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Jordan Miller

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  1. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Mel Benson for a blog entry, Spark more real time engagement with the Trending Content feature   
    See what members are currently most engaged with in real time in your community by using our new Trending Content feature included in our latest release, 4.7.0. 
    Our new Trending Content feature, available on our Business & Corporate/Enterprise plans, automatically rounds up a list of engaging topics that are most active in the present moment within your community and proudly displays them for other members to see and contribute to. 
    Trending Content is one of the best ways to stay on top of popular and current topics, as well as engage with other members in the here and now. It’s also a powerful method to inform search engines that your community is an authority in its niche because your members are constantly fueling the community fire.
    How does the real time Trending Content feature work?
    Our platform applies a value to different forms of engagement. This informs the Trending Content feature as to what it should display without delay.
    This criteria is weighted and includes:
    Replies: most valuable ⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Topics that receive replies are the clearest sign a piece of content is trending.
    Reactions: valuable ⭐️⭐
    Your members are engaging with other members’ topics and replies. That’s great in helping to decide what is trending, but ultimately we want members to comment.
    Views: somewhat valuable ⭐️
    Visibility is important and plays a role in deciding whether a content item shows in the Trending Content section. 
     
    The Trending Content may be visible in a block, or on your community's leaderboard.
    Trending Content block:


     
    Trending Content section on the leaderboard page:

     
    The Trending Content feature may be turned on or off by visiting your Admin Control Panel (ACP) -> System -> Smart Community -> Features -> Trending Content.
     

     
    Examples of useful Trending Content blocks in different types of communities:
     
    Enterprise communities
    If you’re in the corporate realm, displaying a list of trending content gives your influential clients and members an opportunity to see what’s shaping the ecosystem of your big-named brand. It also provides the company with an opportunity to monitor trends, then focus on more content like it to create another set of trending topics.
    Educational communities
    Display a list of trending content amongst your students. If there’s a particular question that captures the attention of your e-learning audience, chances are it’s engaging and thought-provoking. By including a Trending Content block in prominent areas of your community, students (and teachers) have an opportunity to weigh in and reach a solution together. 
    Gaming communities
    Include a Trending Content block inside your gaming community to drum up interest in new releases, share insider information and rumors about your favorite games and consoles and gauge what your fellow gamer peers are engaged with. 
    Support communities
    Should a critical support issue arise, your team will see what content items your clients are contributing to, assess, then solve.
    News communities
    Don’t be the last to know. When breaking news strikes, members tend to flood to the content item and share their two cents. Including a Trending Content block in a news community is the most efficient route to quickly keep your members in the loop regarding live news. 

    Our new Trending Content feature is available in version 4.7.0. 
    Thoughts? Drop us a line in the comments and let us know what you think. Should this blog post receive great engagement, you'll see it in our Trending Content feature located in our community forum. See you there!
  2. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from GazzaGarratt for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  3. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from iiioroh for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  4. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from VahnPetit for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  5. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Markus Jung for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  6. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Olivia Clark for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  7. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Andy Millne for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  8. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Miss_B for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  9. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Maxxius for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  10. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from OptimusBain for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  11. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from SeNioR- for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  12. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Chris Anderson for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  13. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Yamamura for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  14. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from AlexJ for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  15. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Jim M for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  16. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from IPCommerceFan for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  17. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Matt for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  18. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Matt C. for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  19. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Charles for a blog entry, New community manager tool: schedule topics   
    Community managers and moderators have a simple but powerful new tool at their disposal: scheduling a topic's future publishing date.
    Previously, if a community manager wanted to draft a topic for a future release, they would have to craft the content elsewhere. It wasn’t the best experience. After listening to client feedback, we implemented a path for those with moderator privileges to create topics now, but have them go live in the future. 
    Set this new permissions setting in the Admin Control Panel -> Moderators -> Content -> Can set a future publishing date? 
    Notice the Publish date and time fields at the bottom:


     
    Here are a few examples of when this would be useful:
    Welcoming new members
    A community manager can compose a topic welcoming members from that week, but set it to go live the next week. It’s a powerful, engaging and visible way to acknowledge new sign-ups. Pair this with our new Alerts System.
    Anniversaries
    Big day coming up? Create content around it now, but set the topic's publish date on the actual day. 
    Content calendar
    If you are in charge of creating community content, budget a chunk of time towards creating engaging topics. Set their future publish dates apart so there’s space for members to engage accordingly. It also allows your team to visually see the content and weigh in with changes (or hoorays!) before members see it.
    Related:
     
