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	<title>My Online Forums</title>
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		<title>Online Forums</title>
		<link>http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forums/</link>
		<comments>http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forums/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 02:16:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[Online forums: Our list Links listed above contain various types of online forums listed and categorized for your convenience and ease of use. With our great selection of forums to choose from your bound to settle for one you would &#8230; <a href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forums/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Online forums: Our list</h3>
<p>Links listed above contain various types of online forums listed and categorized for your convenience and ease of use. With our great selection of forums to choose from your bound to settle for one you would want to join. Simply choose from  a relevant category above to browse forums and their discussions.</p>
<h3>Online forums: What are they?</h3>
<p>An online forum is basically the equivalent of a dynamic real-time worldwide bulletin board, or simply put an Internet discussion. Online you can find hundreds if not thousands of forums from automotive repair to animal cruelty. These bulletin boards are run by server-side applications on web servers. Online forums, Internet forums and message boards are simply known as “Forums” online (on the Internet). Attract individuals with common interests looking at being part of topical discussions, forums promoting a general sense of community online.</p>
<p>See also: <a title="Software and technology behind online forums" href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_software/">Software and technology of online forums</a>.</p>
<h3>Online forums: Becoming a member, joining and participating</h3>
<p>Becoming a forum member or active participant is generally free and a very easy set up process. It&#8217;s good practice to research (have a play with) a forum before considering taking up membership or participating. There are numerous reasons why you should also do this, below we’ve listed several questions (with reasons) which you should ask yourself prior to making any commitments.</p>
<p><strong>Would I use this forum?</strong> It’s most likely a waste of time and probably not worth signing up if you don’t intend on becoming an active participant, unless the forum is fairly specific to a subject like the “Ford Forums”, which you may occasionally visit to discuss and ponder problems you’re experiencing with your car. It’s usually best practice to find a forum you’re comfortable with that suits your interests and personality, that way you can slowly build a reputation among it&#8217;s peers known as &#8220;users&#8221;.</p>
<p><strong>Does the content interest me?</strong> Examine the forums’ content and structure, navigating through several pages taking the layout and user friendliness into account and ask yourself whether it’s right for you. Due to the amount of forums online, the key to finding quality forums is to look for ones diverse enough or specific enough to satisfy your needs and wants. You should always have a set of requirements or prerequisites in mind. Prior to joining make sure you take a deep long look into each forum to check whether it’s full of junk (such as spammers, unanswered questions or bad/inappropriate answers), checking times and dates of posts and replies, this is to get a better understanding of how busy and popular the forum is.</p>
<p><strong>What’s my reason for joining this forum?</strong> Always have a reason, or better yet a purpose for joining a particular online forum, otherwise signing up will be a waste of your time. You should never join forums to spam or promote your products and/or services, that is unless you’re willing to build a good reputation with people first.</p>
<h3>Online forums: The purpose they serve</h3>
<p>Because forums serve so many people in so many ways they were destined to be on the net. Generally Internet users join online forums to increase their sense of community online while also troubleshooting problems and receiving great feedback from a community with similar interests and personalities. Internet users also join for reasons of anonymity and privacy, because not everyone feels comfortable discussing matters face to face with known colleges and associates; it’s a good idea to get opinions outside your social group.</p>
<p>See Also: <a title="Common features of online forums" href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/common_features_of_online_forums/">Common features of online forums</a>.</p>
<h3>Online forums: Who runs them</h3>
<p>Besides actually running the forum, the truth is a forum is actually run by it&#8217;s users. Without users like you coming across countless problems daily, forums would surely cease to exist and die.</p>
<p>There are several roles and responsibilities to running successful online forums. More popular forums change over time improving basic design and user friendliness. A forums&#8217; functionality is the webmaster/s sole responsibility, these people are Internet gurus who have years of experience in building websites; graphic designers are sometimes employed to make changes to the design although this rarely happens. Most forums online never change in design or functionality, these are mostly third party software forums created and sold as a template. Moderators play a huge part in popular online forums moderating posts and comments making the content more relevant and Spam free.</p>
