Easy, Free, Unique, Relavent. Those are words you want to hear when talking about web site content. If you find yourself spending all of your time updating content on your web site, or are looking for a way to have others do much of the work, you should look into adding a forum to the mix.
A forum, or community section, is an easy way to add useful content to
your web site with very little effort. First of all, let's define what
a forum is. A forum is a place for users to hold discussions on
various topics. It is interactive, in other words users can both read
postings and post items themselves. Let me give you a half fictional
example of a forum in action.
Forum Thread, Subject UFC in Canada on a Mixed Martial Arts site.
[USER1] Has anyone heard that the UFC might be holding an event in
Canada?
[USER2] Yes, I heard that. In fact, I heard that George St Pierre will
be on the card and it will be at the Bell Center.
[USER1] Thank you USER2, I can't wait to get my tickets.
[USER3] Actually, I heard that it's been canceled and George St Pierre
is out with a knee injury.
So, you can see that the web master has gotten some valuable content
with no work on his/her part. The users are able to ask questions and
respond to them. Once the forum is set up initially and you've found a
way to get traffic to your forum, it becomes a perpetual content
machine, generating useful content for your web site and hopefully in
the process some revenue based on some sort of ad or affiliate program,
like Google Adsense or ClickBank.
Lets try out one more example Thread, this time from a software forum
[USER1] I'm trying to find a link to the phpBB web site and can't find
it anywhere, does anyone here know what the URL is?
[USER2] You could try doing a Google search on phpBB. It should be
near the top of the search results.
[USER1] Thanks, USER2, how about a guide on how to install phpBB?
[USER2] Do a search on "Installing PhpBB On GoDaddy", or there is also a
guide included in the package.
[USER1] Thanks again for the help! Once I get my forum up and
running, I'll post the URL here for you to take a look at.
You can see how the interaction works. It's not always question and
answer, a lot of the time, somebody will post some new information they
discovered, or expereinces they've had (like on a travel forum).
There are two driving factors which make forums popular. The first is
what drives the posters/question answerers, this is either fame or
promotion. They either like seeing their name in lights, or they have a
link to their web site in their signature (I allow this on my forums as
long as they are posting useful information).
The driving force for the people reading the forums is the need for
information. Computer forums are extremely popular in this area.
People need help finding drivers, installing software, diagnosing
problems. People want reviews of products one on one, by other users
who don't have a vested interest in what they end up buying. Forums are
an invaluable research tool for these people, and by the way, the ad
links on these pages also turn into information sources for the same
people.
Adding a forum to your web site is also not expensive or difficult. You
have several options in the forum software arena, some of the most
popular are vBulletin an excellent choice where licenses go for $150US
and my personal favorite phpBB which is a free open source product.
When making the decision of paid vs free software, it's always important
to figure out what kind of user you are (experienced vs novice), how
much hand holding you require and of course if the paid version really
any better than the open source alternative.
Support can also be an issue to be considered, with some smaller open
source projects it can be difficult to find help and/or expertise. I
haven't personally used vBulletin, but I have read several reviews and
looked through their support offerings they offer 1 month, 6 months and
12 months of phone support for $60, $180 and $300 respectively.
vBulletin also offers professional installation at $135 per license.
Most forum software, including phpBB and vBulletin, require you to have
PHP and MySQL available on your host. This isn't an issue with most web
hosts such as godaddy, or hostgator.
If you have a little experience in installations and setup, I would
recommend at least giving phpBB a try. Set up a sub directory on your
web site, install it and see how it goes. The installation instructions
are excellent and if you find yourself installing on GoDaddy, do a
search on "Installing PhpBB On GoDaddy", don't forget the quotes. If
you're installing on hostgator, or most others the install instructions
included with phpBB will do just fine. If you still find yourself
having problems, the folks at the phpBB web site (on their forum) are
quite helpful.
There are currently two version of phpBB, 2.0.x which is a stable,
production ready release, and phpBB 3.0 which is still in the beta stage
and is looking good. For now, I would recommend installing 2.x and
look to 3.0 in the near future.
Also, if you need a coupon code for a Godaddy Domain name, you can
look here to find one at
Godaddy Promo
Codes.
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If you'd like to read more about adding a forum to your website, other Open Source Software, or simply find links to some of the products mentioned, visit Open Source Depot. and Open Source Depot Forums. |
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