toxy2751 wrote:DarkPacMan77 wrote:Cons:
* could lead to much lower member registration numbers if people get aggravated during the sign-up
-DarkPacMan77-
yeah But Think About It...how Many Members Who Have Actually Signed Up Are Commited To Staying Active to The Site?
Well see, that's one of the issues that I've figured into this whole idea. From the current demographic standpoint, there is a pretty hefty number of people, perhaps 70%+ that are registered users but do not post in the forum or even sign into their accounts. The other people that do use their accounts are split between people that come to us for a question or two and then never return and the people that actively participate, albeit weekly, bi-weekly, or even monthly - but still consider themselves to be "active" members, and all of those types are fine with me.
The real underlying question at hand here, and what Puncharger is trying to exploit, is the idea of "bottom-feeders", like he mentions in his post in this thread. He's basically bringing up the point that, [color=red]"well... why exactly are we just having people sign up for no good reason and never posting when we could privatize the forum and ensure that people are coming here for a reason - with a purpose, and registering in order to either A.) be part of our fine community here, or B.) Resolve a tech-related issue".
Now see, that's the kind of thinking I like to see. I agree with that sentiment, but going about how to change our current system is a different story. The current consensus is leaning in strong favor of giving this a test run and having a trial period, which is what I believe would probably be best off the bat as well.
At the end of the day, the
entire point of this effort would be to attract
LESS members but those of which are also
MORE dedicated members. Members who have a
cause and a purpose or are otherwise joining a "private" forum to
seek a more private community in order to get the help that they need, because let's face it folks... we f**king
ROCK when it comes to helping out people. I kept track of how many people we were able to help that asked questions for 2 months some time ago and the results were over 93% for how much we successfully resolved problems. We also have one of the largest outright tutorial sections for PSP, I believe... but then again, last I knew that was fully true was a year ago
I guess the real debate would be whether or not privatizing the forum would really bring those types of "quality-over-quantity" type of members, but perhaps that's exactly why we should do a test run first... hmm. Much for the mighty DPM to ponder in his cave about...
-DarkPacMan77-