no one gets paid.
oh... I thought the moderators worked here.
Not much to put in your resume or cv too...
I can imagine job employers all confused about it.nah he can put
moderater at typology central sept 2014- current
the internet
- herded crazies
- overs saw posting patterns over others
- banned people
- made decisions about what to do about people
- had a blue name, to denote superiority
I can imagine job employers all confused about it.
I don't think most employers know the full dynamics of forums.only if they live in the 80s or earlier
I don't think most employers know the full dynamics of forums.
hmmm... I'd say it depends on the business. Forum usage is not common among the majority of the population.then they should not own businesses.
Less than 5% of those 20,000 are actually active here. Also, the moderators are not leaders, they're moderators. They make sure people adhere to set rules for a level of order and harmony. It can be a difficult thing to do, but essentially online forum moderation is fairly different from an office workplace. Most employers wouldn't see it as something that strongly contributes to a job with face to face dynamics.I dunno there's probably something to be said about a person's leadership abilities to keep an online community of nearly 20,000 running fairly smoothly with an active participating base/readership.![]()
stop being an INTJ.hmmm... I'd say it depends on the business. Forum usage is not common among the majority of the population.
Less than 5% of those 20,000 are actually active here. Also, the moderators are not leaders, they're moderators. They make sure people adhere to set rules for a level of order and harmony. It can be a difficult thing to do, but essentially online forum moderation is fairly different from an office workplace. Most employers wouldn't see it as something that strongly contributes to a job with face to face dynamics.
hmmm... I'd say it depends on the business. Forum usage is not common among the majority of the population.
Less than 5% of those 20,000 are actually active here. Also, the moderators are not leaders, they're moderators. They make sure people adhere to set rules for a level of order and harmony. It can be a difficult thing to do, but essentially online forum moderation is fairly different from an office workplace. Most employers wouldn't see it as something that strongly contributes to a job with face to face dynamics.
Risking further derailing, look at you going all Te on me.
You say potato, I say potato. Moderators are totally leaders of a forum they ultimately make the decisions of how the rules are handled, who gets banned, what features get implemented, etc. As for as a resume, it's going to depend on the employer--In my subjective opinion, I think this would be a decent booster for any human resources or customer service job.
Most of what they do is policing. The police are not leaders.Moderators are totally leaders of a forum they ultimately make the decisions of how the rules are handled, who gets banned, what features get implemented, etc.