Hey fellow Lemmings,
I’ve been thinking about how we measure the liveliness of our communities, and I believe we’re missing the mark with Monthly Active Users (MAU). Here’s why I think Posts + Comments per Month (PCM) would be a superior metric:
Why PCM is Better Than MAU
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Quality over Quantity: MAU counts lurkers equally with active participants. PCM focuses on actual engagement.
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Spam Resistance: Creating multiple accounts to inflate MAU is easy. Generating meaningful posts and comments is harder.
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True Reflection of Activity: A community with 1000 MAU but only 10 posts/comments is less vibrant than one with 100 MAU and 500 posts/comments.
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Encourages Participation: Displaying PCM could motivate users to contribute more actively.
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Easier to Track: No need for complex user tracking. Just count posts and comments.
Implementation Ideas
- Show PCM in the community list alongside subscriber count
- Display PCM in each community’s sidebar
- Use PCM for sorting “hot” communities
What do you think? Should we petition the Lemmy devs to consider implementing this? Let’s discuss!
Isn’t this actually just spam encouragement? A community with a bot that posts 50 low-value posts every day will have a much higher PCM as a result, and that behavior is more obnoxious to users and moderators who have to see it and deal with it, vs. someone creating a bunch of accounts, which is largely invisible to everyone else.
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I mean, isn’t the whole point of this comment section to discuss the merits and flaws of the proposal you’ve made? If we’re not discussing the downsides, too, what’s even the point?
That said, an ideal system would be a measure of the quality of content, not the quantity of content so, as another user has suggested, some measure involving net upvotes might be more effective. Yes, obviously a user can create multiple accounts to upvote everything and fuck with that metric, but I kind of doubt many folks would go to the trouble.
Maybe some combination of PCM and the average number of votes divided by the number of active users could generate some sort of quality metric. At the very least it might be a measure of engagement.
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