Shawn Duggan wrote...
... A wiki or even structured FAQ's would greatly help reduce the noise ... Whatever the solution, it should be here.
... the Ubuntu Forums - it's an incredibly welcoming and friendly place. They also have dedicated community volunteers that run the forums ... It is an example of forums done right IMO.
... staffing the forums with subject matter experts - taking a lesson from the Ubuntu Forums?
... A forum is only as effective as the community behind it. I think DNN is at a juncture where some investment in the community could go a long way to helping the community continue to grow.
I would like to know how others feel about Shawn Duggan's comments (above, quoted). Is it agreeable that the growth of DNN can be harnessed and driven forward if some willing, aggressive steps were taken to welcome newcomers? Rhetorically (from me): Has DNN's shadow passed and therefore it is not worth the effort now? I do not know the answer to that question. S. Walker has supplied evidence that the number of posts in these forums has grown at a positive, linear rate. In every forum I have ever participated in this generally means that the use of, and interest in, the product is increasing. I wonder what the growth in the rate of downloads of DNN has been?
In any case, as Shawn Duggan says, the forum environment is for CERTAIN only as good as the community behind it. In general, these forums are too technical and the expectations too high (my opinion) for the absolute beginning user. Just think of the number of people each day who purchase shared web hosting plans but who are not technically adept. They reach their host's control panel and find, oh cool, I can have this DotNetNuke thing installed with just one click. So {click} it is. That's a good moment: they are curious about it, they know this DNN thing meets their goals, they want to see results with their experimentation. They start to fiddle, and the find these forums in the same sitting ... so they type up a question for our forums ... and then... {THUD} ... it takes 15 hours before a forum administrator approves their question to even be visible as a thread. Talk about a killjoy maneuver! Under any form of interpretation -- be it psychological, pedagogical, or other -- this sort of non-response is against the desire to continue to learn. I am sure many are lost to DNN in that way. {THUD=door shut}
But to be positive, there are plenty of helpful people here who do take time to answer questions. They could be much more productive under the wiki model. Newcomers can be welcomed more quickly (if not instantly) with a immediate post + wiki solution. (wiki = user-friendly FAQ, etc.)
Anyway, would this help?