I often browse /all, come across a post that looks interesting but I have no clue what’s it about, so I check the sidebar - and all I find is “An unofficial Lemmy community for X”, " A place to discuss everything about X", or the best kind, “A continuation of r/X from Reddit”.

Can’t people write just some basics? What is that thing, a TV show, a music band, a sports team, a tabletop game? Sometimes I really can’t tell even after looking at a few posts.

Your community may be of interest to someone who stumbles upon it, not only to diehard fans.

I know sometimes that’s the joke, but most times it would be simple to just use a few words. “Discuss X, a Zimbabwean spy-thriller public theatre show.” There we go, now everyone knows what it is.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    201 year ago

    Agreed! I started a community a couple days ago and I also browsed through the descriptions of other communities to get an idea of what we should put in one (I have no experience moderating subreddits or anything like that) and I found that many had little to nothing in the sidebar.

    • Kabe
      link
      English
      12
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      In case this is of any use to you or others, here’s what I’ve found to work well:

      1. Summary of what the community is about
      2. Community rules of conduct
      3. Links to related communities that offer similar content
      4. Some additional info/useful links that are related to the topic.

      Good formatting also makes it look clean and professional.

      Shameless plug: check these out

      [email protected]
      [email protected]

    • @MaxVerstappen
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      Did you have to do anything special to start one? I just tried and I keep getting an error: {“error”:“rate_limit_error”} when I hit create.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        41 year ago

        It was actually easy to create it (I’m on lemm.ee instance) the hard part is I think just being able to maintain engagement.