- Work it into the conversation when you're talking to people elsewhere (I don't mod any communities but am interested in seeing them grow and this has been the #1 successful tactic)
- Don't be weird about mentioning it in general. For example, why does this post not say what your community is or have a link for people to follow?
- Don't just post links that people can click on, think "huh" and then move on. Post questions or other interactive things to draw out lurkers.
- Team up with mods of related communities to maintain a list of "neighbours" that you all pin to make it easy for your users to find more stuff they're interested in.
- Make sure to respond to anyone who does happen to wander in and leave a post or comment, don't leave them hanging
- Advertise it on your other social media since presumably you're hanging around people with the same interests
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Thank you, these are excellent tips! Btw here is the community: https://programming.dev/c/auai ([email protected]) - I didn't want to mention it because I didn't want my post to sound like cheap self-promotion, but I guess I'm a bit too shy in this regard.
The icon and the cover image are terrible, I'm planning to replace them later.
Thank you for your advice! I‘m trying to built a bass-related community over at [email protected]. So if you’re reading this and moderate a music related Community, hit me up so we can cross link our Communities and work together!
Good luck! If you've got seen it yet, lemmyverse.net is a newer better interface for searching communities so you might be able to use that to find some likely candidates to reach out to.
Didn‘t know about lemmyverse yet, appreciate the tip! Already found some communities I‘ll get in contact with, thanks
Constant work. Such online communities have an exponential growth pattern. So you probably have a certain amount of time after which you double.
This is obviously very apparent when you have 10k subs, and on the next day it is 10,1k. But when you are at 10 subs it can take days for the next to arrive.
Just go on posting and the thing will start to take off. If you stop, or other active members stop the community might die.
So what is your community and where is it? Advertise it, please. 😊
I think it just takes time. I’m also posting to a community that currently has 7 subscribers (and I think that includes me, haha) but I enjoy posting there since I care about the topic. Growth will come naturally, but I mostly care about exchanging ideas and just general conversation with other fans.
You need to get at least one user on another instance to sub to your community manually. Before you do that, you will only be discoverable by users on the local instance. Once you get that first user, posts in your community will start appearing in "all" on that other instance.
After you get a sub from some other instance, regular posting will help users find you by just seeing posts from your community on their instance, and they can easily click the community name and sub to it.
Aside from this fediverse-specific quirk, @[email protected] already posted some good tips.
Excuse me but may I ask why posts of my community don't show up on other instances? I made accounts on other instances to manually search it myself, it is discoverable on those instances. However new posts are not.
Edit: Nvm it starts showing up now
I would say look to other areas that might have some overlap in interest and point them in your direction.
Be patient and keep going. Promote it in the comments of other posts (when the context allows it. For exaple someone says: "I really like X". That's when you reply "hey! I have a community about x! [email protected]")
Make it easy to subscribe if someone is browsing from a different instance. For example, the link to the new communities sub Lemmy, I think if you leave off the protocol (https://) I could browse it via my instance and actually click the subscribe button.