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eModeration hits Marketing Monger Podcast

Our friend Tamara over at eModeration was interviewed by Eric at MarketingMonger.com (Eric’s on a quest to interview 1000 marketing people).

The discussion is an interesting insight into the ins and outs of adding content moderation to your community building efforts.

Developing a solid moderation gameplan for any community is not just a good thing to do, it’s an absolute requirement. Without an appropriate, robust moderation plan, the community is almost destined to fail sooner rather than later. This holds true for brand driven communities as well as user driven communities.
Too many people assume that pre-moderation (moderating all content before it ever appears to the public) is the best solution. After all, if the company looks over the content first, what problems could exist? Separate from the issue of users finding ways to trick your moderators once they discover they’re being moderated, there are some immediate risks:

Easy? Not really. Safer? Well, depends on what you mean when you talk about "safe". Sure, there’s a higher chance that porn might slip through. But there’s also a significantly increased failure possibility too. MySpace users change their profiles on average every 72 hours. Imagine if every single bit of content had to be approved before it was displayed. With 100+ million users now, do you think the turnaround time would be acceptable to that audience? How long before MySpace users get tired of waiting around and take off for some other site where things happen faster?

Certainly post-moderation has it’s issues too. If you’re dealing with kids, pre-moderation becomes much more important. But beyond a specific use case that requires pre-moderation, post-moderation offers many more possibilities.

This is a significant issue in the development of any project that directly asks for user input. If you’re not spending time on this issue early and often, your project may well fall flat.

The good news is that with proper planning, it’s not a insurmountable issue.

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