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I don't quite understand how non-provider-specific collectives like R are going to work. Who will put in work and why?

Who will want to write articles? I can think of two options:

  • The kind of people who currently post articles on Medium, e.g. as part of TowardsDataScience
  • Or will they come mostly from sponsors who get rights to publish a number of articles based on their sponsorship tier?

More importantly, who will voluntarily curate articles?

  • Will anyone voluntarily review and edit Medium style articles for free? Really? Especially subject matter experts have better things to do with their time.
  • I can't imagine community subject matter experts interacting with sponsor articles so this will have to be done by paid staff, too commercially sensitive otherwise.

Why introduce recommended answers as part of collectives? If recommendations from subject matter experts are a good thing, why only introduce them for communities? Why not let gold badge tag holders recommend answers on their tags? That requires much less overhead of creating communities and seems more natural.

Did I miss anything? Collectives seem to boil down to that. The full list is here: Collectives: Overview of features and community management

There seems to be no reason why one needs collectives for the articles. It's all rather contrived.

Provider-specific communities make some sense for me. There's a clear value proposition for the provider. But non-provider-specific communities? Do they serve to make communities feel more "natural" to make provider-specific communities fit in better? I don't get it (yet).

I don't quite understand how non-provider-specific collectives like R are going to work. Who will put in work and why?

Who will want to write articles? I can think of two options:

  • The kind of people who currently post articles on Medium, e.g. as part of TowardsDataScience
  • Or will they come mostly from sponsors who get rights to publish a number of articles based on their sponsorship tier?

More importantly, who will voluntarily curate articles?

  • Will anyone voluntarily review and edit Medium style articles for free? Really? Especially subject matter experts have better things to do with their time.
  • I can't imagine community subject matter experts interacting with sponsor articles so this will have to be done by paid staff, too commercially sensitive otherwise.

Why introduce recommended answers as part of collectives? If recommendations from subject matter experts are a good thing, why only introduce them for communities? Why not let gold badge tag holders recommend answers on their tags? That requires much less overhead of creating communities and seems more natural.

Did I miss anything? Collectives seem to boil down to that.

Provider-specific communities make some sense for me. There's a clear value proposition for the provider. But non-provider-specific communities? Do they serve to make communities feel more "natural" to make provider-specific communities fit in better? I don't get it (yet).

I don't quite understand how non-provider-specific collectives like R are going to work. Who will put in work and why?

Who will want to write articles? I can think of two options:

  • The kind of people who currently post articles on Medium, e.g. as part of TowardsDataScience
  • Or will they come mostly from sponsors who get rights to publish a number of articles based on their sponsorship tier?

More importantly, who will voluntarily curate articles?

  • Will anyone voluntarily review and edit Medium style articles for free? Really? Especially subject matter experts have better things to do with their time.
  • I can't imagine community subject matter experts interacting with sponsor articles so this will have to be done by paid staff, too commercially sensitive otherwise.

Why introduce recommended answers as part of collectives? If recommendations from subject matter experts are a good thing, why only introduce them for communities? Why not let gold badge tag holders recommend answers on their tags? That requires much less overhead of creating communities and seems more natural.

Did I miss anything? Collectives seem to boil down to that. The full list is here: Collectives: Overview of features and community management

There seems to be no reason why one needs collectives for the articles. It's all rather contrived.

Provider-specific communities make some sense for me. There's a clear value proposition for the provider. But non-provider-specific communities? Do they serve to make communities feel more "natural" to make provider-specific communities fit in better? I don't get it (yet).

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I don't quite understand how non-provider-specific collectives like R are going to work. Who will put in work and why?

Who will want to write articles? I can think of two options:

  • The kind of people who currently post articles on Medium, e.g. as part of TowardsDataScience
  • Or will they come mostly from sponsors who get rights to publish a number of articles based on their sponsorship tier?

More importantly, who will voluntarily curate articles?

  • Will anyone voluntarily review and edit Medium style articles for free? Really? Especially subject matter experts have better things to do with their time.
  • I can't imagine community subject matter experts interacting with sponsor articles so this will have to be done by paid staff, too commercially sensitive otherwise.

Why introduce recommended answers as part of collectives? If recommendations from subject matter experts are a good thing, why only introduce them for communities? Why not let gold badge tag holders recommend answers on their tags? That requires much less overhead of creating communities and seems more natural.

Did I miss anything? Collectives seem to boil down to that.

Provider-specific communities make some sense for me. There's a clear value proposition for the provider. But non-provider-specific communities? Do they serve to make communities feel more "natural" to make provider-specific communities fit in better? I don't get it (yet).