Volunteers, and Participation Inequality - 3 comments
I'm on the lookout for volunteer organisers from among Labour bloggers. The target is for, perhaps, a dozen of you to give up some of your free time on a regular basis to develop our network, and boost political blogging (contra this).
What's in it for you...
- Being an active part of an organisation.
- The chance to arrange meet-ups with other bloggers.
- Incentives to succeed: the more effective you are, the more interesting life will be: more social events, better links with the political community where you are, and so on.
- A small symbol of your status is available - from central funds (i.e. my pocket).
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 don't participate very much. Often, they simply lurk in the background.Jakob speculates that this situation could be improved to 80-16-4. Perhaps - it would be great: one advantage of decentralising is that it increases the chances of someone finding that key and passing the knowledge back.
In contrast, a tiny minority of users usually accounts for a disproportionately large amount of the content and other system activity. [...]
User participation often more or less follows a 90-9-1 rule: 90% of users are lurkers [...]; 9% of users contribute from time to time [...]; 1% of users participate a lot and account for most contributions:
My expectations of volunteers...
- You must have a vision in mind of how blogging can help the Labour Party, help society, and make for a healthier political culture.
- You should invest some of your own time, or hand over to someone who will - it's the only way. However, you'll be completely free to say how much time, and when. You'll be your own boss, in other words.
- You should build links with Labour bloggers in your area and make the case for (ethical and thoughtful, ideally) political blogging. You should also encourage party members you know - plus potential members and other supporters, and especially councillors and other elected members - to give blogging a try.
- As social events will help here, you should arrange and promote these (perhaps quarterly), or else add a segment to existing party meetings, perhaps getting together before or after the main feature.
- Our network can do more when we have regular, and decentralised funding: so you should encourage donations.
- You should report on progress using the forum, as and when necessary.
In some ways this is a problem of economics that I'm hoping to solve in a non-financial way, by encouraging "public spiritedness", rather than individualism.
"Territories"...
I would like each organiser to cover a particular region; a county; or perhaps even a city, when Labour bloggers has a strong presence there (e.g. Manchester, Oxford, London, Brighton & Hove, perhaps), and make it their own. I don't think sharing an area would work. Alternatively, a volunteer could take on the role of building links with a Labour (or allied) party from another country (e.g. Australia, Ireland).
In summary, if you're interested in becoming a volunteer organiser, or helping out in other ways, simply get in touch, or post on the forum.
Update (05/04): Nobody at all interested??
Labels: blogging, economics, Labour bloggers, participation, usability, web











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