Welcoming committee: Difference between revisions
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== How do we word our welcomes? == | == How do we word our welcomes? == | ||
It's best to keep our welcoming messages personal, so we don't sound like bots. People aren't used to being quickly welcomed by real people, and there has been some confusion as to if we friendly folks are bots or not. We can alleviate this by keeping our welcoming messages as friendly as possible. | |||
* Try to make your welcome message relevant to their interests (i.e. | * Try to make your welcome message relevant to their interests (i.e. "Hey, fellow #art fanatic!" or, "Cool, I dig #android development as well!") | ||
* Keep the welcoming | * Keep the welcoming "fresh". By this, we mean switching up the welcoming message. Maybe to one user, we might say "Welcome to Diaspora, {name}!", and to another, we might say "Hey there {name}! Great to see another friendly face on Diaspora!" | ||
* If someone | * If someone doesn't seem to have the wording "…and I am interested in {tags}", suggest that they follow some tags, noting that those tags will appear in their stream. (The hashtags populated in a newcomer's #NewHere message includes the tags that they are following.) | ||
== Are you #NewHere ... == | |||
... and just need some help? see [[FAQ for Users]] | |||
[[Category:Community]] | [[Category:Community]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:44, 15 October 2018
Community is a huge part of the Diaspora project, and we can show this by welcoming all new-comers on any installation by simply saying a friendly welcome to their #NewHere posts. This document will serve as some guidelines, as set forth by the community, on how best to welcome a new user on Diaspora*.
How do we word our welcomes?
It's best to keep our welcoming messages personal, so we don't sound like bots. People aren't used to being quickly welcomed by real people, and there has been some confusion as to if we friendly folks are bots or not. We can alleviate this by keeping our welcoming messages as friendly as possible.
- Try to make your welcome message relevant to their interests (i.e. "Hey, fellow #art fanatic!" or, "Cool, I dig #android development as well!")
- Keep the welcoming "fresh". By this, we mean switching up the welcoming message. Maybe to one user, we might say "Welcome to Diaspora, {name}!", and to another, we might say "Hey there {name}! Great to see another friendly face on Diaspora!"
- If someone doesn't seem to have the wording "…and I am interested in {tags}", suggest that they follow some tags, noting that those tags will appear in their stream. (The hashtags populated in a newcomer's #NewHere message includes the tags that they are following.)
Are you #NewHere ...
... and just need some help? see FAQ for Users