    Announcements
    Scheduling an announcement inside a topic, in tandem with our Announcements workflow functionality located in the Moderator Control Panel, allows community moderators to create space for feedback from loyalists. 
    Promo campaign
    As a community manager, time is a commodity. Setting up a promotional campaign for a future product release sets you up for success. When planning intricate marketing projects, organization and editing are paramount. Setting a future release date creates space to ensure the messaging is clear and effective.
    This feature, available for all Invision Community clients, is available in 4.7.1 Beta 1 (out now). View our release notes.
    Thoughts? Let us know what you think in the comments (preferably now 😉).
  20. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from SeNioR- for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  21. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Marc Stridgen for a blog entry, New tool for community managers: Rank Progression   
    See how long, on average, members ascend from one Rank to the next. 
    Screen Recording 2022-07-20 at 14.58.14.mp4  
    We are excited to have added this new chart to our existing statistics that shows Rank Progression. This addition, available for all plans, is included in an upcoming release of our latest version 4.7.
     
    You can find it in your Admin Control Panel -> Stats -> Users -> Rank Progression.
    Ranks display a members’ perceived value to the community. The higher a members’ Rank, the greater their influence. Members with higher ranks earned those through their engagement and participation in the community. Actions like commenting, reacting and should your community be utilizing the Achievement system, through those Rules that award points. The more points, the higher the rank.
    Learn all about our Achievement System and Points in this previously shared Blog.
    Why is our new Rank Time Progression chart important?
    Understanding how long it takes members to move from rank to rank helps you strategize a user journey. You want meaningful contributors to feel rewarded for their engagement and participation in your community and receive an increase in their Rank.
    This chart provides a better understanding of how long it takes members to change Ranks.
    You will now be asking yourself insightful questions like:
    Am I happy with that timeline? Are my members happy too? Are any ranks being achieved too quickly or not quick enough? Are the ranks that I want to be “exclusive” and reserved for my star members, appropriately adjusted and take long enough to achieve?  Ranks, Rules and all things Achievements can be adjusted and changed. Ask yourself these questions and make changes to better support and reward engagement from those valuable members.
    Related: Help Guide on how to set up Ranks in your community


     
    Let’s take a look at this chart again.
    Here, the Rank Progression average shows a curve, meaning the time, on average, it takes a member to jump from rank to rank increases.
    If a member reaches Grand Master faster than you intended, you’re now armed with information to adjust the Ranks.
    Ultimately, the shape of the line on the chart depends on your goals.
    Flat line = no time between ranks Rising straight line = similar amount of time between ranks Rising curved line = increasing amount of time between ranks This new addition tracks Ranks for all registered members from day one.
    Want input setting new Rank Progression goals? Please post in our community forum or leave us a comment.
    While you’re at it, feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think; we're looking forward to hearing from you!
     
  22. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from AlexJ for a blog entry, New tool for community managers: Rank Progression   
    See how long, on average, members ascend from one Rank to the next. 
    Screen Recording 2022-07-20 at 14.58.14.mp4  
    We are excited to have added this new chart to our existing statistics that shows Rank Progression. This addition, available for all plans, is included in an upcoming release of our latest version 4.7.
     
    You can find it in your Admin Control Panel -> Stats -> Users -> Rank Progression.
    Ranks display a members’ perceived value to the community. The higher a members’ Rank, the greater their influence. Members with higher ranks earned those through their engagement and participation in the community. Actions like commenting, reacting and should your community be utilizing the Achievement system, through those Rules that award points. The more points, the higher the rank.
    Learn all about our Achievement System and Points in this previously shared Blog.
    Why is our new Rank Time Progression chart important?
    Understanding how long it takes members to move from rank to rank helps you strategize a user journey. You want meaningful contributors to feel rewarded for their engagement and participation in your community and receive an increase in their Rank.
    This chart provides a better understanding of how long it takes members to change Ranks.
    You will now be asking yourself insightful questions like:
    Am I happy with that timeline? Are my members happy too? Are any ranks being achieved too quickly or not quick enough? Are the ranks that I want to be “exclusive” and reserved for my star members, appropriately adjusted and take long enough to achieve?  Ranks, Rules and all things Achievements can be adjusted and changed. Ask yourself these questions and make changes to better support and reward engagement from those valuable members.
    Related: Help Guide on how to set up Ranks in your community


     
    Let’s take a look at this chart again.
    Here, the Rank Progression average shows a curve, meaning the time, on average, it takes a member to jump from rank to rank increases.
    If a member reaches Grand Master faster than you intended, you’re now armed with information to adjust the Ranks.
    Ultimately, the shape of the line on the chart depends on your goals.
    Flat line = no time between ranks Rising straight line = similar amount of time between ranks Rising curved line = increasing amount of time between ranks This new addition tracks Ranks for all registered members from day one.
    Want input setting new Rank Progression goals? Please post in our community forum or leave us a comment.
    While you’re at it, feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think; we're looking forward to hearing from you!
     
