Discussion: Audience Participation

Let's talk about audience participation.  Cyberfunded creativity lives or dies on interaction.  Audience participation is what distinguishes crowdfunding from a plain old store online.  It's part of the fuel that drives creators to produce more goodies.  It's part of the bait that attracts new viewers and donors. 

So how does it work?  How do you get people talking?  There are many types of interaction, including:
* Posting polls
* Calling for prompts
* Inviting viewer opinions or critiques
* Looping inspiration
* Asking the creator about the project
* Listing favorite projects for people to discuss
For more ideas on this topic, see "How to Boost Your Audience."

As a creator, what kind of audience participation do you find most useful in the creative process?  What things entice your audience to respond?  Have you tried anything that you really thought would work, but it just flopped?  Do you like audience cross-chat, or find it distracting?

As a viewer, what makes you lean forward and start typing?  Do you prefer polls, comments, Like/Favorite buttons, or some other particular option?  Do you have more fun talking to creators, or cross-chat with other audience members, or both?

[identity profile] minor-architect.livejournal.com 2011-07-21 02:41 am (UTC)(link)
As a patron, I'm much more inclined to get hooked on a project - and donate to it - if I know there's a chance the creator will talk to me about their work. (An atmosphere conducive to chatting with other audience members is enjoyable, too, because it's fun to bolster other people's ideas. :) I realize that busy creators don't have time to respond to every, "Wow, that was great!" or "I really liked this!" But if my comment has more substance, such as, "Your piece really spoke to me because of this memory I have which reflects what you wrote...and by the way, when are you going to publish something else?" then I have a greater expectation of a response. The more times my questions go unanswered, however, the more likely I am to move on to another project.

[identity profile] the-vulture.livejournal.com 2011-07-21 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
Very much ditto this, especially if there's a possibility that discussion can become collaborative.

Re: Yes...

[identity profile] the-vulture.livejournal.com 2011-07-21 03:10 am (UTC)(link)
It's so weird and wonderful where some of those conversations wander. :)