Comment by Clover_Jane on 26/06/2024 at 11:07 UTC

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View submission: ModChat - What's on your mind?

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Idrk what your community topic is, but you may want to check to make sure there's not an already established subreddit that's thriving before you start a new one. If there is, maybe reach out to that sub and see if you can be a part of it or do a collab.

Aside from that, my thoughts on moderating are below.

Modding is a team effort. Even while your community is small, bring on mods and try to bring on more than you need. The reason being, you will find mods who agree to mod, and you can take the time to train them, but they'll fade off quickly. There's more chance others will pick up the slack if you bring on more at the same time. Set expectations for what you would like the subreddit to be about with your mods (as well as the community) and delegate tasks if you can. Like the wiki or automod. Sometimes too many people working a task can make a mess of things, so just having set people do those things is better/easier imo.

When you're in the initial community building stage, take time to comment or reply to people as often as you can. Reddit has a lot of lurkers, and you ideally want those people to be comfortable enough to become participants. My subs don't allow any hostility towards others whatsoever. People know my main sub is helpful because even now, I still take time to respond to members with helpful responses and I'm never rude or mean, so the community in turn sees that and are nice to each other Of course, we'll have the occasional person being a jerk, but it's not the norm.

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There's nothing here!