F.A.Q
Frequently asked questions
The CollabAnthNetwork is not an anthropology organization in the traditional sense. Instead, it is a social networking and multi-service platform specifically designed to support the anthropology community, including individual anthropologists and anthropology organizations. Through this platform, organizations can extend their reach, connect with the broader community, and focus on creating and distributing valuable anthropology resources and programs to their members, all while utilizing the diverse services offered by the Collaborative Anthropology Network.
In essence, the CollabAnthNetwork provides a unique opportunity for anthropology organizations to reduce their technology requirements and overhead costs, significantly increase their outreach, and enhance the services they offer to members. If you represent an anthropology organization, we invite you to contact us about group plans tailored to your needs.
No, joining the CollabAnthNetwork is completely free, and the core social network is largely open to the public. However, you will need to register to access certain features, such as the members directory and individual social profiles (we are considering offering limited public profiles in the future).
While the essential social networking features are free, we do offer additional paid services for those who wish to enhance their experience. These services include creating a personal blog within the community, listing an organization in the directory, posting a job or resume on the upcoming job board, and participating in or offering online courses in our upcoming open course marketplace (founding instructor partners are currently being sought). There are free options for all of these services as well, but premium plans provide additional benefits and help to support the ongoing maintenance and development of the platform.
Slack has become a popular tool for organizational and professional communication, thanks to its ease of use and freemium model that allows users to create a ‘workspace’ at no cost. For teams that need real-time communication, Slack’s features can be incredibly useful. However, when it comes to fostering an open community platform, Slack falls short in several critical areas:
- Short-Term Memory: Slack’s basic plan, which is often the go-to option for many groups, functions primarily as a group messaging service with a limited 90-day window for viewing messages. This design is fine for small teams that require daily communication and can operate within this limited timeframe. However, for organizers trying to build a community forum, this short-term memory poses a significant challenge. Important conversations, shared resources, and collective knowledge disappear after 90 days unless users are willing to pay for a premium plan—a cost that can quickly add up as the community grows.
- Lack of Community-Centric Features: Slack is fundamentally designed for ongoing team collaboration, not for building and sustaining a community forum. While Slack offers channels for basic organization, features like long-term archiving, advanced community management tools, and robust options for categorizing and retrieving discussions are limited. This makes it difficult for community members to revisit past discussions, find relevant information, or contribute to a knowledge base that endures over time.
- Limited Customization and Scalability: As a proprietary platform, Slack offers limited customization options. Communities are confined to the tools and features that Slack provides, which may not fully align with the specific needs of an anthropology-focused community. Furthermore, as your community grows, the need for more robust features and the associated costs can become a barrier to scalability.
The Collaborative Anthropology Network Advantage: In contrast, the Collaborative Anthropology Network is designed from the ground up to support the unique needs of the anthropology community. Here’s why it stands out:
- Long-Term Community Engagement: Unlike Slack, the Collaborative Anthropology Network allows for permanent archiving of discussions, resources, and shared knowledge. This means that valuable conversations and content aren’t lost after a set period, enabling the community to build a rich, enduring knowledge base over time.
- Tailored Features for Anthropology: The platform offers a range of tools specifically designed to foster collaboration, research, and learning within the anthropology community. From group discussion boards to integrated wikis, and from research tools to an annotation dashboard, the CollabAnthNetwork provides a suite of features that go far beyond what Slack can offer.
- Free and Accessible: The Collaborative Anthropology Network is a free platform with no hidden costs or paywalls for basic functionality. This ensures that all community members can fully participate without the need for expensive upgrades or premium plans.
- Scalable and Customizable: Built on a customizable open-source foundation, the platform can grow with your community. Whether you’re a small group or a large organization, the CollabAnthNetwork can scale to meet your needs, with the flexibility to adapt as those needs evolve.
- Focus on the Anthropology Community: While Slack is a general-purpose tool, the Collaborative Anthropology Network is specifically dedicated to supporting anthropologists, cultural advocates, and related researchers. This focus ensures that the platform’s features, content, and community are all aligned with the interests and goals of its users.
