Building community

This article or section is missing vital information. You can help the SL Wiki by editing it.

This page is a prototype and has yet to "gel". If you know something that could save us time, please add it!


"If you rez it, they will come."

Or something that like — sure, you may have made a community building, but are you building community?

This page is all about how to optimize your Second Life locations with compelling content so they attract, sustain, and grow visitors. This is important whether you're running a business (like a club or store) or non-commercial venue. As Soft Linden aptly put it: "... building places, not spaces."

Note: Mentions of products & services are not necessarily endorsement, simply real examples of what's been accomplished.

Key things to remember

Tools

Search for most of these on Xstreet.

Your human touch

Advice on social interaction and how to be well-liked. As such, it's mostly subjective: use what works for you.

Events

Whether it's a splashy launch party or a casual poetry reading, you can host many types of events in Second Life — or if you'd prefer not to, you can hire someone you trust to run the show. For much more info, see:

SL has a Search > Events tab, which is unfortunately crowded and not very practical. Thus, the most successful event promoters use one or more of these techniques:

Social media

If you're savvy about social media tools, there are ways to integrate them in Second Life. For instance, Flickr is intensely popular with thousands of Residents, and there are specialty groups for a variety of niche interests — fashion, photorealism, celebrations, etc. There are Twitter HUDs which let you post SLURLs from inworld to a Twitter page — Linden Lab even has an official presence. Also, hundreds of Resis use the Second Life Link app on Facebook.

Social games

Within Second Life are communal experiences with rules, or social games. Many real-life games like scavenger hunts where clues are shared have inworld equivalents.

There are "viral games" like Tiny Empires and The Thirst: Bloodlines, games which require you to interact with others in varying ways to succeed. Detractors claim they're akin to pyramid schemes, but they've been extremely popular. Friendships can be formed, and truly compelling games can attract a player's attention for months, or even years.

More elaborate, Role-Playing Games (RPGs) are one of the most popular ways to build community in SL: create a themed region (or set of them), an accompanying narrative, character classes, and other components to flesh out a "game world". RPGs spanning a range from fantasy to cyberpunk to horror are regularly packed.

Further game details are beyond the scope of this page, so have a look at:

By using "hooks" like these, you can attract visitors from outside of SL, and also create value by connecting people who already use both SL and other social media tools.

Usability tips

Optimizing navigation

Everyone was new once. If you've been in SL for awhile, recall your awkward first experiences, then make your build (short for what you're building) a joy to explore for newcomers and veterans alike. A build that's hard to navigate will deter people from spending time on you. Tips:

Related resources