DZone
Thanks for visiting DZone today,
Edit Profile
  • Manage Email Subscriptions
  • How to Post to DZone
  • Article Submission Guidelines
Sign Out View Profile
  • Post an Article
  • Manage My Drafts
Over 2 million developers have joined DZone.
Log In / Join
Refcards Trend Reports
Events Video Library
Refcards
Trend Reports

Events

View Events Video Library

Zones

Culture and Methodologies Agile Career Development Methodologies Team Management
Data Engineering AI/ML Big Data Data Databases IoT
Software Design and Architecture Cloud Architecture Containers Integration Microservices Performance Security
Coding Frameworks Java JavaScript Languages Tools
Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks
Culture and Methodologies
Agile Career Development Methodologies Team Management
Data Engineering
AI/ML Big Data Data Databases IoT
Software Design and Architecture
Cloud Architecture Containers Integration Microservices Performance Security
Coding
Frameworks Java JavaScript Languages Tools
Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance
Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks

Curious about the future of data-driven systems? Join our Data Engineering roundtable and learn how to build scalable data platforms.

Data Engineering: The industry has come a long way from organizing unstructured data to adopting today's modern data pipelines. See how.

Threat Detection: Learn core practices for managing security risks and vulnerabilities in your organization — don't regret those threats!

Managing API integrations: Assess your use case and needs — plus learn patterns for the design, build, and maintenance of your integrations.

Related

  • Data-Driven Decision-Making in Product Management: The Key to Success
  • Monolithic First
  • 8 Must-Have Project Reports You Can Use Today
  • 4 Essential Strategies for Enhancing Your Application Security Posture

Trending

  • Digitalization of Airport and Airlines With IoT and Data Streaming Using Kafka and Flink
  • Building Scalable AI-Driven Microservices With Kubernetes and Kafka
  • Real-Time Data Streaming on Cloud Platforms: Leveraging Cloud Features for Real-Time Insights
  • Using Oracle Database 23AI for Generative AI RAG Implementation: Part 1

5 Reasons Why People Create New Content Online

By 
Adi Gaskell user avatar
Adi Gaskell
·
Jun. 23, 15 · Interview
Likes (0)
Comment
Save
Tweet
Share
1.2K Views

Join the DZone community and get the full member experience.

Join For Free

In the online community world there’s a well used heuristic that says how for every 100 members of a community, 1 will post unique content, 9 will comment on existing content, and 90 will be passive consumers.

As heuristics go, it has proved relatively durable, and there is a clear motivation for community owners to attract as many of the content creators as possible.

A recent study explores some of the motivations behind unique content creation, and may therefore help community managers in their quest.

They have identified five core motivators behind the creation of fresh content, whether that’s a blog post, a video, song or the numerous other types of online content.  Those five factors are:

  1. entertainment
  2. self-expression
  3. social-belonging
  4. communication
  5. social-cognition

The five motivators were derived via the theory of uses and gratifications, together with the theory of reasoned action.  These were used to better understand content creation and how we perceive such acts of creativity.

The authors suggest that the five motivators behind online content creation are similar to those found in those who passively consume content online.  The difference primarily lies in the area of social-cognition.

This underlines our desire to share information or insights, voice our opinions online or participate in discussions.

“The findings of this study would help future studies to build a more comprehensive theoretical model, which will allow scholars to understand the factors influencing consumers’ creating behavior of social media content,” the team concludes.

To further muddy the waters, a study from earlier this year found that the easier we make it to create content online, the less likely people are to do so.

They use an analogy of a market, with creators of content making the investment in the hope that they will attract customers (or readers).

Unlike a business however, individual content creators often aren’t seeking financial reward but rather the status that comes from being heard.

The larger the social network, the greater the effort required to reach people, and the authors believe it doesn’t take a huge drop-off in the ‘reward’ they receive to see the effort taken to produce content as not worthwhile.

This increase in size tends to result in content that is less tailored, and therefore often less relevant to the receiver.

This then often sees creators deciding that the pay-off is no longer worthwhile, whilst potential creators can be put off by the size of the market.  This, the researchers believe, explains why so much content is created by so few users.

Original post

Creator (software) POST (HTTP) Heuristic (computer science) Factor (programming language) Receiver (information theory) teams Clear (Unix) Media (communication)

Opinions expressed by DZone contributors are their own.

Related

  • Data-Driven Decision-Making in Product Management: The Key to Success
  • Monolithic First
  • 8 Must-Have Project Reports You Can Use Today
  • 4 Essential Strategies for Enhancing Your Application Security Posture

Partner Resources


Comments

The likes didn't load as expected. Please refresh the page and try again.

ABOUT US

  • About DZone
  • Support and feedback
  • Community research
  • Sitemap

ADVERTISE

  • Advertise with DZone

CONTRIBUTE ON DZONE

  • Article Submission Guidelines
  • Become a Contributor
  • Core Program
  • Visit the Writers' Zone

LEGAL

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

CONTACT US

  • 3343 Perimeter Hill Drive
  • Suite 100
  • Nashville, TN 37211
  • support@dzone.com

Let's be friends: