Forum Moderators: phranque
I am also thinking about adding a forum where users can exchange information related to topic. Finally I am wondering about opening up a community forum where people can talk about whatever they want.
I will probably be using phpBB.
Here is the question, will opening up forums that are beyond the scope of support/help/CS greatly increase the amount of board mgmt (moderation and technical) and increase the bandwidth both to the point where the good community love aspect outweighs the cost of running those forums?
Our site will be attracting a big youth crowd into blogs, site building, and the like.
Can anyone share their experience in this area? I am looking for sites where the boards are auxiliary to the main purpose of the site, not the sole focus.
If you merely offer but don't push the community forums above the other ones, they shouldn't add that much more to the board's management or bandwidth. I've seen a number of forums modeled similar to WebmasterWorld where most are focused on the pertinent topics with a much smaller number for off-topic discussions. If you do something similar, I think the community ones won't become overly popular to the point of overwhelming your site yet still benefit from the added stickiness.
I have a 'random chat' forum running alongside my 'real' ones - it accounts for 2.5 per cent of all posts - not very much at all.
Roddy
I agree entirely with Blue Sky and Roddy, when your membership increases, people get to know other people and find other common interests which are not related to the topic of your website, but they'd like to discuss nonetheless.
Something like Foo on here, or a general off-topic forum, is a good idea. We have one, it's very busy and it brings people back to the site. It's worth having.
TJ
And (using PHPbb anyway) creating a new forum (or ten) is incredibly simple - and if you are worried about size or bandwidth setting it to prune itself regularly should help.
Roddy