Are We Designing for Community Completely Wrong?
Over the past few days, I’ve had the pleasure of carrying on conversations with a few of the forward-thinkers in our industry about community.Russ Unger and I spent some time thinking about the currency of comments. How valuable comments are now to organizations. Bad one, good ones; they all come with a value.
Later this weekend I received a thank-you note from the delightfully dynamic Whitney Hess for a comment I posted on her blog last week. First, writing that note is a fantastic idea that goes right to the heart of writing: to create an ongoing dialogue with your readers.
In the note, she asked if I had any further thoughts on facilitating the dialogue.And that’s when the thought struck: if creating dialogue and valuing comments are paramount in this age of the social Web, why don’t we give them more importance in the design of social sites? Are current Web conventions completely upside down?In conventional blog format, there is an object that presents a linear view. That can be a blog post, a video on YouTube or Current TV, a home page on FaceBook. The creator of that object is trying to inspire the audience to react and contribute.
Ultimately, if we’re really honest about not wanting to be up on our soapbox first, and getting comments second, we should design for that. Right? A comment posted on a blog entry should appear right under the headline. The reaction section of YouTube should appear above the video. Amazon reviews should be directly under the product information.
When you start to think of the practical application though, things start to look wrong. Doesn’t a reader come to that page looking for the content they came for? Are they really looking for the community, or are they looking for an object or insight they can take back to their own peers?
Whitney suggested some kind of AJAX-y intervention to create a compromise. Which got me to think that one good answer may be to allow readers to highlight text and add comments inline, like you might do with a PDF or word document. And this is a very intriguing concept.
Whatever that next step is, I believe it’s time to start experimenting.Microblogging, social networking and other new technologies aren’t necessarily about today at all. It seems that now we’re trying to understand what’s possible as a foundation to the ubiquitous computing that will take place over the next decade. Where will the creative class fit in the micro-interactions of an utterly connected world?
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