In conclusion, while Slack may serve the basic communication needs of small teams, it lacks the depth and breadth required to support a thriving, open community platform. The Collaborative Anthropology Network, on the other hand, is purpose-built to facilitate long-term collaboration, knowledge sharing, and professional growth within the anthropology community. By choosing CollabAnthNetwork, you’re investing in a platform that’s designed not just to connect, but to empower your community.
While technological advancements have made sophisticated platforms possible, anthropology remains a niche field largely made up of humble non-profit organizations. Most anthropology organizations lack the resources to build and maintain the complex technology platforms that today’s digital environment demands. Organizations with some amount of resources often rely on proprietary SaaS platforms owned by large corporations to provide services beyond a basic website. While these offer out-of-the-box solutions and customer support, they come with significant costs and limited customization options. Smaller organizations turn to open-source platforms to launch basic websites, but these still require experienced designers, developers, and dedicated IT staff to remain functional and up-to-date, which is often beyond the reach of those organizations.
It’s also important to recognize that many anthropologists and anthropology organizations rely on social media platforms that have innovated business models based on surveillance capitalism, where personal data becomes the product, and engagement is driven by algorithms at the cost of user well-being.
Anthropologists and Non-profit organizations often face a difficult choice:
- Make large investments in technology and hire full-time IT staff, or
- Depend on for-profit platforms, subject to their development priorities (or lack thereof),
- Struggle with basic, poorly configured, or outdated instances of open-source platforms managed by part-time or inexperienced staff and volunteers.
- Rely on large social media platforms that collect and sell their data and don’t offer any means to advance the field of anthropology beyond their networking capabilities.
“Yeah, and you’re a ‘for-profit,’ social media platform…“
The Collaborative Anthropology Network is a different kind of platform. Unlike the multi-billion dollar industry that exploits research outputs or social media platforms that collect and sell your personal data, the CollabAnthNetwork was created by an aspiring design anthropologist with a background in web and graphic design and a degree in anthropology. In fact, the CollabAnthNetwork was pitched to a number of prominent anthropology organizations and foundations as a potential platform that could be owned by or established as a non-profit. When these partnerships didn’t take shape, the development forged ahead to become the most innovative platform dedicated to the anthropology community. This approach allows us to provide cutting-edge technology and exceptional customer support typically associated with SaaS platforms, while offering free services not seen with traditional anthropology organizations, and premium plans at a cost lower than most organizational memberships.
We fully support anthropology organizations as a vital user base of the CollabAnthNetwork and are actively developing features and group plans to help them provide additional benefits to their members. We are also open to creating community-led committees and advisory boards to assist with decision-making as the platform grows. However, we recognize that our role is in the operation, maintenance, and development of the platform and its underlying technology, with anthropology organizations, their members, and the broader anthropology community at the center of our development priorities.
In today’s digital environment, a commitment to user rights and privacy is not just a guiding principle, but an ongoing technological challenge. While many traditional non-profits may struggle with these complexities, we take this challenge seriously, driving us to continually innovate and enhance our platform’s security and user protections. On the other hand, despite the platform being spearheaded by an individual there were limited available opportunities to partner with existing organizations, locate relevant or eligible grants, or gain other benefits by establishing it as a non-profit. While we are a technology company today, the CollabAnthNetwork is different. We are driven by a passion for anthropology and a commitment to listening to the community like no other platform before.
Starting with an open-source foundation has significantly reduced our development and maintenance costs. To further support the platform, we offer paid services such as personal blogs, job postings, online courses, and an organizational directory—always providing both free and paid options. We also offer sponsorship opportunities and group plans for anthropology organizations. To manage costs effectively, we limit the amount of media users can upload to their profiles, but offer premium memberships for those who need more storage. These revenue streams help us cover the costs of operating and maintaining the platform.
We are committed to providing a platform that does not rely on the invasive business models of surveillance capitalism used by major social networking platforms. The paid services on the CollabAnthNetwork are our way of offering all the social networking features at no cost, while ensuring the sustainability of the platform.