  23. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Charles for a blog entry, New tool for community managers: Rank Progression   
    See how long, on average, members ascend from one Rank to the next. 
    Screen Recording 2022-07-20 at 14.58.14.mp4  
    We are excited to have added this new chart to our existing statistics that shows Rank Progression. This addition, available for all plans, is included in an upcoming release of our latest version 4.7.
     
    You can find it in your Admin Control Panel -> Stats -> Users -> Rank Progression.
    Ranks display a members’ perceived value to the community. The higher a members’ Rank, the greater their influence. Members with higher ranks earned those through their engagement and participation in the community. Actions like commenting, reacting and should your community be utilizing the Achievement system, through those Rules that award points. The more points, the higher the rank.
    Learn all about our Achievement System and Points in this previously shared Blog.
    Why is our new Rank Time Progression chart important?
    Understanding how long it takes members to move from rank to rank helps you strategize a user journey. You want meaningful contributors to feel rewarded for their engagement and participation in your community and receive an increase in their Rank.
    This chart provides a better understanding of how long it takes members to change Ranks.
    You will now be asking yourself insightful questions like:
    Am I happy with that timeline? Are my members happy too? Are any ranks being achieved too quickly or not quick enough? Are the ranks that I want to be “exclusive” and reserved for my star members, appropriately adjusted and take long enough to achieve?  Ranks, Rules and all things Achievements can be adjusted and changed. Ask yourself these questions and make changes to better support and reward engagement from those valuable members.
    Related: Help Guide on how to set up Ranks in your community


     
    Let’s take a look at this chart again.
    Here, the Rank Progression average shows a curve, meaning the time, on average, it takes a member to jump from rank to rank increases.
    If a member reaches Grand Master faster than you intended, you’re now armed with information to adjust the Ranks.
    Ultimately, the shape of the line on the chart depends on your goals.
    Flat line = no time between ranks Rising straight line = similar amount of time between ranks Rising curved line = increasing amount of time between ranks This new addition tracks Ranks for all registered members from day one.
    Want input setting new Rank Progression goals? Please post in our community forum or leave us a comment.
    While you’re at it, feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think; we're looking forward to hearing from you!
     
  24. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Bionic Rooster for a blog entry, New tool for community managers: Rank Progression   
    See how long, on average, members ascend from one Rank to the next. 
    Screen Recording 2022-07-20 at 14.58.14.mp4  
    We are excited to have added this new chart to our existing statistics that shows Rank Progression. This addition, available for all plans, is included in an upcoming release of our latest version 4.7.
     
    You can find it in your Admin Control Panel -> Stats -> Users -> Rank Progression.
    Ranks display a members’ perceived value to the community. The higher a members’ Rank, the greater their influence. Members with higher ranks earned those through their engagement and participation in the community. Actions like commenting, reacting and should your community be utilizing the Achievement system, through those Rules that award points. The more points, the higher the rank.
    Learn all about our Achievement System and Points in this previously shared Blog.
    Why is our new Rank Time Progression chart important?
    Understanding how long it takes members to move from rank to rank helps you strategize a user journey. You want meaningful contributors to feel rewarded for their engagement and participation in your community and receive an increase in their Rank.
    This chart provides a better understanding of how long it takes members to change Ranks.
    You will now be asking yourself insightful questions like:
    Am I happy with that timeline? Are my members happy too? Are any ranks being achieved too quickly or not quick enough? Are the ranks that I want to be “exclusive” and reserved for my star members, appropriately adjusted and take long enough to achieve?  Ranks, Rules and all things Achievements can be adjusted and changed. Ask yourself these questions and make changes to better support and reward engagement from those valuable members.
    Related: Help Guide on how to set up Ranks in your community


     
    Let’s take a look at this chart again.
    Here, the Rank Progression average shows a curve, meaning the time, on average, it takes a member to jump from rank to rank increases.
    If a member reaches Grand Master faster than you intended, you’re now armed with information to adjust the Ranks.
    Ultimately, the shape of the line on the chart depends on your goals.
    Flat line = no time between ranks Rising straight line = similar amount of time between ranks Rising curved line = increasing amount of time between ranks This new addition tracks Ranks for all registered members from day one.
    Want input setting new Rank Progression goals? Please post in our community forum or leave us a comment.
    While you’re at it, feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think; we're looking forward to hearing from you!
     
