This helpful pyramid from Clara Shih also reflects this behavior. In the typical online community, there are more taggers / voters than commenters, and more commenters than content producers. It's hard work to write a blog post or a review, slightly less hard to comment on said post, and really not a big deal to vote / like / or tag that review.
Current media darling Foursquare is built around an action that is even simpler than commenting or tagging - Checking in. On an iPhone, a Checkin is just a single tap of the phone. If other patterns of UGC participation are any guide, a community built around a single tap has a better chance of going mainstream than a community built around a more in depth behavior like writing an article.
But is there any value in the content created by a single tap of the phone? On Foursquare, yes. My Checkin tells my friends where I am. It tells the business that I am a customer. That Checkin gives the (awesome) future me a historical list of the places I've been. And on the aggregate, those Checkins tell Foursquare what places are hot at any given time.
One little tap can carry a lot of data.
By now, if you're like me, you are probably thinking about how you can let folks check in to your web service. And taking a quick look around the social media landscape, there are plenty of Checkins to be found.
You can Checkin to a place: companies like Foursquare, Gowalla, and the mysterious DoubleDutch are all over this.
You can Checkin to a piece of content on Facebook: try "liking" something in your newsfeed.
You can Checkin to a product: try clicking "I want this" on GDGT.
You can Checkin to a link: just click it.
And on and on.
Checkins are easy, fast, lightweight, and most importantly, are a data point tied to a larger intention. For Foursquare, a Checkin represents a person's connection with a local business, their location, and probably an indication of a dollar spent. For Facebook, a Checkin is a signal of the content preferences of the "liker," a newsfeed story in its own right, and a gentle, hugely important tap of encouragement for the content creator. For Google, a Checkin is revenue, a signal of content quality, and on the aggregate, a view of how the world surfs the web.
The dirty little secret of User Generated Content has always been that a tiny percentage of the population contributes most of the content.
Perhaps the proliferation of Checkin-like actions can begin to change this.


You find this interesting: Putting metadata onto tweets (& other objects) with #FluidDB http://blogs.fluidinfo.com/fluidDB/2009/12/01/putting-metadata-onto-tweets-with-fluiddb/
Posted by: twitter.com/AAinslie | December 01, 2009 at 08:53 AM
I think, it is amazing!
http://www.rapidsharemix.com
Posted by: Makai | February 02, 2010 at 07:41 AM
It's a very interesting point of view and items that I would like to know more as the interpersonal attitude is something that is not given much information.
Posted by: cheap uggs | March 05, 2010 at 12:31 AM
I agree, i think Checkins are easy, fast, lightweight, and most importantly extremely convenient.
Gary
http://www.rapidsloth.com
Posted by: GaryLeeson | March 12, 2010 at 03:21 AM