<p>See also: <a title="Rules and guidelines of online forums" href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_rules_guidelines/">Rules and guidelines of online forums</a>, <a href="/managing_online_forums_101_tips_strategies/">101 tips for managing online forums</a>.</p>
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		<title>Software and Technology Behind Online Forums</title>
		<link>http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_software/</link>
		<comments>http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_software/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2009 02:36:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myonlineforums.com/?p=26</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Due to the overall high popularity and huge success of the idea of online forums many people have or desire to create them. The extreme structure and programming complexity of online forum software has lead programmers to create template installations; &#8230; <a href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_software/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Due to the overall high popularity and huge success of the idea of online forums many people have or desire to create them. The extreme structure and programming complexity of online forum software has lead programmers to create template installations; usually sold under annual licenses.  High quality custom online forums exist also, these required being built from scratch and generally owned by the larger companies or corporations such as Adobe or Microsoft.</p>
<h3>Structure of an online forum</h3>
<p>All online Internet forums fundamentally possess a common structure. The actual forums back-end is run from a web server created in various coding languages. Forum software applications each have and are directly linked to a database, which stores and outputs data being posted and updated pretty much instantly.</p>
<h3>Template software</h3>
<p>Popular and reasonable quality online template forum software is usually sold under license by programming companies such as vBulletin. The template application comes as a user friendly installation; having being installed and hosted on a web-server. Unless an installation service is ordered as part of the initial sale the forum software will require installation by the site administrator; requiring access to a database and common knowledge of how to set up online applications. The administrators later access an admin area within these applications via username and password, here they many further customize their forums. Template themes determine the look and feel of the forum; these are easily changeable by the webmaster sometimes taking under 30 seconds to completely transforming a forums layout and style.<br />
For newbie web gurus and web enthusiasts it would surely be advised to go with a template installation as they are mostly open source and have great support.</p>
<h3>Installing online forum software: Requirements</h3>
<p>When someone wishes to install their forum themselves they require at least a little basic knowledge of web servers; otherwise a custom installation will be required by the software vendor providing the online forum software.<br />
Forum software applications are installed on either IIS (Microsoft Internet Information Services) or Linux servers. These may be either shared (much cheaper but used by many) or a dedicated server (fast but more expensive).</p>
<h3>Modifying and customizing forum software</h3>
<p>It&#8217;s recommended that forum administrators understand web servers and have minor knowledge of the scripting language running their forum. This has been recommended due to required modifications at a later date, such as adding email accounts, making minor changes to the template, running database queries or making minor adjustments to code such as cascading style sheets (CSS). For newbie webmasters and Internet gurus, choosing forum software which is open-source enables them great flexibility and further options to later improve and update their forum; like installing plug-ins or add-ons, themes and security fixes and patches or simply random updates. The only and most appealing advantage of open-source software is your being backed up and working with a broad community who also use the same software. Now while being free to make and share modifications, your free to interact, work on and easily tackle slight problems within these open-source communities.</p>
<h3>Forum software: Programming languages &amp; difficulty of customization</h3>
<p>Be careful when choosing the language of your software script as this is crucial if you wish to later customize the forum. For dummies we’d recommend installing PHP online forum software which usually integrates a MySQL database. These two work well together and are very common web components, being open source technology and again having one of the easiest learning curve.</p>
<h3>Recommended software</h3>
