How to End the Brownian Motion State of Web 2.0 Users

by morler on 2006-11-25 22:55:23

Domestic WEB2.0 sites are all learning from the American model; no matter how much venture capital they receive, they will still end up in a dead end.

It's very difficult to cultivate user habits, and once these habits are formed, they are hard to change.

The difference between the habits of American users and Chinese users is much greater than many people imagine.

The idea of running a website with just one program can only be described by one Chinese idiom: "a foolish person's dream."

Users can create content, and content can create value, but users moving in Brownian motion cannot create value.

The most undervalued group on the Internet are editors.

Truly valuable internet editors are few in number, there is no training mechanism for them, their salaries are low, and their status is even lower.

Technical people will never understand content, and content creators also find it difficult to understand technical people, but they may be able to cooperate.