  25. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from SeNioR- for a blog entry, New tool for community managers: Rank Progression   
    See how long, on average, members ascend from one Rank to the next. 
    Screen Recording 2022-07-20 at 14.58.14.mp4  
    We are excited to have added this new chart to our existing statistics that shows Rank Progression. This addition, available for all plans, is included in an upcoming release of our latest version 4.7.
     
    You can find it in your Admin Control Panel -> Stats -> Users -> Rank Progression.
    Ranks display a members’ perceived value to the community. The higher a members’ Rank, the greater their influence. Members with higher ranks earned those through their engagement and participation in the community. Actions like commenting, reacting and should your community be utilizing the Achievement system, through those Rules that award points. The more points, the higher the rank.
    Learn all about our Achievement System and Points in this previously shared Blog.
    Why is our new Rank Time Progression chart important?
    Understanding how long it takes members to move from rank to rank helps you strategize a user journey. You want meaningful contributors to feel rewarded for their engagement and participation in your community and receive an increase in their Rank.
    This chart provides a better understanding of how long it takes members to change Ranks.
    You will now be asking yourself insightful questions like:
    Am I happy with that timeline? Are my members happy too? Are any ranks being achieved too quickly or not quick enough? Are the ranks that I want to be “exclusive” and reserved for my star members, appropriately adjusted and take long enough to achieve?  Ranks, Rules and all things Achievements can be adjusted and changed. Ask yourself these questions and make changes to better support and reward engagement from those valuable members.
    Related: Help Guide on how to set up Ranks in your community


     
    Let’s take a look at this chart again.
    Here, the Rank Progression average shows a curve, meaning the time, on average, it takes a member to jump from rank to rank increases.
    If a member reaches Grand Master faster than you intended, you’re now armed with information to adjust the Ranks.
    Ultimately, the shape of the line on the chart depends on your goals.
    Flat line = no time between ranks Rising straight line = similar amount of time between ranks Rising curved line = increasing amount of time between ranks This new addition tracks Ranks for all registered members from day one.
    Want input setting new Rank Progression goals? Please post in our community forum or leave us a comment.
    While you’re at it, feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think; we're looking forward to hearing from you!
     
  26. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Ocean West for a blog entry, New tool for community managers: Rank Progression   
    See how long, on average, members ascend from one Rank to the next. 
    Screen Recording 2022-07-20 at 14.58.14.mp4  
    We are excited to have added this new chart to our existing statistics that shows Rank Progression. This addition, available for all plans, is included in an upcoming release of our latest version 4.7.
     
    You can find it in your Admin Control Panel -> Stats -> Users -> Rank Progression.
    Ranks display a members’ perceived value to the community. The higher a members’ Rank, the greater their influence. Members with higher ranks earned those through their engagement and participation in the community. Actions like commenting, reacting and should your community be utilizing the Achievement system, through those Rules that award points. The more points, the higher the rank.
    Learn all about our Achievement System and Points in this previously shared Blog.
    Why is our new Rank Time Progression chart important?
    Understanding how long it takes members to move from rank to rank helps you strategize a user journey. You want meaningful contributors to feel rewarded for their engagement and participation in your community and receive an increase in their Rank.
    This chart provides a better understanding of how long it takes members to change Ranks.
    You will now be asking yourself insightful questions like:
    Am I happy with that timeline? Are my members happy too? Are any ranks being achieved too quickly or not quick enough? Are the ranks that I want to be “exclusive” and reserved for my star members, appropriately adjusted and take long enough to achieve?  Ranks, Rules and all things Achievements can be adjusted and changed. Ask yourself these questions and make changes to better support and reward engagement from those valuable members.
    Related: Help Guide on how to set up Ranks in your community


     
    Let’s take a look at this chart again.
    Here, the Rank Progression average shows a curve, meaning the time, on average, it takes a member to jump from rank to rank increases.
    If a member reaches Grand Master faster than you intended, you’re now armed with information to adjust the Ranks.
    Ultimately, the shape of the line on the chart depends on your goals.
    Flat line = no time between ranks Rising straight line = similar amount of time between ranks Rising curved line = increasing amount of time between ranks This new addition tracks Ranks for all registered members from day one.
    Want input setting new Rank Progression goals? Please post in our community forum or leave us a comment.
    While you’re at it, feel free to leave a comment and let us know what you think; we're looking forward to hearing from you!
     
