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So are you the sort of person who comments on blog posts? Rates products on shopping sites?This sort of interaction is a valuable component of social collaboration and building productivity using web 2.0 tools, yet they seem to be slow down from tim...
The level of attention given to comments, and the likelyhood of follow-up should be entirely clear up front. On a publication like the Economist, you're simply getting a platform to have your opinions heard by people with an interest similar to your...
Stori: Allowing anonymity is a slippery slope (particularly within the enterprise). While it does lower the barrier to participation, it also emboldens a lot of bad behavior. By having to sign your name on a post, you provide some sort of journali...
Not to be overly cheeky about this... but what reward helped you overcome the effort to leave this?The reason I ask:1) I like it and it is a nice succinct model for communicating participation and adoption2) I'd love to figure out what part of the ...
While trolling and flame-bait can be amusing to observe, it is rarely productive, so I agree with not including it in your list. Given our goal with ESS is productivity, I hope we don't see much (if any) of that sort of trolling.I agree that the ear...
I think the 1-9-90 observation is pretty well known by now, and it certainly makes sense for Amazon and a lot of public sites, but I'd hope we're going for higher levels of engagement and participation in the enterprise. In a 10,000 employee firm, i...