
Everything posted by Shawn Gossman
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Deal or no Deal: Shawn Gossman
Decline
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Deal or no Deal: Shawn Gossman
3, 6, 7, 10, and 17.
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Do you play the lottery?
I buy a few $20 scratch off tickets after Christmas time. Sometimes I win all the money back I spent on Christmas! If the lottery numbers are into the high millions, I'll buy a ticket or two to test my luck.
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Stuck on a desert island with only 2 items
I would want a knife. I wouldn't want a folded one as they can break too easy. A water filter would be good, too.
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What was the last tv show that you watched?
I LOVE Person of Interest! Another good show - Fringe.
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What’s annoying you today?
It's getting cold out and I hate the cold.
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What are you nostalgic about?
You're bringing back some great members. I miss IRC and running scripts in MSN Chat. Getting on Fight Rooms in Yahoo Chat. I miss Php-Nuke haha
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Hello
Welcome to the community! You picked a great one to join. :)
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What is the creepiest thing to have ever happened to you?
On 9/11/2001, after all civilian aircraft was grounded following the terrorist attacks, I got off the school bus and looked to the sky like everyone else did that day. I saw anywhere from 6 to 10 disk-shaped objects REALLY FAR away in the sky. They were moving erratically but in some sort of weird formation. I won't rule out some sort of surveillance drone cluster but to this day, it gives me chills recalling it.
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Deal or no Deal: Shawn Gossman
13
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Three-Year Forum Strategy for Content, Market, and Profit
Businesses succeed because they introduce strategy into their operations. See, strategy means that you plan for an activity and set goals and objectives. This allows you to conduct your business in a certain way so that you can achieve the goals and objectives you set. With strategy, business activities, and random and based on luck, which is not very effective at the end of the day. We should consider these same strategies without discussion forums. By creating a forum strategy, you’re planning for success instead of being overwhelmed when failure occurs. Many forum owners quit because they have no real direction with their communities. If you make a plan, set goals, and uniformly follow your plan, you’ll start to see great success. My strategy is simple. It’s realistic. It took three years to become a potentially profitable forum. And it goes something like this: [HEADING=1]Year 1: Forum Content[/HEADING] The first year of your forum should be about content. You can advertise and promote it here and there to obtain new membership, but focus on content the most. You might even do some post exchange with other forums to get more content and members. If you can afford to, try buying more posts and membership, as well. Focus on creating the best content for your forum. The best content is on topics that encourage engagement, debate, and answers. You should post controversial topics that often result in many replies. Also, post content that addresses your audience's needs, wants, and pain points. By the end of the first year, your forum should have thousands of topics and replies. [HEADING=1]Year 2: Forum Marketing[/HEADING] The second year is about marketing your forum while also continuing to post new topics. This is where you need a budget and time to do things. You don’t need to be rich to have a forum promotion budget. You do need to be able to invest some time into promoting your forum at this point unless you can afford to hire other people to do it for you. Try to focus your efforts on posting on niche-related communities, social media community development, and paid advertising. Find other forums in your niche and post on them routinely. If you can have signature links, put your forum link on your signature; otherwise put it in your profile. Try to become a beloved member who is helpful and friendly. Try to befriend active members on the forum and eventually invite them to join your forum. Your next mission is to create a social media community. You can do this by consistently posting about your forum and engaging with your audience. Once you start to grow a larger following, it will be easier to convert your social media followers to forum members. And then, you’ll want to move on to paid advertising and have a budget based on what you can afford. Most of your ads should be bought from related forums that use the same software as yours because their members are interested in your topic and they already understand the software. You should also buy ads on social media where your audience is. Try to make sure you have a goal when buying ads so that it makes it worth accomplishing something relevant to your forum. Do these tactics for an entire year while still creating excellent content, and watch your forum bloom! [HEADING=1]Year 3: Forum Profit[/HEADING] The third year is about earning profit with your discussion forum. By this time, you should have the content to back your forum up. You should also have a loyal audience to convert into customers. Now, you’ll just need to offer a product worth paying for. It needs to be something that solves the pain points of your membership. It might be a premium membership with specific features that help members with their biggest problems. Maybe it’s an eBook that addresses their needs, wants, and pain points. Whatever product or service you decide on, make sure that it actually helps members out with something they desperately need help with. By the third year, earning a profit shouldn’t be that difficult on your forum. [HEADING=1]Final Thoughts[/HEADING] Thank you for taking the time to read through my article about having a three-year forum strategy. Some will feel that three years is too long. In reality, it isn’t that long at all. With the saturation online and the number of users, it’s going to take a few years for any forum to get really successful. Just keep at these tactics and you’ll watch your community grow and flourish in no time. If you enjoyed this article, please reply and tell me what you think of it.
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Deal or no Deal: Win big or risk it all!
I'm in :)
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Are smaller communities better than larger online communties?
They can be. I have a Facebook Group with 46K members. Back when I first started it, everyone knew each other. It felt like a tight-knit community. 46K+ members later, it's too big to know everyone there. Conversations are going on that I don't even know about aside from ensuring nothing against the rules is occurring. I've noticed the same with forums. However, we have our cliques and groups that we identify as being part of but often with that comes hesitation of letting others in, which makes large communities hard for newbies.
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Best starter topics on a new forum?
Controversial topics are a good start. Those are the ones that get people emotionally involved.
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What was the last tv show that you watched?
Twilight Zone (series 1) The original series - black and white right now. I've started watching it from the beginning and for it being as old as it is, I don't find it even being a little cheesy. Just a well-written series!
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My name is Khan, new here :)
I think I've talked to you on the vBulletin support forum. Welcome to the forum.
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Do You Like Scary Movies?
I love horror movies. I especially like ones featuring monsters or creatures. Something about monsters just gets me excited to watch it. I don't really like the movies that focus too much on gore.
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Hey!
Welcome to the community :)
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Domains you don't know what to do with?
Yeah, back then I had hundreds of domains as well. I try to keep the list down as much as I can, mainly because I give myself too many web projects and never get the other ones done LOL
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Please recommend me a theme designer
When you do - tell us what you go with! :)
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Creating fake members to jumpstart community: yay or nay?
I agree with that. A test account, sure. I do make those and typically call them "Test User."
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Domains you don't know what to do with?
If you had asked me this back during AAF 1.0, I would have given you quite the list, LOL, and I think there were a few posts about that. unexpected.ly is a good one! Maybe make that into a "The Onion" type satire news :D My list: artbyshawn.com bluffage.com (a word I made up in my hiking gig) disastertopics.com hikefortrash.com inboxbuilders.com listupgrade.com membershipboost.com onlinecommunitymakers.com openthreatreport.com paidcommunity.guide paidcommunuityguide.com (me being old and hesitant about these new fancy domains LOL) propopsintel.com somethinghorrifying.com wildernessfeast.com xenadmins.com That's my whacky list!
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Wordpress VS WP Engine
https://www.searchenginejournal.com/cloudflare-blocks-automattics-wp-engine-tracker-for-phishing/532244/ Interesting update!
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Creating fake members to jumpstart community: yay or nay?
Not fake. I don't think I'd feel right doing the fake thing. But buying posts (as long as it's real people not one person with many names) or post exchanges is fine. I'd much rather people join organically though, And maybe a slow growth until then is a-okay with me :)
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How Active is Your forum’s Staff?
1) Very important. I wouldn't expect them to live on the forum, but I'd hope to see them active daily. 2) Definitely. Onboarding is a big deal. 3) Daily. A few times a day if they can do it. Engage when you visit. 4) Everyone acts as a team :) 5) Not really but I'm interested in that idea :) 6) 9 and that's fine with me :)