  27. Thanks
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from bungomedia for a blog entry, Spark more real time engagement with the Trending Content feature   
    See what members are currently most engaged with in real time in your community by using our new Trending Content feature included in our latest release, 4.7.0. 
    Our new Trending Content feature, available on our Business & Corporate/Enterprise plans, automatically rounds up a list of engaging topics that are most active in the present moment within your community and proudly displays them for other members to see and contribute to. 
    Trending Content is one of the best ways to stay on top of popular and current topics, as well as engage with other members in the here and now. It’s also a powerful method to inform search engines that your community is an authority in its niche because your members are constantly fueling the community fire.
    How does the real time Trending Content feature work?
    Our platform applies a value to different forms of engagement. This informs the Trending Content feature as to what it should display without delay.
    This criteria is weighted and includes:
    Replies: most valuable ⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Topics that receive replies are the clearest sign a piece of content is trending.
    Reactions: valuable ⭐️⭐
    Your members are engaging with other members’ topics and replies. That’s great in helping to decide what is trending, but ultimately we want members to comment.
    Views: somewhat valuable ⭐️
    Visibility is important and plays a role in deciding whether a content item shows in the Trending Content section. 
     
    The Trending Content may be visible in a block, or on your community's leaderboard.
    Trending Content block:


     
    Trending Content section on the leaderboard page:

     
    The Trending Content feature may be turned on or off by visiting your Admin Control Panel (ACP) -> System -> Smart Community -> Features -> Trending Content.
     

     
    Examples of useful Trending Content blocks in different types of communities:
     
    Enterprise communities
    If you’re in the corporate realm, displaying a list of trending content gives your influential clients and members an opportunity to see what’s shaping the ecosystem of your big-named brand. It also provides the company with an opportunity to monitor trends, then focus on more content like it to create another set of trending topics.
    Educational communities
    Display a list of trending content amongst your students. If there’s a particular question that captures the attention of your e-learning audience, chances are it’s engaging and thought-provoking. By including a Trending Content block in prominent areas of your community, students (and teachers) have an opportunity to weigh in and reach a solution together. 
    Gaming communities
    Include a Trending Content block inside your gaming community to drum up interest in new releases, share insider information and rumors about your favorite games and consoles and gauge what your fellow gamer peers are engaged with. 
    Support communities
    Should a critical support issue arise, your team will see what content items your clients are contributing to, assess, then solve.
    News communities
    Don’t be the last to know. When breaking news strikes, members tend to flood to the content item and share their two cents. Including a Trending Content block in a news community is the most efficient route to quickly keep your members in the loop regarding live news. 

    Our new Trending Content feature is available in version 4.7.0. 
    Thoughts? Drop us a line in the comments and let us know what you think. Should this blog post receive great engagement, you'll see it in our Trending Content feature located in our community forum. See you there!
  28. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from AtariAge for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  29. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from SeNioR- for a blog entry, Spark more real time engagement with the Trending Content feature   
    See what members are currently most engaged with in real time in your community by using our new Trending Content feature included in our latest release, 4.7.0. 
    Our new Trending Content feature, available on our Business & Corporate/Enterprise plans, automatically rounds up a list of engaging topics that are most active in the present moment within your community and proudly displays them for other members to see and contribute to. 
    Trending Content is one of the best ways to stay on top of popular and current topics, as well as engage with other members in the here and now. It’s also a powerful method to inform search engines that your community is an authority in its niche because your members are constantly fueling the community fire.
    How does the real time Trending Content feature work?
    Our platform applies a value to different forms of engagement. This informs the Trending Content feature as to what it should display without delay.
    This criteria is weighted and includes:
    Replies: most valuable ⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Topics that receive replies are the clearest sign a piece of content is trending.
    Reactions: valuable ⭐️⭐
    Your members are engaging with other members’ topics and replies. That’s great in helping to decide what is trending, but ultimately we want members to comment.
    Views: somewhat valuable ⭐️
    Visibility is important and plays a role in deciding whether a content item shows in the Trending Content section. 
     
    The Trending Content may be visible in a block, or on your community's leaderboard.
    Trending Content block:


     
    Trending Content section on the leaderboard page:

     
    The Trending Content feature may be turned on or off by visiting your Admin Control Panel (ACP) -> System -> Smart Community -> Features -> Trending Content.
     