<p>Choosing the right solution for you is critical, it’s advised you do a little research prior to diving into any sort of installations, running or indexing your demo software installations with search engines. If you are new to forums in general try looking for some demos from software vendors who provide them and make comments on usability and friendliness of each aspect especially when accessing the online forums administrative features. If you’ve run into a great piece of software which looks rather attractive but their creators haven’t provide an online demo, you could always try installing this yourself on your home computers web server called a localhost such as XXAMP.</p>
<p>For a while there have been several third party open source software vendors integrating simple programming languages, the main two favourites being vBulletin and phpBB. vBulletin and phpBB both have online demos of  their forum software so you may visit their websites to take a little peak on what the back end of a forum looks like. The back end may seem very confusing at first but it does take some time getting used to and is rather simple with some practice.</p>
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		<title>Common Features of Online Forums</title>
		<link>http://www.myonlineforums.com/common_features_of_online_forums/</link>
		<comments>http://www.myonlineforums.com/common_features_of_online_forums/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2009 02:31:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myonlineforums.com/?p=22</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[All online forums as a default element require users the ability to start posts, threads and submit replies. Over the years the fundamental forums design and its functionality hasn’t changed much. In this article we will explain the common design &#8230; <a href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/common_features_of_online_forums/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p>All online forums as a default element require users the  ability to start posts, threads and submit replies. Over the years the  fundamental forums design and its functionality hasn’t changed much. In  this article we will explain the common design features of most Internet  forums.</p>
<h3>Posts &amp; Threads</h3>
<p>A thread is a grouping of posts for discussions among the forums  members. Besides locked threads, posts may be started by all members and  all members may reply to posts. Sometimes forums enable file  attachments as part of posts, with a file extension and size upload  limit.</p>
<h3>Registration</h3>
<p>All forums require it’s users to register prior to being able to  submit threads, post replies and sometimes even use their search  function. The majority of forums also request that you sign their terms  of service agreement before being able to register, not literally off  course, you just need to tick the selectbox asking if you read and agree  to the forums terms of service. Typically the most basic information  requested of you comprises of these a username a chosen password and  email, although many forums ask you for your address, phone number and  country of origin.</p>
<p>As far as joining or membership fees go: The overwhelming majority of  forums don’t have joining fees as such bar a few, we don’t mention them  here (perhaps later).</p>
<h3>Polls</h3>
<p>Forums with added poll functionality enable users to vote on polls  and if enabled post their own polls or add them in with their posts.</p>
<h3>Emoticons</h3>
<p>When writing up your post many forums contain HTML editors built into  these pages, you can use this editor to add facial symbols or graphics  commonly known as smiley’s. Smiley’s can be inserted using a drop down  menu within the toolbar.</p>
<h3>HTML Editors</h3>
<p>A large number of forums enable users the ability to implement HTML  code within their post to allow for things like formatting and linking  using the typical <a> </a> tags.</p>
<h3>Moderators</h3>
<p>Spam many times over the last few years has been the cause of forums  demise. With witty programmers and hackers creating auto spamming  software it’s sometimes able to completely cripple a forum and make  users leave and never return. For this reason as every day users,  moderators have been introduced into the forum structure. Moderators  have the power to remove threads and even users sometimes from the  forum; for reasons like spamming the forum and being a troll.</p>
<h3>Members area</h3>
<p>Users may edit and manage their personal forum profile at any time,  having the ability to create signatures and edit personal preferences.  Most forums have email notifications and private messaging between users  as added functionality built into the software.</p>
<h3>Administrators Area</h3>
<p>The administration area usually referred to as the ‘back end’ is  accessed by administrators for the purpose of administering the forum  and configuring its fundamentals.</p>
</div>
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		<title>Rules and Guidelines of Online Forums</title>
		<link>http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_rules_guidelines/</link>
		<comments>http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_rules_guidelines/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2009 02:28:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myonlineforums.com/?p=20</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Towards the end of the registration or account creation process, most forums ask their users to verify that they’ve read and agree to the terms &#38; conditions set by the forum. Forum rules example Registration to this forum is free! &#8230; <a href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/online_forum_rules_guidelines/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p>Towards the end of the registration or account creation  process, most forums ask their users to verify that they’ve read and  agree to the terms &amp; conditions set by the forum.</p>
