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Usability Highlights, Content and Community

This is a nice article about usability, but what it also brings to light are some content management and authoring ideas. It also reminds us that testing is not so difficult, when you consider the alternatives of trial and error at $120 per hour.

The point that I really want to highlight is the web2.0 interactive community advice.  This dovetails nicely with my earlier reference to the Wired article on the long tail, and niche topics.

Interactive community requires a certain critical mass to make it work, the community.  We’ve all seen it happen so many times before: set up a party, but no guests come to play (other than the spam slammers).

So, is it better to piggy back on the established sites with posts, groups or widgets, or to build your own community resources?

Its a long tail question - is your content attractive enough to claim its place on the long tail and attract its own audience, or is it best posted as a side attraction on an established community where you can go after ‘passing traffic’.

Much the same as a retailer considers a shop in a mall to garner passing traffic, or a streetside location because they know customers will come to them as a destination.

To get a handle on the interest in your topic, try a little social interactive marketing activity across multiple relevant community sites, blogs and forums to sample how much interest there is in your message, and don’t forget that landing page on your site to measure your results.

And remember, it doesn’t matter where or how you build your audience, its about your audience, and the message you get across. Its an evolving process and you’ll have to work it if you want good results.

Blink Interactive: Essays - Usability Highlights: 2008 and Beyond

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To Niche or Not to Niche? Report Challenges Long Tail Theory on P2P Networks

Since the rationalisation of the Magazine Industry, when broad spectrum publications began to be replaced by niche topic publications, the conventional wisdom has been that ever increasing specialisation and topical focus was the way to secure your future in publishing.  Followed up by the audience orientation of different radio talk shows and even television networks, this seemed to prove the conclusion.Now, the  report linked below seems to indicate there is a future for broad-based content, and that niche marketing and communication strategies may not have cornered the market.

In the P2P world of music downloads, it appears the “top 40″ are still the downloads of choice, even though there is so much more niche content available out there.  In P2P, the long tail is pretty stumpy.

Report Challenges Long Tail Theory on P2P Networks | Epicenter | Wired.com

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