     
    Examples of useful Trending Content blocks in different types of communities:
     
    Enterprise communities
    If you’re in the corporate realm, displaying a list of trending content gives your influential clients and members an opportunity to see what’s shaping the ecosystem of your big-named brand. It also provides the company with an opportunity to monitor trends, then focus on more content like it to create another set of trending topics.
    Educational communities
    Display a list of trending content amongst your students. If there’s a particular question that captures the attention of your e-learning audience, chances are it’s engaging and thought-provoking. By including a Trending Content block in prominent areas of your community, students (and teachers) have an opportunity to weigh in and reach a solution together. 
    Gaming communities
    Include a Trending Content block inside your gaming community to drum up interest in new releases, share insider information and rumors about your favorite games and consoles and gauge what your fellow gamer peers are engaged with. 
    Support communities
    Should a critical support issue arise, your team will see what content items your clients are contributing to, assess, then solve.
    News communities
    Don’t be the last to know. When breaking news strikes, members tend to flood to the content item and share their two cents. Including a Trending Content block in a news community is the most efficient route to quickly keep your members in the loop regarding live news. 

    Our new Trending Content feature is available in version 4.7.0. 
    Thoughts? Drop us a line in the comments and let us know what you think. Should this blog post receive great engagement, you'll see it in our Trending Content feature located in our community forum. See you there!
  30. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from LiquidFractal for a blog entry, Spark more real time engagement with the Trending Content feature   
    See what members are currently most engaged with in real time in your community by using our new Trending Content feature included in our latest release, 4.7.0. 
    Our new Trending Content feature, available on our Business & Corporate/Enterprise plans, automatically rounds up a list of engaging topics that are most active in the present moment within your community and proudly displays them for other members to see and contribute to. 
    Trending Content is one of the best ways to stay on top of popular and current topics, as well as engage with other members in the here and now. It’s also a powerful method to inform search engines that your community is an authority in its niche because your members are constantly fueling the community fire.
    How does the real time Trending Content feature work?
    Our platform applies a value to different forms of engagement. This informs the Trending Content feature as to what it should display without delay.
    This criteria is weighted and includes:
    Replies: most valuable ⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Topics that receive replies are the clearest sign a piece of content is trending.
    Reactions: valuable ⭐️⭐
    Your members are engaging with other members’ topics and replies. That’s great in helping to decide what is trending, but ultimately we want members to comment.
    Views: somewhat valuable ⭐️
    Visibility is important and plays a role in deciding whether a content item shows in the Trending Content section. 
     
    The Trending Content may be visible in a block, or on your community's leaderboard.
    Trending Content block:


     
    Trending Content section on the leaderboard page:

     
    The Trending Content feature may be turned on or off by visiting your Admin Control Panel (ACP) -> System -> Smart Community -> Features -> Trending Content.
     

     
    Examples of useful Trending Content blocks in different types of communities:
     
    Enterprise communities
    If you’re in the corporate realm, displaying a list of trending content gives your influential clients and members an opportunity to see what’s shaping the ecosystem of your big-named brand. It also provides the company with an opportunity to monitor trends, then focus on more content like it to create another set of trending topics.
    Educational communities
    Display a list of trending content amongst your students. If there’s a particular question that captures the attention of your e-learning audience, chances are it’s engaging and thought-provoking. By including a Trending Content block in prominent areas of your community, students (and teachers) have an opportunity to weigh in and reach a solution together. 
    Gaming communities
    Include a Trending Content block inside your gaming community to drum up interest in new releases, share insider information and rumors about your favorite games and consoles and gauge what your fellow gamer peers are engaged with. 
    Support communities
    Should a critical support issue arise, your team will see what content items your clients are contributing to, assess, then solve.
    News communities
    Don’t be the last to know. When breaking news strikes, members tend to flood to the content item and share their two cents. Including a Trending Content block in a news community is the most efficient route to quickly keep your members in the loop regarding live news. 