<h3>Forum rules example</h3>
<p>Registration to this forum is free! We do insist that you abide by  the rules and policies detailed below. If you agree to the terms, please  check the ‘I agree’ checkbox and press the ‘Register’ button below. If  you would like to cancel the registration, click here to return to the  forums index.</p>
<p>Although the administrators and moderators of this forum – This forum  will attempt to keep all objectionable messages off this forum, it is  impossible for us to review all messages. All messages do not express  the views of the author, and the owners of this forum – These forums,  nor will Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. (developers of vBulletin) be held  responsible for the content of any message.</p>
<p>By agreeing to these rules, you warrant that you will not post any  messages that are obscene, vulgar, sexually-oriented, hateful,  threatening, or otherwise violative of any laws.</p>
<p>The owners of this forum reserve the right to remove, edit, move or  close any thread for any reason.</p>
<h3>Forums: Ethics &amp; etiquette</h3>
<p>Not all forum members have genuine intentions of abiding by the forum  rules and policies, most Internet users have unfortunately been  desensitized from reading terms &amp; conditions or such content in  general, because more times than not the terms are too long and become  too technical; and because of this some first timers have no ethics or  etiquette and end up being booted from their first forum quickly indeed.<br />
Experienced forum users take pleasure and time to actively contribute to  their posts and replies and constantly thank and praise real genuine  active reputable participants. One type of people disliked like spammers  have been nicknamed “Trolls” on forums. Trolls post completely useless  content in hopes of starting emotional discussions among other members;  people look down on users who may be spamming the forum or are simply  wasting others time. Well prepared forums have useful links besides each  post enabling users to report particular members or violations of posts  or replies.</p>
<p>Being positive, kind and courteous is what really means being a forum  member. You can’t walk out in the middle of the mall and start yelling  what you’re selling because no-one would listen to you, unfortunately  some people just think they can get away with it on the Internet.</p>
<h3>Being banned from a forum</h3>
<p>Once banned from a forum for violating it’s terms of use, you will  not be able to sign up and register again with the same email address or  username and sometimes your IP (Internet Protocol) address (this is a  number identifies your connection/computer on the Internet) may be put  on a temporary ban list which can last several months.</p>
<h3>Infamous forum spammers</h3>
<p>Forums have been designed with safeguards, and in such a way to help  identify spammers rather quickly. Spammers come to forums to promote  their products and websites often times forcing administrators to  disable forum features such as follow links (making them nofollow links  so search engines don’t give that site love), closing threads, deleting  threads and sometimes even closing down the forum altogether; because  when forums aren’t looked after or moderated, they turn elsewhere in  search of a better solutions.</p>
<h3>Being sanctioned</h3>
<p>When forum violators are brought into question, administrators  sometimes have ways of sanctioning or punishing these people. Not being  able to submit a post or reply for a given time is one such form of  punishment, removing your signature many be another; this all depends on  the functionality of your forum.</p>
</div>
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		<title>Managing Online Forums: 101 Tips &amp; Strategies</title>
		<link>http://www.myonlineforums.com/managing_online_forums_101_tips_strategies/</link>
		<comments>http://www.myonlineforums.com/managing_online_forums_101_tips_strategies/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 May 2004 04:54:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.myonlineforums.com/?p=176</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Where to Start 1. Choose a specific area to focus on and your target audience. It may be for local discussions, car lovers, business, advertising or whatever you’re interested in. It’s impossible to advertise to everybody, so you need to &#8230; <a href="http://www.myonlineforums.com/managing_online_forums_101_tips_strategies/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Where to Start</h3>
<p>1.	Choose a specific area to focus on and your target audience. It may be for local discussions, car lovers, business, advertising or whatever you’re interested in. It’s impossible to advertise to everybody, so you need to narrow down your audience.<br />
2.	Determine where your online forum will be located. Will it be part of your website or on a separate domain? Once the decision is made and acted upon, it’s extremely difficult to change.<br />
3.	Decide on hosting. Are you going to host your own forum or use a remote forum host? Compare the features and the restrictions and limits. Hosting your own forum gives you more interface options. Free forum hosts generally fill your forum with advertising, which can be removed for a fee.<br />
