I know we have been kicking around related pieces of this question since we started this Ning group in September. Sue Waters raises some great points in her post
Ownership and Online Communities about how challenging it is to keep communities like Ning going when there is a perception of one person owning it. I've been an administrator on this network since the beginning, and while I have been doing things in the background and trying to actively participate, I certainly have let Michele be front and center. So now she has said she wants the community to own the Ning, so I am coming forward. But I don't want it to shift to a perception of Michele and Christine owning it either. I'd love it if there was a larger group of active members who wanted to share the administration. What do you think? Would that help us all feel we own this space?
Michele also wrote a great post today,
Egocentric vs. Object Centric Networks: I Think I Know the Problem .... She talks about how ego-centric communities like Facebook and Linkedin that center around individuals struggle with the issue of ownership in contrast to object-centered ones like Flickr and Youtube which center around sharing content.
This made a lot of sense to me. I still don't have a clue what I am supposed to do on Facebook, and while I get Linkedin a bit more, I don't actually use it for much. To me these places put me back in junior high school where I felt awkward all the time and imagined that everybody else was getting something I wasn't. If only I belonged to the right group or had enough friends. So the last thing I want to do is create the Ning equivalent!
This group came out of a common focus on making our blogs better, and I do think that is still a worthy common goal. Now we just need to collectively figure out how to adjust what we are doing to better serve the community at large. And that includes weathering the ups and downs of people's lives getting too busy to participate from time to time.
Simon and I have been talking about doing blog reviews for each other. I think it's an idea worth trying. So perhaps we can spend December figuring out the logistics of how it could work and collecting volunteers who want suggestions for their blogs. Then we can be ready to try it in January? What do you think? Would this shift the focus of the group back to our common interest in better blogging?
Would you feel invested? If not, is there anything that would help you feel more a part of this Ning group?