    Our new Trending Content feature is available in version 4.7.0. 
    Thoughts? Drop us a line in the comments and let us know what you think. Should this blog post receive great engagement, you'll see it in our Trending Content feature located in our community forum. See you there!
  31. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Olivia Clark for a blog entry, Spark more real time engagement with the Trending Content feature   
    See what members are currently most engaged with in real time in your community by using our new Trending Content feature included in our latest release, 4.7.0. 
    Our new Trending Content feature, available on our Business & Corporate/Enterprise plans, automatically rounds up a list of engaging topics that are most active in the present moment within your community and proudly displays them for other members to see and contribute to. 
    Trending Content is one of the best ways to stay on top of popular and current topics, as well as engage with other members in the here and now. It’s also a powerful method to inform search engines that your community is an authority in its niche because your members are constantly fueling the community fire.
    How does the real time Trending Content feature work?
    Our platform applies a value to different forms of engagement. This informs the Trending Content feature as to what it should display without delay.
    This criteria is weighted and includes:
    Replies: most valuable ⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Topics that receive replies are the clearest sign a piece of content is trending.
    Reactions: valuable ⭐️⭐
    Your members are engaging with other members’ topics and replies. That’s great in helping to decide what is trending, but ultimately we want members to comment.
    Views: somewhat valuable ⭐️
    Visibility is important and plays a role in deciding whether a content item shows in the Trending Content section. 
     
    The Trending Content may be visible in a block, or on your community's leaderboard.
    Trending Content block:


     
    Trending Content section on the leaderboard page:

     
    The Trending Content feature may be turned on or off by visiting your Admin Control Panel (ACP) -> System -> Smart Community -> Features -> Trending Content.
     

     
    Examples of useful Trending Content blocks in different types of communities:
     
    Enterprise communities
    If you’re in the corporate realm, displaying a list of trending content gives your influential clients and members an opportunity to see what’s shaping the ecosystem of your big-named brand. It also provides the company with an opportunity to monitor trends, then focus on more content like it to create another set of trending topics.
    Educational communities
    Display a list of trending content amongst your students. If there’s a particular question that captures the attention of your e-learning audience, chances are it’s engaging and thought-provoking. By including a Trending Content block in prominent areas of your community, students (and teachers) have an opportunity to weigh in and reach a solution together. 
    Gaming communities
    Include a Trending Content block inside your gaming community to drum up interest in new releases, share insider information and rumors about your favorite games and consoles and gauge what your fellow gamer peers are engaged with. 
    Support communities
    Should a critical support issue arise, your team will see what content items your clients are contributing to, assess, then solve.
    News communities
    Don’t be the last to know. When breaking news strikes, members tend to flood to the content item and share their two cents. Including a Trending Content block in a news community is the most efficient route to quickly keep your members in the loop regarding live news. 

    Our new Trending Content feature is available in version 4.7.0. 
    Thoughts? Drop us a line in the comments and let us know what you think. Should this blog post receive great engagement, you'll see it in our Trending Content feature located in our community forum. See you there!
  32. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from BertT for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  33. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Elon Report for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  34. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from iiioroh for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  35. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from kmk for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  36. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from ASTRAPI for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  37. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Ramsesx for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  38. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Sonya* for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  39. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from sulervo for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  40. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Yamamura for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  41. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from AlexWebsites for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  42. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Markus Jung for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  43. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Clover13 for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  44. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from IPCommerceFan for a blog entry, An easier way to edit your theme   
    In a digital world with no shortage of places to connect, a beautiful theme will help you stand out from the crowd. 
    We previously touched on the importance of branded communities, and now we’re unveiling new functionality that will help make your theme more functional: easy access to header and footer tabs within our new simple theme editor. 
    Invision Community already has a powerful and advanced theme editor allowing total control over every aspect of your community’s UI, however this power comes at the cost of ease of use. We often get asked if there’s an easier way to add a site wrapper, or header and footer with some tweaks to the CSS without learning the complexities of the theme editor. Now, we do!
    Invision Community 4.7.0 comes with a simple theme editing mode.
    Utilizing a clean interface, this editing mode allows you to quickly and easily add header and footer HTML, along with any CSS.
     


    When editing a theme, after clicking the big green button that says "Use Simple Theme Editing," you're taken to a simplified theme editor page where you can add in code for your header and footer, as well as custom CSS.
    Previously, this option was not available. Before, community leaders had to sift through a theme’s template structure to modify anything within the header and footer code by manually editing Core > Global > GlobalTemplate and work out where to put the HTML. Now, there are header, footer and CSS tabs for easy access.
     

     
    The same Header and Footer tabs are also viewable when editing a theme. 
     

     
    TL;DR? We streamlined an important theme editing process.
    Our mission is to further simplify the more complex parts of the Admin Control Panel without losing the extensibility and customization Invision Community is famous for. The simple theme editor is a single step in that direction.
    The new, easy-to-use header / footer / CSS theme options are available to use in our new release, 4.7.0.
     
