Being Part Of Groups
There are many different ways to have fun and socialize on the internet. One of the most fulfilling things that you can do is join one of the many social groups that exist.
What is an internet social group? These are a whole bunch of people who share their experiences, thoughts and beliefs over the internet. Usually they are united by a common theme or cause (or many causes). Sometimes these themes are as simple as "friendship" or "internet addiction", but they can also be united by a desire to recruit Christians, deliver a message or protest a wrong.
Some examples of groups are Random Acts Of Kindness, Misker's Denizens, Garden of Friendship and Hearts Of Gold. Other groups include Kindred Spirits, Inner Dreams, Web Addicts, Net Dudes and so on.
Generally, a group is started by one or a small group of "founders". The founders lay out the rules and create a basic website, then recruit charter members, who then recruit additional members. Ideally, what you wind up with is a focused, motivated group who performs the duties and tasks required for group membership.
Being
part of an internet
social group means
more than just
putting a link
or we bring fragment
on a web site.
It means more
than joining an
E-group list and
reading the messages
that people send.
And it certainly
means more than
a nice looking
graphics.
Each
group has a set
of bylaws (rules
and regulations)
and most have
a creed, which
is the mission
statement describing
what the group
is supposed to
accomplish. For
example, Random
Acts Of Kindness
exists to do exactly
what the name
implies: deliver
acts of kindness
to people. This
could consist
of guest book
signings, articles,
giving stationery
or gifts, or any
number of other
small, thoughtful
things to do.
Usually
a group has committees
and you have the
option of joining
one or more. Being
in a committee
has more responsibilities
than just being
a member. For
example, if you
are on the Welcoming
Committee, you
will be expected
to sign new members
guest books with
welcome messages,
or if you are
on the newsletter
committee you
will be writing
articles and contributing
materials.
The main point of all of this is to get people to be active in one way or another to the group. It's fine and dandy to have a thousand members, but if only ten of them are actually doing anything ... it's really not a very useful thing.
Presumably
you join a group
for a reason.
Perhaps you like
the people, you
want someone to
communicate with
or you like signing
guest books. Perhaps
you want to contribute
to the causes
that the group
supports.
Well,
then please contribute.
This is actually
very important
to the survival
of a group. People
need to put in
effort. They will
find that effort
magnified many
times. That's
the beauty of
these groups!
If everyone does
just a little
bit every day
or once a week
or whatever, then
it's magnified
by the number
of people in the
group. You get
each person in
a hundred member
group to sign
one guest book
per day randomly,
that's 100 guest
books
per day, or over
36,500 per year!
That's a lot of
guest books!
That's the idea. Figure out how you can contribute, then do so. Personally, I've joined half a dozen of these groups. I write an article a day and send it to each of them. Why? Because I can help a number of people that I like with their common internet questions and concerns. I can contribute in a very positive way.
Other
people choose
to contribute
differently. Let's
say you are on
the graphics committee,
then contribute
a couple of graphics
a week at least.
On the welcoming
committee? Sign
a dozen guest
books each Saturday.
Just a plain old
member and not
on any committees?
Then pick something
that the group
needs, perhaps
a different thing
each week, and
contribute it.
Don't
have the time
to do anything?
Then I have a
tough question
for you - why
are you a member
of the group?
I mean, why join
something that
you don't want
to give anything
to? Take a look
at it - even if
you can only do
ten minutes of
something per
week - you can
at least sign
a guest book or
two. Just visit
one site of a
group member per
week, look it
over, and sign
their guest book
with a short,
nice comment.
That alone will
help brighten
someone's day!
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