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	<title>Comments on: The 1% Rule vs. The 1:1 Ratio</title>
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	<description>music maker, photo taker, world changer</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 10 Mar 2010 11:04:41 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: State of Mind of The Art &#187; The 1% Rule vs. The 1:1 Ratio</title>
		<link>http://dr.xnlb.com/blog/48/the-1-rule-vs-the-11-ratio/comment-page-1/#comment-3986</link>
		<dc:creator>State of Mind of The Art &#187; The 1% Rule vs. The 1:1 Ratio</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Jul 2007 15:23:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] An emerging trend in the online world is that the gap between content creator and the content consumer is closing. Personal Computers come pre-installed with many content creation tools, and many more aimed at the Amateur to the Pro-Am content cretor abound. One only has to look at iLife, Apple&#8217;s Am/Pro-Am content creation suite (now complete with a webpage editor that sports RSS feeds). Some have put forth a suggestion, that only 1% of the online world is creating content. This seems awfully low to me. I have always thought of it as The 1:1 Ratio, for every content creator in a community there is a consumer, that in turn is also a creator. Their numbers, stating that out of 100 people, 1 would create the content, 10 would interact with it (commenting on it, offering suggestions to improve it, etc.) while the other 89 users would simple view it. Maybe I just travel in more creative circles, because anecdotally The 1:1 Ratio holds true for me. Their numbers come from YouTube&#8217;s upload vs download ratio, and obviously skew the results because of the size of the sample. I&#8217;m not doubting their findings, but it&#8217;s interesting to hear the same theory in different contexts. Read the article, and decide for yourself. It&#8217;d be cool if you left a comment too, and let me know which rule holds more true for you, The 1% Rule, or The 1:1 Ratio. digg story originally published on dr.xnlb.com [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] An emerging trend in the online world is that the gap between content creator and the content consumer is closing. Personal Computers come pre-installed with many content creation tools, and many more aimed at the Amateur to the Pro-Am content cretor abound. One only has to look at iLife, Apple&#8217;s Am/Pro-Am content creation suite (now complete with a webpage editor that sports RSS feeds). Some have put forth a suggestion, that only 1% of the online world is creating content. This seems awfully low to me. I have always thought of it as The 1:1 Ratio, for every content creator in a community there is a consumer, that in turn is also a creator. Their numbers, stating that out of 100 people, 1 would create the content, 10 would interact with it (commenting on it, offering suggestions to improve it, etc.) while the other 89 users would simple view it. Maybe I just travel in more creative circles, because anecdotally The 1:1 Ratio holds true for me. Their numbers come from YouTube&#8217;s upload vs download ratio, and obviously skew the results because of the size of the sample. I&#8217;m not doubting their findings, but it&#8217;s interesting to hear the same theory in different contexts. Read the article, and decide for yourself. It&#8217;d be cool if you left a comment too, and let me know which rule holds more true for you, The 1% Rule, or The 1:1 Ratio. digg story originally published on dr.xnlb.com [...]</p>
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