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This link has been bookmarked by 20 people . It was first bookmarked on 24 Jul 2007, by Martin M.

  • 13 Mar 08
  • 27 Jan 08
    aleph28
    Kay Cantwell

    One of the emerging principles of social design is what I call The Del.icio.us Lesson, which can be summarized as “personal value precedes network value”.

    delicious

  • paselibrary
    St Dympna's Library

    One of the emerging principles of social design is what I call The Del.icio.us Lesson, which can be summarized as “personal value precedes network value”.

    delicious

  • 04 Dec 07
  • 22 Nov 07
    drewvigal
    Andrew DeVigal

    "…in a networked world you have to provide immediate, personal value in order to grow from a seed to a tree."

    del.icio.us socialsoftware coldstart socialnetworking

  • 20 Nov 07
  • 11 Sep 07
  • 15 Aug 07
    • Now, it’s one thing to talk about the importance of personal value and how that personal value precedes network value, but just what does the Del.icio.us Lesson mean in practice? That’s what this series of posts is about.


      The first step to putting the Del.icio.us Lesson into practice is asking a simple question that serves as the litmus test.


      Is your system useful to someone even if nobody else uses it?


      When the answer to this question is NO, then you’re ripe to suffer from the Cold-Start Problem.


      The Cold-Start Problem


      The Cold-Start Problem is when you launch your site and nobody uses it. When this happens, you’re probably focusing too much on the social value and not enough on personal value. You’ve made a bet that you can convince the masses to all sign up for your service at once, so that there is suddenly lots of value for everyone, sharing, commenting, and generally supplying user-generated content by the bucketful. I’ve talked to many folks who imagine this state of nirvana, and it rarely, if ever, actually happens.

    • Groupware


      Now, we must distinguish between groupware and software that isn’t built for groups. Groupware is software built for multiple people to use: it isn’t useful unless there is a group using it. This includes social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook, messaging systems such as Twitter, bulletin boards, help systems, collaboration applications, project management software, etc. This software is kind of a middle ground, where the value is communication…the personal value is that you are connected to others. The important thing to notice is that most software isn’t groupware! Most sites aren’t like MySpace and Facebook or even email, even though they might like to be as successful. This doesn’t mean that there aren’t a lot of communication-oriented start-ups…there are. But they are still a very small portion of the total web application universe.

    • 3 more annotations...
  • 09 Aug 07
    wytzekoopal
    Wytze Koopal

    The Cold-Start Problem is when you launch your site and nobody uses it. When this happens, you’re probably focusing too much on the social value and not enough on personal value.

    analysis blog community delicious web20 enterprise2.0 webapps socialsoftware socialnetworking

  • 05 Aug 07
  • 01 Aug 07
    • One of the emerging principles of social design is what I call The Del.icio.us Lesson, which can be summarized as "€œpersonal value precedes network value"
  • 31 Jul 07
  • 26 Jul 07
    themingway
    Tom Hemingway

    interesting discussion about personal value versus network value in social networks; asks "s your system useful to someone even if nobody else uses it?

    community socialnetworking design for:slmader for:jamesfk

  • 25 Jul 07
  • 24 Jul 07
    • The best tools do one thing very well. It nails a certain activity to the wall and really makes it simple and easy. Hammers drive in nails. Del.icio.us saves bookmarks. Netflix sends you movies. Photoshop enables image editing. iTunes plays music, etc. All of these tools actually have other uses, but that’s the 1%. We naturally gravitate toward software with a single purpose because its easier to remember and we know exactly what we’re doing when we’re using it.