4.	Research the available forum software. Compare the features and pricing. There are many options with varied features available. Some popular forum software providers include Vbulletin, PHPBB, simplemachines.org<br />
5.	Try to work out everything you want in terms of the interface and functionality from the start and stick with it. Of course you will want to update features from time to time but continually making changes so members have to relearn the posting process will just frustrate them.<br />
6.	Work out what forums (categories) you’re going to have but keep the number proportional. If you’re just starting out, you don’t want 20 empty forums. Just start with say five and add more as your community grows.<br />
7.	Start the forum topics yourself by posting relevant key questions and providing quality answers under different aliases. You can actually hire help for this but not many owners prefer this option. Don’t think this is deceiving your audience. There is no other way to start the conversations because not many people ever want to be the first from fear of looking like a fool. Remember not to respond to your answers too quickly.</p>
<h3>Conversations &amp; Arguments</h3>
<p>8.	Allow members to express their opinions and arguments. There’s nothing worse than cutting someone off in their tracks, as long as the rules are followed. Remember, arguments spark interest, so let them develop.<br />
9.	Don’t delete a member’s post just because you disagree with their opinion.<br />
10.	Create an administrator account and a general user account. Use your general alias to post like any other member. Not many users feel comfortable debating with an administrator or moderator, even if you ask them to.<br />
11.	Allow users to opt in to be emailed responses to their posts. This reminds them of your existence, keeps them interested and invites further response.<br />
12.	Keep your signal to noise ratio low. This means cutting the amount of false, superfluous data whilst nourishing useful information and conversation. This is done by setting down rules and enforcing them through moderating. It makes the forum more user- friendly and relevant.<br />
13.	Prohibit personal attacks. They not only aggravate the victim, tolerating this behavior makes online forums seem unprofessional and unfriendly.<br />
14.	Don’t allow arguments unrelated to your forum topic. You may like to place topics such as religion or sport in their own separate categories. This way people who wish to avoid them can.<br />
15.	Don’t permit members to libel, slander or otherwise accuse others without substantiation.</p>
<p>16.	Don’t allow members to continue arguments just by repeating the same thing over and over.</p>
<h3>Making friends</h3>
<p>17.	Members like to be valued and to feel part of a community. The best way to show you care is to be part of that community. Make yourself known and add to the conversation.<br />
18.	Have a new member introduction area. Rather than newbies just contributing to a certain topic, they can feel part of a community straight away by either introducing themselves or simply saying hi in the new members area. It’s a great ice breaker.<br />
19.	Be honest with your members. If you made a mistake which affected their use of the forum, let them know and apologize. This way you’ll build a good rapport with your users – they support you, you support them.<br />
20.	Be friendly and respectful towards your members. They do appreciate feeling valued.<br />
21.	Remember to value your members. Without them, your forum wouldn’t exist.<br />
22.	Don’t surprise your members, always let them know in advance before you make changes or add features.<br />
23.	Don’t exploit your users by selling their personal information. That is the ultimate betrayal.<br />
24.	Allow users to contribute at their own pace. Of course, providing incentives for valuable contributions is absolutely fine.<br />
25.	Learn from the members. If they complain about you or your forum, look at it objectively. Take it in your role, not personally. They may have a valid point.<br />
26.	Avoid siding with a member against others. You’re role is to be impartial.<br />
27.	Treat everyone as equals – never be biased. You might dislike a member, but pushing their buttons won’t do you any favors, especially when they leave and complain about you on other discussion sites. Apply the rules equally, even if your mother breaks them.</p>
<h3>Moderators</h3>
<p>28.	Moderating a forum can be a huge task, especially when the community starts growing. It can become too big a task for a single owner to handle alone. If you’re being stretched, don’t be afraid to seek outside help for moderating the forum. Many moderators work voluntarily so you don’t need to be out of pocket.<br />
29.	Ask current members if they are willing to act as moderators for a topic they’ve been contributing to and are knowledgeable about. It can even be a few minutes per day.<br />
30.	When selecting moderators, treat the process as if you were hiring an employee. Ask yourself, are they appropriate for the topic? Are they interested in the forum theme? Do they have problems with attitude or authority?<br />
31.	Allocate different moderators for each discussion.<br />
32.	Keep the number of moderators proportional to your community. You don’t need 10 moderators if you only have 20 members.<br />
