1966 Articles match "Participation"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Tuesday, March 16, 2010
New post on KJolt: Beyond lurking - Modes of participation [link] 11:26 PM Mar 1st Selling social media upstairs [link] Via Here is the twelfth twelfth in a new series of posts that provide access to my favorite tweets that contain contain links to useful information. 
 
Monday, March 15, 2010
We learned heaps and the feedback from participants was fantastic. In late February and early March we ran workshops in Melbourne and Sydney with Kevin Bishop from the UK. The workshops focussed on Influencing Change using Stories. Until recently, Kevin was heading the change activities for 60,000 staff at the Royal Bank of Scotland.
 
Monday, March 15, 2010
There are countless issues which lend themselves well to this format, and the combination of high-profile challenges, enthusiastic citizen participation, and meaningful rewards and outcomes all bode well for very innovative activities. We've written previously about the Obama Administration's Open Government Directive . Among other things, the Directive has led to a proliferation of innovative " ideas sites " across the federal agencies.
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Another article from early 2007 about participation rates in online sites ...Tags: Tags: participation online_communit
Tags: participation online_communit Notes on the 90-9-1 Principle ...Tags:
Tags: participation community events onlinelearnin Bev Traynor and John Smith's article about online events, blending online and offline, etc ...Tags:
2006 Participation Inequality in Social Design Jakob Nielsen sAlertbox, October 9, 2006: Participation Inequality: Encouraging More Users to Contribute Summary: In most online communities, 90% of users are lurkers who never contribute, 9% of users contribute a little, and 1% of users account for almost all the action. All large-scale, multi-user communities and online social networks that rely on users to contribute content or build services share one property: most users dont participate very much. use it.com Alertbox Oct. Often, they simply lurk
The Next Web » Why people participate in online communities - The Next Web advertising Apple digg Europe facebook five questions for start-ups funding funny germany google Inspiration iphone marketing Microsoft mmm mobile music myspace russia search social network social networks Start-ups TechCrunch thenextweb2008 twitter united kingdom Video Interview yahoo youtube Home About Advertise Contact Team Archives The Next Web Conference 2009 will take place on April 15, 16 and 17 in Amsterdam.
may cover these posts at a later date, as my post today is more on adoption or participation at the group level. Following on from my post on workshopping and piloting a new community are the adoption factors a facilitator can massage to get participation off the ground. Peer to Peer influence • Sometimes people will only adopt if their close colleagues are participating • Prior to this they have not dedicated the time to investigate, but if This is not a post about social computing deploying/piloting/adoption in general. All these are applicable on many levels
We’re winding down one of our wiki projects, not for lack of participation. Tags: English Gestión del conocimiento Gestión e innovación Herramientas crowdsourcing e-participation idea marketplace Online community participation prediction markets tribalization wikinomic These days I’ve collected an outsized collection of vaguely related links that I wanted to explore in more depth or are noticeworthy for some other reason. Some of them bear keeping after perusal, and some are in English.
How Should I Participat photo credit: AleBonvini Recently, Recently, I was engaged in a conversation on Twitter with someone who couldn’t understand the guidelines that many forums, including mine, have regarding advertising or self promotion. Sue (@SueOnTheWeb) was involved in the conversation, too, as we were both explaining why forums were a tad different from other forms of social media, [...] How
The Pathways through Participation project is “exploring how and why people get involved and stay involved in different forms of participation over the course of their lives”. They have now produced an excellent and wide-ranging literature review covering community development, volunteering, public participation, social movements, everyday politics and ethical consumption. Download from here . ...Tags: Tags: All posts Engagement asides participatio
Back in the summer I worked with Bev Carter reviewing levels of social and civic participation in Milton Keynes. We based our work on the belief that social participation and informal involvement with others in everyday life underpins and is critical for civic participation. Cohesion and stability among existing groups has to precede participative integration into broader civic structures. The report has just been published by Citizens:MK - click on the research tab here . For a small study it's quite a lengthy report, because a lot of stuff came up.