Forum Organization Shared Practices

I have a "shared practice" type question and wanted to get thoughts from my fellow community architects using Telligent!

We're creating a group called "Questions & Discussions" that house most of our forums.  We want it to be really easy for users to navigate between the different forums, but make it feel like they're staying in the same place... creating a seamless UX for all questions.

 I'd like them to see a listing of all recent forum threads and be able to use the sort/filter tools to look through existing questions. I'm guessing the best way to do this is by using the Forum - Thread List widget. Then, on the right side (1/3) of the screen I'd like to see a list of our (15) Main Topics... similar to what Appian has done (image, right)

Now here's the caveat... Each of our Main Topics have 5-15 different sub-topics or categories. I would like to have this list on the right to function in a similar way to what Appian has done, so when a viewer clicks on one Main Topic, it would go to that forum AND show a list of all the sub-topics or categories within each main topic. SEE ATTACHED PDF.

So I was thinking that the best way to do this would be to create sub-groups for each of our Main Topics, beneath our ROOT "Questions & Discussions" Group. Then, we could create as many forums as we need to represent each of the categories within our subgroups.

I can envision so many ways to do this but I'd love to have a discussion with others to see what they would do, and why!

Some specific questions:

  1. We'd like to allow users to subscribe to individual forums, so I was thinking we would need to have them all as sub-groups. Would we need to have all of the granular categories within a Main Topic (Sub-group) as another sub-group??
  2. We'd like to have it so when a person clicks on one of the categories/main topics, on the right, that it opens to reveal all of the sub-groups or forums (depending on which we end up doing). What considerations should we take into account in order to be able to do this? Architecturally, would we need to use sub-groups vs. forums to be able to show all of the sub-topics?

Here's a sketch of what I was thinking of doing...

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  • Thank you all for chiming in here and for elaborating on your thoughts. In Jive we had a "categories" feature that could be used within a group and it allowed you to categorize content within a group. It also had tags that you could use to further subcategorize content in a group. 

    Based on the feedback I received from y'all and thinking about this more, I'm leaning towards having one single group for Questions and Discussions and adding a "Forum" Application to represent the category for each Main Topic of questions/discussions. Then I will leverage tags for each of the sub-categories within each Main Topic.

    brought ups some great points. I'd like to hear more from on what they've done to enforce tags to empower community members to organize their content as they post new threads. 

    I'm also wondering if anyone has insight on how to allow people to subscribe to individual tags. If one of our members wants to be notified whenever someone posts about a particular tag, is there a simple way to allow them to subscribe to that tag/topic? I'm sure will have an answer to this question.

  • brought ups some great points. I'd like to hear more from on what they've done to enforce tags to empower community members to organize their content as they post new threads.

    From what I can decipher, Archie is empowering his community members by providing a list of Forums called specific names which represent Topics, Categories, or Tags.

    OOB you can not force a tag to be used in a thread however you can provide suggestions similar to what Jive would do if in the case of Categories. When you create categories in Jive, there is a field to add suggested tags.

    Here is how you can add suggested tags for EACH forum:

    Under each Forum you can add a tag to be used in the Forum however it is not automatically applied to the content. When a user clicks inside the tag field, the tags used in the forum, including the one you added displays giving the user a selection to use.

    Hope this helps a bit.


    Another Idea is to add Tag List Widgets to the page if you are creating specific types of content yourself. For example, If you have the contant tagged individual with one of these 4 tags, Groups, Membership, Permissions, Widgets you can then put 4 Tag List Widgets on the page and Filter each widget to show only content with that tag.

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  • brought ups some great points. I'd like to hear more from on what they've done to enforce tags to empower community members to organize their content as they post new threads.

    From what I can decipher, Archie is empowering his community members by providing a list of Forums called specific names which represent Topics, Categories, or Tags.

    OOB you can not force a tag to be used in a thread however you can provide suggestions similar to what Jive would do if in the case of Categories. When you create categories in Jive, there is a field to add suggested tags.

    Here is how you can add suggested tags for EACH forum:

    Under each Forum you can add a tag to be used in the Forum however it is not automatically applied to the content. When a user clicks inside the tag field, the tags used in the forum, including the one you added displays giving the user a selection to use.

    Hope this helps a bit.


    Another Idea is to add Tag List Widgets to the page if you are creating specific types of content yourself. For example, If you have the contant tagged individual with one of these 4 tags, Groups, Membership, Permissions, Widgets you can then put 4 Tag List Widgets on the page and Filter each widget to show only content with that tag.

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