Forum Moderators: not2easy
I'm trying to figure out what kind of content my target group (15 to 23 years of age) would like.
I was thinking of travel reports from people that are currently in a foreign country. This story could be under constant development and have people come back to my site.
What are your experiences with "to be continued" stories on websites? Will people come back?
Dan
I had a “Hints and New Uses for Widgets” page that I buried because I felt the feed source wasn’t active enough.
News pages should be new news and old news is archive.
My 2 cents worth
jb
I was thinking of other types of content which could attract young people (16-23):
- free short messages to cell phones (=> would cost us a fortune, but would be great advertising)
- using flash animations to present our programs
- using video streaming to present our programs
- using funny texts (without damaging our organization's reputation)
could you think of any other content to attract young people?
Dan
For this age group, moderated message boards are probably one of the best things you can do.
To be continued will only work if you say when it will be continued and stick to it. Seeing "to be continued April 8, 2003" when it is August will reflect upon the quality of your site, even if getting the "continued" part is beyond your control. And some might not return to get the continued part. They can work, but you have to make it work.
I think it could work well but if, AND ONLY IF, you publish a schedule (could be as informal as 'next week') and you stick to it.
If I come back next week and the same content is there - especially if I've given you a few more days to get it updated - then my opinion and my interest will drop significantly if not altogether.
I'd also suggest having a "register for updates" capability and keep it simple and quick. It'll help you capture some visitor details and to communicate when the update is made.
It was suggested to use some kind of message board where people (my target group is between 16 and 23 years old) could interact and sort of chit-chat.
Our organization depends very much on trust. People decide to do "business" (well, we're non-profit anyways...) with us, because they feel that they can trust us. A message board could however severely hurt our reputation.
Imagine if a competitor went to the message board and put some horror stories about our org on the board. This could kill our organization in no time. So could you think of any other ways of interactive content that is not as risky as message boards?
(Well, you could have moderators, but they need to constantly monitor the site. Since most people in our organization are pretty lazy, this is not such a good idea...)
Dan
But, what I would suggest would be to ask for their e-mail address. They give you their e-mail address and you send a notification to tell them when the next installation appears. You can really leverage that e-mail address as far as building a relationship goes.
BTW: Imagine if someone writes horror stories about you on site x and there is no group of loyal customers/fans who hang out on your site to discount the malicious site x post.