this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2023
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sh.itjust.works Main Community

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Home of the sh.itjust.works instance.

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founded 2 years ago
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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Barbarian to c/main
 

Imma preface this by saying that I'm not an admin or mod here, these are just my thoughts & advice on the matter.

You've noticed that a community doesn't exist on Lemmy. I'm going to assume you've checked the community browser, and seen that that specific community doesn't exist. So, you've gone to communities, typed in the name, and are about to hit create.

Well, hold up a second. There's an INSANE amount of community spam going on in lemmy.ml, and it looks like it's starting here to a much lesser degree.

Some questions you should ask:

  1. Are you creating this community just to create it? By that I mean, are you willing to put in the work as the moderator if it does take off?

  2. Is it a niche community of a larger subset that has a thriving community or a completely new category?

  3. Are you willing to regularly post stuff to start seeding comments & advertise it in the relevant places?

If the answer to any of these is no, get your cursor off that create button and go join the bigger communities. It just makes it harder to find communities that aren't 100% dead when half of them are dead-ends created just because 'they exist on Reddit'. Once there are enough people are visiting [email protected], they spill over into [email protected] if they want more focused TTRPG stuff. Once there are enough people on [email protected], they'll spill over to my Shadowrun group. Lots of communities are fractal in nature, and people are skipping a few steps. The userbase needs time to grow and mature.

Please think before you make a community.

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[–] manifex 6 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I agree. I limited myself to creating one community. I'll stick to it and see if it grows.

[–] Barbarian 5 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Your one definitely ticks all the boxes :)

  1. You're actively moderating
  2. Techy stuff is really big on Lemmy already, I guess mainly because first movers to an open source platform under heavy development is a techy thing to do. Networking is absolutely a great niche within that category
  3. You're actively posting there and trying to build it
[–] manifex 5 points 2 years ago

Awww, thanks. I ran r/Trackballs and r/PDXKBC... The keyboard club happened away from keyboard prior to creating it... I inherited Trackballs from the one and only Ripster55. I believe he has since passed away. I've already passed PDXKBC on and will do so with Trackballs today.