33.	Set down clear rules and guidelines for your moderators. They need to know exactly what’s expected of them. When can they intervene, edit or delete a post or even ban a member?<br />
34.	Let moderators start new topics to keep discussions fresh.<br />
35.	Don’t let mods delete a member or post, even if it does breach the rules. First, mods should give the member an opportunity to rectify their actions. This keeps relationships between members and moderators civil.<br />
36.	If the mod must take action, they should send the member a message to notify them of the action and give reasoning. Members can break the rules by accident without even knowing.<br />
37.	Don’t let moderators act like they’re above the members. Sure there’s a hierarchy that must be followed, but the more members are aware of it, the less enticing it is to join and contribute. Moderators should be friendly and not draconian.<br />
38.	Let the mods know they’re help or work is appreciated. A mere ‘thank you’ provides incentive to work on your community and to do it well.<br />
39.	If a moderator is difficult to deal with, constantly breaches rules or puts his or her interests above the forum, just get rid of them.</p>
<h3>Your expectations about Online Forums</h3>
<p>40.	Don’t start a forum for money – you will be disappointed, well, definitely at the start. Things may improve, but many just hope to cover their operating costs.<br />
41.	Don’t simply assume members are going to keep starting and maintain conversation. Many forum owners find posts may fizzle out one week and then regenerate the next. Continual flow of posts and conversation doesn’t just happen naturally. Your input will be needed from time to time and it may take years to generate a self-sufficient community. If you keep strong, it will happen for you.<br />
42.	Make sure you enjoy the topic. Without any other incentive, you may find it hard to keep motivated.<br />
43.	Don’t think your members are going to come flooding in as soon as the doors open.<br />
44.	Don’t expect members not to be annoyed by advertising. Whilst some advertising is expected, it shouldn’t disrupt the usability.<br />
45.	Don’t just copy categories from other related forums. People often join communities to find something unique and fresh.<br />
46.	Be flexible. You might think you’ve created the ultimate forum, but you never know how users are going to react to certain policies or features. Be prepared to make changes and adapt your community to suit members’ needs and wants.<br />
47.	You will be harassed and criticized, especially after banning a member. Not everyone is nice and not everyone will have the same opinions and good intentions for your community. at times, you will need to be tough for the good of your online community.<br />
48.	Don’t compare your forum statistics to others. Every community is unique and the number of visits, page views or forum members doesn’t mean one is more successful than the other. Statistics won’t reveal community sentiment. They can’t show how many of those posts are quality and worthwhile or how many members are real contributors rather than spammers.</p>
<h3>Invigorate Your Forum</h3>
<p>49.	Regularly start new threads and contribute to topics. Don’t wait for the conversation to dry up before contributing.<br />
50.	Spark interest by posting something controversial. It gets people fired up and chatting. Just don’t be defamatory or racist.<br />
51.	Use polls to keep interest in topics.<br />
52.	Run small competitions and quizzes.<br />
53.	Encourage valuable contributions and contributors with prizes or awards. For example, “contributor of the month”.<br />
54.	Make sure questions are answered. Post quality answers yourself either as administrator or under different names. People appreciate good advice no matter who it comes from.<br />
55.	Ask members for feedback to determine what policies and features they like / dislike.<br />
56.	Keep the content fresh. If members don’t see new and interesting things, they will move on to other communities.<br />
57.	Post a calendar of events to entice return visits to scheduled events.<br />
58.	Run guest interviews. Interview an expert, a friend, even your family members and post the results.<br />
59.	Remove unpopular topics. They are poisonous to a thriving community.<br />
60.	Don’t try to invigorate the forum by changing the interface. If members have to keep figuring out how to respond to posts, they will get annoyed.<br />
61.	You can change colors from time to time just to keep things interesting, but don’t alter functionality too often.</p>
<h3>Use Spam tools and mods for Online Forums</h3>
<p>62.	Set up email verification to weed out most of the spammers (they never click on the validation link).<br />
63.	Block open proxy registrants – registration requests from open proxy servers are usually malicious.<br />
64.	Use Captcha, image verification or textual confirmation (TC) to require humans to retype what’s shown in the distorted image. Other computers can’t read what’s in the image, thereby blocking automated requests.<br />
65.	Allow members to report spam and trolls.<br />
66.	Filters – block users via IP, URL or domain name. Use the swear filter to reject any keyword you specify.<br />
67.	Set up additional required member profile fields which spambots won’t have. For example “reasons for joining?”<br />
68.	Use cryptographic signing. This ensures posts come from the appropriate form, which was generated specifically for that user and that a certain amount of time (like 5 seconds) has elapsed before the form is submitted. This disables automated posting from bots.<br />
