I volunteered to help moderate and grow a small online forum for amateur astronomers. We have a solid core of about twenty regular posters, but attracting and keeping new members is tough. The other mods keep talking about tracking online community engagement metrics to guide our efforts, which sounds smart, but I’m not sure what we should actually be measuring. Is it just page views and new registrations, or should we be looking at something deeper, like how many threads a new member posts before they fade away? Our forum software gives us basic numbers, but they don’t tell the story of why someone joins, reads a bunch, and then never posts. I’m worried we’re focusing on the wrong data.
Nice problem to tackle. A good plan is to separate vanity numbers from signals that show real community health. Think about how lurkers become posters and whether those posters stay active over time.
Try a handful of concrete metrics you can actually influence. New member signups per week, posts by new members, threads started, and the share of members who post within their first week.
Build a simple funnel and watch drop offs. Visited the forum, registered, wrote a first post, posted again within two weeks. Compare cohorts month to month to see what helps.
Don’t rely only on numbers. Ask new members what would help them participate and what topics they care about. Use short onboarding questions to guide small changes.
Protect the culture you have. Don’t turn the group into a numbers chase. Make changes small and tied to a clear goal like more replies per thread or longer reads.
Quick two month pilot plan. Pick two metrics to improve, implement one small change such as a weekly prompt thread, and review results with the group. If it works, scale a bit.
Happy to draft a tiny starter scorecard for you with the metrics and a week by week plan. Want me to put that together?