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#1
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What is a "Quality" post?
Lately I've been thinking about the quality of the Chief Delphi Forum. Many have commented the quality of posts has gone down hill since a few years ago. I've been reading a book recently and that inspired the following question I want to ask to all of you CD forum posters:
What is a "Quality" post? What do you consider "Quality"? Why is some post better than others? How can you tell? Like many of the questiosn I posted, I ask you to reply with thoughtful, insightful posts instead of the normal 2 sentence quick replies I see quite a bit now a days. Lets see where this discussion lead us. :-) |
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#2
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
Quality? A short and simple post like this that doesn't take a whole page to read and is straight to the point.
Now that's a quality post.Though you know, that if one eloborates on his or her subject with even greater detail, more facts, etc. etc. then you have a real quality post. It has to be very descriptive, simple, "modularly complex" if you get what I mean. Everything sort of comes together. |
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#3
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
My idea of a quality post is one that is clear, concise and helpful. I don't mind seeing a little humor but when posts go off on "tangents" or have nothing to do with the discussion or thread at hand they seem to lack the "quality". A quality post will add and carry the discussion along and not sidetrack it. If a thread has to deal with a problem/issue or someone is looking for an answer to a question a "quality" post should answer the question or give information or suggestions to deal with the problem/issue. Providing facts or formulas to how you came about the answer is helpful too.
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#4
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
Another quality post is one that does not repeat the words of its predecessors. If a person asks for help in a thread, the answer or answers only need be stated once so that said person can find what is needed right away without having to search through the different posts as much.
Also, a post that doesn't point out what another has said in a negative way is quality. I really don't like to see any tension here on the forums. |
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#5
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
A quality post is the persons thoughts that make you think and make a point.
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#6
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
This would be an example of a poor post:
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#7
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
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But seriously, posts that offer factual information, not just speculation or an opinion (unless asked for) are high-quality |
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#8
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
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I really read through these and laughed.... btw this is probobly a perfect example of a poor post or is it I am making a point I am providing clear and accurate information and i am presenting it in a manor that (hopfully) doesnt offend or upset anyone i dont know what makes a quality post, quality but i know that things like one word replies that involve just agreeing with someone, w/o adding to the conversation are examples of poor posts |
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#9
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
Personally, I think it is good when someone makes a post (especially if the thread is someone asking for help about something, or asking a question such as this one) by bringing a different view-point in... although not always helpful, it can sometimes allow the thread-starter to get kick-started into finding the solution if people just giving simple answers aren't enough. Whether it be in the form of reading material that could help, or by going far over-and-beyond what the question is to help the person not only find the answer they're looking for... but also understand why that is the answer and/or how it works.
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#10
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
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#11
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This is.
![]() MrToast |
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#12
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
In my opinion, a "quality" post is most of what has been said (non-repetitive, few or no errors, no incorrect info, etc.). In every post, though, you should ask yourself one question: is this post contributing to the discussion? If the answer is no, then don't post. I use it as my benchmark for every post, both when making my own posts, and reading others' posts. If you can honestly say that your post is contributing something new and valuable to the discussion, you can't go wrong.
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#13
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
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#14
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
Great question! I recently started a thread that I thought had become stale and unproductive. After a couple of slaps on the wrist (well deserved I might add) I sat back to look at the thread again. Sometimes what one person sees as a quality post and helpful, another finds useless. I think that every post should be looked at from more than one set of eyes and at different angles to tell whether or not it is a quality post. Even the state of mind that we have when we read something can alter our view of the post.
What is quality? My feeling is that a quality post is one that has been thought out and expressed with a sincere positive thought process. |
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#15
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Re: What is a "Quality" post?
The way I see it, your role as a poster is to provide interesting material for others to read, such that they read it through. If they want to read it through, chances are that it's contributed to the discussion in a positive way. Using this basic test, one can determine whether or not a post is worth reading in its entirety (because that's what this is really about):
A quality post shows the poster's insight toward the topic. Basically what this means is that (assuming a poster has any insight at all) if he can articulate his insight to readers, and demonstrate his intelligence, he has succeeded in making a good post. The fact of the matter is that good logical reasoning, reading, and writing, are what lead to a good post, and are even more important than actual knowledge of the topic. An intelligent poster knows when and what to post. The lesson we should learn from this is that these skills are the things we should be thinking about when we make a post. Am I really making sense? Am I being helpful? Someone who can CAD with the best of them is useless at helping a rookie to CAD if he can't make a readable post, and it really can be as simple as that. Ken asked "How can you tell," and that's what I'll go into for a second here. Let me explain my reasoning: First of all, we need to admit that there are posters out there that we really like to listen to, and conversely, those whose posts we couldn't care less about, based on experience from reading their previous stuff. I personally triage posts for skimming based on a few points:
Last edited by jonathan lall : 18-08-2004 at 22:48. |
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