69.	Hide the signature fields at registration. Any applicant who fills out the hidden fields (ie: spambots) will be rejected. You can also activate IP banning so their IP is automatically blocked.<br />
70.	Use flood control to restrict the number of posts a user can create within a specific period of time.<br />
71.	Regularly undertake mass pruning to delete inactive accounts. Make sure you specify conditions as to which accounts are to be deleted and notify your members prior to pruning.<br />
72.	Link rejectors – asks visitors or guests to remove links from their posts prior to posting. This also eliminates automated posts.<br />
73.	Use an external blacklist to reject registrant applications containing details within their blacklist. These blacklists generally contain thousands of IPs, names and email addresses.<br />
74.	Create a spam sub forum and hide it from genuine members.<br />
75.	Many suggest disallowing links in signatures. However, using the above tools will get rid of the majority of spammers and spambots. Some people only look for forums to contribute to if they can be rewarded with that signature link. By disallowing it, you risk losing some potential contributors.</p>
<h3>Software etc.</h3>
<p>76.	Make sure your server capacity can handle an influx of visitors. If you become mentioned or noticed for some reason, you want those visitors to actually sign up and log in.<br />
77.	Before adding a new mod, hack or feature, back up everything and record the process. Remember that some hacks and customizations may not be compatible with software upgrades.<br />
78.	Keep your software and security patches current.<br />
79.	Backup regularly. If your forum software doesn’t offer backup features, use PHPMyAdmin for your SQL database.</p>
<h3>Forum Rules</h3>
<p>80.	Due to the large amounts of spammers and trolls, you will need a set of forum rules. This way, your members can know what to expect and what’s appropriate on your forum.<br />
81.	Think of every possible situation that could go wrong and based on this, jot down a list of issues which need to be addressed in your forum rules. For example, what happens if a member breaches a rule for the first time, the second time etc. In what circumstances will you delete/suspend a member immediately and without warning?<br />
82.	 Take a look at similar discussion sites to get more ideas for your rules and policies.<br />
83.	Change the policies and rules as your community develops – they are not set in stone.<br />
84.	Don’t make the rules too draconian. Your rules should also entice visitors to join. For instance you should allow links inside posts, users to promote their business and to post commercial messages in their signature.</p>
<h3>Promoting Your Forum</h3>
<p>85.	Announce a grand opening on your website.<br />
86.	Send your friends a short email to inform them of your new project.<br />
87.	Add a link to your forum anywhere you can, including your email signature, your website, your Facebook or Twitter profile.<br />
88.	Link to a poll on the forum from your website.<br />
89.	Put a “hot topics” section on your website linking to the forum.<br />
90.	add a link to the forum from your contact page and your email signature stating “want an immediate answer? Post to our forum”.<br />
91.	Build traffic gradually. Even if you could get thousands of people to your new site at once, you wouldn’t want that. You need to test your community and weed out the problems. It wouldn’t be very enticing for members to return to a new forum which was filled with bugs, had limited content and crashed due to overloaded traffic.<br />
92.	Make your forum fun and interesting to start with. There’s no use directing people to a boring empty discussion site. See Reinvigorate Your Forum above for ideas.<br />
93.	Don’t pay for advertising until you have some rich and valuable content. Visitors will just leave, making your advertising expenses superfluous.<br />
94.	Contribute to other forums with a link to yours on your profile or signature.<br />
95.	Never use spam to promote your online community; it’s a guaranteed reputation killer.<br />
96.	Don’t join online forums just to drop your link. Using the “what do you think of my site” post is a really bad idea. At best, you will be called a troll by the other members.<br />
97.	Find other communities with like interests and ask to exchange links.<br />
98.	Add constructive comments to blogs related to your niche. Don’t just drop links, actually contribute. After contributing to a blog a few times, contact the blogger. Introduce yourself and establish dialog. Ask them what they think of your site and see if they would like to interview you or for you to write a guest post for their blog.<br />
99.	Use twitter and post useful updates. Don’t just re-tweet all the time. Actually share your opinion, link to some interesting forum posts and give useful tips and advice. Use twitter appropriately, people generally don’t want to know what you’re having for breakfast.<br />
100.	Set up RSS alerts to keep informed about conversations relating your forum and specific topics that you cover. This way, you can comment as soon as a conversation starts.<br />
101. If your forum is very specific, try adding some general community elements such as newsworthy events and interesting facts relating to your industry. Something that will appeal to the lowest common denominator.</p>
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