site has grown to be... and yet still remains.