====== The IndieWeb Onboarding Gap ====== YouTuber OnionBoots' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkUgOT22F5s|video on the Old/IndieWeb revival]] reached over 500,000 views. A handful of those viewers joined IndieWeb communities. The conversion gap is the defining unsolved problem. ===== Identified Barriers ===== **Jargon and assumed knowledge**\\ [[https://indieweb.org/challenges|IndieWeb's own challenges wiki]] is honest: outdated tutorials, jargon, prior knowledge baked into even the "Getting Started" page. [[https://darthmall.net/2024/indieweb-is-for-devs/|W. Evan Sheehan writes plainly]]: the IndieWeb is for developers — not intentionally exclusionary, but practically and structurally built around people already comfortable with a terminal. **The terminal requirement**\\ [[https://gilest.org/notes/indie-easy.html|Giles Turnbull's point]]: what's actually needed are publishing tools that require no terminal at all. A whole galaxy of options, not just "install WordPress or figure out Hugo yourself." **Cost**\\ The "pay for shared hosting" step alone excludes people who will not or cannot spend money. Mitigations: * [[https://neocities.org/|NeoCities]] — free static hosting * [[https://nekoweb.org/|NekoWeb]] — free, similar community * [[https://github.com/abint7/free-domains|Free domain options]] — workarounds for the registrar cost **Algorithmic passivity**\\ [[https://tracydurnell.com/2024/05/17/indieweb-next-stage/|Tracy Durnell's observation]]: the IndieWeb community has been free from corporate social media long enough that it sometimes can't recognize how hostile and disorienting those platforms have become. People who've spent years being algorithmically trained into passivity don't immediately pick up unfamiliar tools. We keep designing solutions for the wrong problem. **Discovery vacuum**\\ Personal websites are hard to find from inside corporate silos. There's no algorithm serving someone a beautifully weird blog about fountain pens at 2am. People who build a site can spend weeks shouting into nothing and conclude the whole thing was a mistake. The IndieWeb has a **retention problem** as much as an onboarding problem. **Learned helplessness**\\ Technical skills are learnable. Programming and web development require time and effort — but so does good writing, and most people don't consider themselves incapable of writing. The belief that technical aptitude is fixed ("I'm not a math person") is self-limiting and, arguably, by design. If a large majority of people believed they had the technical capacity to be autonomous from corporate tech, it would cost entire industries. Setting up an SSG blog can be as simple as: - Fork an existing theme - Press a few buttons on Netlify - Write Markdown ===== What's Not the Answer ===== Making the IndieWeb more like the corporate web. The answer is slower and stranger. We are cultivating a community garden. The point of entry must be curiosity and welcome, not technical proficiency. ===== What's Working ===== * [[https://32bit.cafe/|32-Bit Café]] — onramps and invitations rather than technical assessments; [[https://discourse.32bit.cafe/t/resources-list-for-the-personal-web/49|best resource list for the personal web]] * [[https://forum.melonland.net/|MelonLand Forum]] — welcoming community for new personal site creators * [[indieweb:getting_started|Getting Started on the IndieWeb]] — skill-level ladder: Level 0 (no code) → Level 1 (HTML) → Level 2 (SSG) ===== Related Quote ===== > I'd much rather see "poorly" designed websites by humans instead of exclusively existing on the Internet only on the sterilized, boring, privacy-void accounts of social media. ===== See Also ===== * [[indieweb:start|IndieWeb Index]] * [[indieweb:getting_started|Getting Started on the IndieWeb]] * [[indieweb:indieweb_defined|What Is the IndieWeb?]] * [[indieweb:trust_online|Trust and Faith Online]] * [[indieweb:hosting|Hosting & Domains]] * [[indieweb:neighbourhood|Being a Good Neighbour]] * [[start|Return to wiki home]]