Marketing & Strategy Innovation

Social Roles in Web Communities

by on 5 October, 2007 - 13:57

by: Roger Dooley

Every community operator knows that it takes different kinds of participants to be successful. Some people come looking for answers, others come to help. Some like to expound at length, while others say little. Some are lurkers, others are prolific contributors. Researchers from Cornell and Microsoft have produced some interesting research that graphically represents different community roles.

Discussion Person

In Visualizing the Signatures of Social Roles in Online Discussion Groups, researchers Howard T. Welser of Cornell University, Eric Gleave of the University of Washington and Microsoft Research, Danyel Fisher and Marc Smith (both of Microsoft Research) analyzed data from several discussion forums and represented the posting activity of members in graphical form. A column of bubbles represents the posting activity for each day, while the size of the bubbles represents the length of each post. The researchers then categorized members with similar charts into groups, notably “answer people” and “discussion people”. In addition, posts in threads they started themselves appear on a positive axis, while replies in threads started by others were put on the negative axis.

Answer people were readily identifiable due to a lack of thread starts (most activity was below the horizontal axis) and a lot of small bubbles. The behavior of these members was to respond to the questions and comments of others, typically in relatively brief posts. Discussion people, as illustrated above, had a markedly different look: they started threads, and as a result often had as much activity above the line as below; in addition, they had quite a few larger bubbles, indicating that some of their posts were much longer than others.

The researchers also plotted relationships between community members. Answer people tended to have simple, star (or hub and spoke) relationships, indicating quick, one-time interactions with members (many of whom may have been passing through). Discussion people had more dense networks of relationships (see below).Discussion Person NetworkNone of this will be surprising to forum admininstrators, but it is always good to have a reminder that community members fill different and important roles. Many communities are characterized by a constant influx of new participants seeking help (e.g., a technical problem or medical question). Answer people fill an important need by helping these new members quickly and efficiently. Discussion people, meanwhile, are a key part of the glue that holds communities together. Their network of relationships and occasionally lengthy posts engage other members and help bring new arrivals into greater participation.

With the emphasis on Web 2.0 and the growth of social networks as a powerful model for community building, this study reminds us of the different but important roles in online communities and provides us with an interesting way to visualize them.

Original Post:  http://www.rogerd.net/articles/social-roles

Share/Save
 

No comments

Add your comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
Mollom CAPTCHA (play audio CAPTCHA)
Type the characters you see in the picture above; if you can't read them, submit the form and a new image will be generated.

Recent content

  • The Top None /Marketing & Strategy Innovation Blog/ - I'd planned in all sincerity to write an essay about ... http://tinyurl.com/yd9hyt3
    15 hours 54 min ago
  • Don’t Make Social Media Another Silo /Marketing & Strategy Innovation Blog/ - Social Media Week in London ... http://tinyurl.com/ybw5v2n
    16 hours 52 min ago
  • Serious Games for a Better Future - EnerCities out of Beta /Marketing & Strategy Innovation Blog/ http://tinyurl.com/yhw7s4g
    16 hours 52 min ago
  • With every recommendation, promoters put their rep on the line. How do you to make sure they don't regret it? #NPS
    23 hours 37 min ago
  • Nice one! Quaint Media, Online Social Optimization, and Transmedia Narratives http://bit.ly/5zwdkd RT @zenwerewolf: via/ @SloppyUnruh
    2 days 43 min ago

This blog reflects the personal opinions of individual contributors and does not represent the views of Futurelab, Futurelab's clients, or the contributors' respective employers or clients.

Subscribe



Archive