Community In The Digital Age - Using Content To Bring The World Together
The world of content and content generation has been forever altered. This is for many reasons, from the growth of the digital world to the new standards of business associated with it (such as a click based business model). Not only that, but there is an ever-growing need for improved speed and scale. Data Hunters discusses the new paradigm of content and communities.
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 5, 2022 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Presided over by technology platforms and Big Tech in general, the world of content has favored platforms over producers (for the most part), reduced the primacy of the author/artist, and endured a crisis of confidence. Indeed, in a world in which everyone can legitimately "author" or "create," we have democratization on the one hand but destruction of the burden of authorship and editorial integrity on the other. With the economic model brought about by Big Tech platforms and a pathological insistence on "free," talented content producers have found themselves unemployed, unloved, and otherwise reduced to "production machines."
We could go on forever about the mechanics of content production in a largely digital world or the effects of this paradigm on quality and depth of content, but we'll save that analysis for a different piece. Instead, here, we want to introduce the notion of "community" into the content discussion in the hopes that we might find a better place for readers, authors, publishers, and the sponsors that often fund them.
Digital content is an abstraction that brings four parties together: Readers/Users, Authors/Artists, Publishers/Platforms, and Sponsors/Funders. Ideally, the content produced is meant to help with customer transactions and decisions, whatever and however grandiose those decisions might be.
We'll stipulate that this is the model that will continue to prevail despite a variety of recent attempts to semi-disrupt it. The question is: What are the benefits of digital to these four parties?
We've established that digital comes with a set of demerits, as explained. But what are the merits? Certainly, the factors of speed and scale loom large here. To be able to publish content semi-instantaneously and, theoretically at least, to be able to scale to millions with a fairly low amount of energy and time expended- that is the main promise of digital. What we call "quick rev" is the next large merit- digital allows us the ability to amend, edit, or revolve content quickly. Some argue that democratization is a key index of the digital era. We are unsure of this claim given its theoretical potency, but practical failure (yes, anyone can be an instant author, but distribution is still difficult without money and access.)
Debates continue, and each person has the right to an opinion. That said, there is little debate about the importance of one aspect of the digital content world: Community. While communities have existed as long as people have and community formations- guilds, associations, study groups and so on- are not specific to the digital world, the speed, scale, and interconnectivity possible today is unheralded. The "constancy" of digital content, and the ability to quickly connect it to other relevant content, allow us to build "affinity linkages" with relative ease. Thus digital content is a gateway to community, which then activates a content generation machine. Not all the content is useful, but nuggets of gold are often found.
In the B2B data world, communities of peers are the single most important influencer in purchase decisions. In the B2C arena, communities create influence and opinion- in areas as far flung as real estate or fashion. Traversing both of these, community is ultimately the "killer app" of digital content.
Along with other digital communities, data communities play a crucial role in bringing down barriers by providing use cases, datasets and professional opinions from data experts all in one place. Find useful data and learn how to use the data you have. Whether you are a data leader, involved in data analytics, or a decision maker needing to show growth, the DataHunters community is here to help you power your decision-making with the right data.
Media Contact
Eli Adry, DataHunters, +1.310.933.5553, [email protected]
SOURCE DataHunters

Share this article