this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2023
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It's a normal situation when you have big migrations like the reddit migration. Same thing happened on mastodon with the various twitter migrations.
A lot of people migrate thinking they're reaching the promised land, realize they aren't getting what the want from the new platform and go back. It's the nature of bandwagon jumping.
It's just fine. The process of growth is dynamic, and the people who remain are the ones who like the platform.
To add to this, the best course of action is to:
In our case, we already know that reddit is going to announce its IPO eventually. Assuming they don't do something to piss off users sooner than this, this will likely be the next major event to drive people to check out Lemmy. People who checked it out but fell away will already have accounts, and new people will check it out for the first time. If we do steps 1, 2, and 3 well, when step 4 occurs the retention will be higher each time.--
Yep!
If you like the fediverse, then the answer is to be on the fediverse.
It's a pretty awesome platform anyway, so it's worth being on regardless of the entire earth being here.
It would be interesting to see numbers from the Digg to Reddit migration. There was a lot of pushback initially. Reddit was "confusing" and "ugly". I used both for a while but didn't fully abandon Digg for at least a few months.
Lemmy on the other hand, Reddit made it very easy for me. I've been using Sync since at least 2014. Once it went dark I was full Lemmy.