  45. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from iiioroh for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  46. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Felipo Antonoff - Opencart for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  47. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from crmarks for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  48. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from SC36DC for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  49. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Dprock for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  50. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Miss_B for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  51. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from BomAle for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  52. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Thomas P for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  53. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Myr for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  54. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from media for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  55. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Sonya* for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  56. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from DawPi for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  57. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Maxxius for a blog entry, Improved spam defense in 4.7 with hCaptcha   
    As the Invision Community platform continues to evolve, so do the precarious ploys of pesky bots. 
    Oftentimes spammers, whether they are bots or actual humans, spam your community with links in an effort to boost their website’s SEO. 
    There are already a number of ways in the Invision Community platform to fight against spam, including…
     
    Our native Spam Defense built into the platform that scores a newly-registered member Placing new registrations into a moderator queue Adding word filters that, when triggered, put the member in a moderation queue
    We also integrate with various CAPTCHAs. You might be unfamiliar with the term, but you’ve definitely participated with one. It’s a digital gatekeeper in the form of an interactive puzzle that asks you to find patterns or similar images in order to evade malicious bots from taking action, whether that’s submitting a spam email, comment or registering an account. 
    Our existing CAPTCHA defenses include:
     
    Invisible reCAPTCHA where the system intelligently detects if the user is human in the background reCAPTCHA V2 where the user simply clicks an "I'm not a robot" checkbox keyCAPTCHA where the user must complete a jigsaw puzzle
      In our latest update, version 4.7, we’ve included yet another defense to block spam from seeing the light of day: hCaptcha
    hCaptcha is one of the world's most widely used independent Captcha services. 
    We’re incorporating it in a few places where spammers can prepare their attacks.

    Registering:
    Prevent spammers from joining your community. If enabled, the hCaptcha will stop spammers in their tracks before even creating an account in your community.



    Guest posts:
    Community leaders have the option to allow guests to reply to topics. This could potentially open up the floodgates for spammers, but the hCaptcha effectively mitigates this by asking the entity (hopefully an actual person) to problem solve. If the sequence is not successfully completed, the guest post won't be published.



    hCaptcha is available in the new 4.7 Beta 1 release.
    Give it a shot and let us know what you think in the comments… just be sure to successfully select all the traffic lights if you’re a guest! 😉 
     
  58. Thanks
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from TowZone for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  59. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Patrick O'Keefe for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  60. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from sobrenome for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  61. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Dprock for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  62. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Lance... for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  63. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Davyc for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  64. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from AlexJ for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  65. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from BomAle for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  66. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from ASTRAPI for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  67. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Maxxius for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  68. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Chris Anderson for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  69. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Yamamura for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  70. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Clover13 for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  71. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from LaCollision for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  72. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Square Wheels for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
  73. Like
    Jordan Miller got a reaction from Matt C. for a blog entry, New feature! A friendly reminder before posting   
    There’s a fine line between freedom of speech and censorship. 
    Invision Community always aims to empower community leaders with options to encourage an open dialogue within a community, while including barriers for members who choose to ignore the guidelines. 
    Invision Community’s latest release, 4.6.11, includes a simple but powerful new feature to help you shape your community’s tone. 
    It’s called Block Submission.
    Block submission stops a member’s message from being posted if it includes any word(s) added to your Word Filters list with the “Block Submission” option enabled. 
    Word Filters, a previously existing feature, allows community owners to prohibit profanity in the community. If a member types a word included on the banned words list, the platform will automatically either...
    Replace the word with something else you set Hold the post for moderation Or, with our new Block Submission feature, notify the member they must amend their post.  Located: ACP -> System -> Settings -> Posting -> Word Filters -> Add Word Filter
    Here is an example:
    I added the word “hate” to the Word Filters list in the Admin Control Panel and selected the Block Submission option. 
     

     
    Now, when a member tries to post the word hate, a message pops up indicating it wasn’t published and why. 


     
    The member must modify their comment in order for the post to go live. In this scenario, that would look like taking out the word hate.
    Feel free to change the default warning message (the text located in the orange message bar above) to something better suited for your community - it's located in the Languages settings in your ACP. 


     
    Why did we create Block Submission?
    This feature not only helps automatically moderate content, but more importantly, it sets a precedent to members regarding what is (and isn’t) accepted. 
    Gently notifying members that their comment doesn’t align with your community’s guidelines helps maintain the existing culture you’ve worked hard on cultivating, as well as your initiative to keep the language and sentiment positive. 
    Interested in trying our block submission feature out? Please upgrade to 4.6.11!
    If you don’t have an Invision Community license yet, please reach out to me and I’ll help get you started. 
    Thoughts on our latest feature? Sound off in the comments (just make sure it passes our new vibe check 😉). 
     
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