I launched a new site about a week ago – Ribbot.com . It allows you to create better discussion forums online.

If you’ve ever used Hacker News, Reddit, StackOverflow, or 37Signals Answers – these are all examples of a new breed of forum that has emerged online and tends to be much better than than traditional forums.
Traditional forums often have low quality discussions, and are a place for a vocal minority to rant online. Many companies avoid user discussion forums because they’re worried about giving people a public place to rant.
Ribbot allows anyone to create one of these new types of discussion forums (like the sites mentioned above) with the following features:
- User voting and reputation
- Threaded comments
- Post and comment ranking algorithms

Here’s how they work: if someone posts something off-topic or unproductive then they are quickly down-voted by the community, and their content is less likely to be seen. Likewise, if someone posts something helpful or insightful, they are quickly up-voted by the community and their content is more likely to be seen. The net result of this is that (with enough users) you are more likely to see good content when you visit the forum, and hopefully contribute some yourself.
Who might want a new forum like this? You never quite know (and I’m eager to find out) but my hunch is this might be useful for:
- Businesses: most companies would like to have user discussion forums because they are a great way to reduce customer support costs. Instead of having customer support reps answering the same questions over and over, users can answer each other’s questions – and those answers become public for all to find later (Ribbot lets you search old content easily). Traditionally, most businesses have been skittish about user discussion forums because they become a public place for a vocal minority of users to rant (see Google Groups). But I believe this new style of forum with the features mentioned above largely solves this quality problem, and businesses will be more likely to adopt it (or their users will for them).
- Question & Answer sites: these have become very popular lately (see StackExchange and Quora) but there still isn’t an easy way for people to start their own QA site on any topic. StackExchange originally started with this vision but they decided to cut off the long tail of smaller topic sites (a mistake in my opinion). Ribbot would allow any special interest group or company to create their own.
- Link aggregation sites: many community sites have grown up around sharing relevant or interesting links on a particular topic (Hacker News is an example of this where the majority of posts are links to external sites with some discussion around them happening in the comments). These are more oriented around timely “latest news and events” links.
- Special interest groups: these could be around health (people with some particular condition), sports, hobbies, tech stuff (open source projects), classes & learning, etc. Basically, anything people are using Google Groups for now could work better on Ribbot.
Ribbot is a good fit for the use cases above because it’s customizable. You can change the terminology of the site to reflect questions and answers, link submissions, posts and comments, or anything you’d like. You can also allow only certain types of submission (links, posts, questions, etc). Three other features allow customization (some of these are still under development):
- Themes: Ribbot supports custom themes (much like Tumblr) which I hope will eventually create many diverse and beautiful sites. Any designer can share (and sell) a custom theme on Ribbot.
- Custom domains: By default Ribbot gives you a subdomain site (again, like Tumblr). But you will soon be able to host the forum on any custom domain of your choosing.
- Monetization options: Ribbot is completely free if you are ok with some ads on the site. But I wanted a way for forum owners and moderators to monetize their sites and be compensated for their work. So with the paid option (see pricing here) you are able to run your own ads and turn a profit. My hope is that a number of forums will generate sufficient traction so that their owners can eventually make it a full time gig. For others, I imagine it could make a nice side income or hobby project. Many businesses I suspect will keep the paid option and run it entirely without ads – the customer support savings would make it more than worth it.
In short, I think Ribbot will help people build better discussion forums online across a variety of topics.
Final notes:
Ribbot is still in an early beta.
To give Ribbot a try you can visit the Ribbot support forum. This is both the support forum for the site and a demo of the product itself.
As always, please send me your feedback and first impressions in the support forum or in the comments below. I always love to hear feedback from people on how/if it can be useful to them (or why it’s not).
And finally, you can create your own Ribbot forum right here on the homepage if you want to try it out.
Until next time, keep breaking free!
Brian Armstrong
Brian Armstrong
November 27th, 2011 at 10:57 pm
Some more discussion on Hacker News here:
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3283552
703m
February 12th, 2012 at 11:48 am
nice and i agree to discussion about hacker
Donna
December 15th, 2011 at 3:51 am
cool site. I was actually looking for a way to create a discussion forum for my site. Does this software work on blogs and static websites?
Brian Armstrong
December 20th, 2011 at 10:09 pm
Thanks Donna! You can run Ribbot on a subdomain. So for example if your blog is at http://www.example.com you could set up a Ribbot forum at forum.example.com. This is actually still under development (and probably the top requested feature in the support forum), so hopefully it’s coming soon.
With the custom theming you can even match some or all of the style of your blog.
Is this for your http://moolamatrix.com/ site or which one?
Grasshopper Network
December 16th, 2011 at 1:09 am
Hey Great Work. Is a beta available for real testing? I would be glad to use one. VB, MyBB and PhpBB style boards are so conventional that some real out of the box stuff was needed. You may get quite a few takers in coming days. The important aspect is get it up there and running fast! People tend to forget pretty quickly.
Brian Armstrong
December 21st, 2011 at 2:32 am
Thanks for the kind words! Yep a beta is up now (quite functional) at http://ribbot.com
You can create a new forum there and try it out or make suggestions in the support area. I think it’s something that can really evolve over time and do well. There have already been about 200 signups so I’ve been really happy with it so far!
James Soto
December 16th, 2011 at 7:38 am
Great post – Very informational I ve been looking for a better discussion forum for the longest now. Thanks
Brian Armstrong
December 21st, 2011 at 2:33 am
Thanks James! Yeah the existing solutions (PhPBB etc) I think are really lacking, and trying to do too much.
Clarence Middleton
December 18th, 2011 at 4:40 am
Would be better is it wasn’t hosted, site owner don’t want to be trapped into monthly payment for a forum. We would also want to be able to modify to our own need.
If it was self hosted I would buy it ASAP.
Brian Armstrong
December 21st, 2011 at 2:34 am
Well there is a free option for the self hosted model (with ads) – but I really like your suggestion. I’d consider open sourcing it and also offering a hosted solution (like wordpress). Thanks for bringing this up – actually I think you convinced me. Let me sleep on it another week or so but I’ll probably open source this.
Mikita Mikado
December 20th, 2011 at 11:48 am
Seems like a useful service. Actually, I wish I had it while in University. Though, I’d pimp features page a bit. Too plain right now…
Brian Armstrong
December 21st, 2011 at 2:34 am
Totally agree – threw that together in all of five minutes and it probably shows :)
Alex Morris
January 16th, 2012 at 2:04 pm
The way you describe it makes it seem like an excellent service. Obviously this is ideal for serious forumites, but I actually quite enjoy reading the insance ranting of some of the maniacs in forums out there. It keeps forums lively and sparks debate (and perpetual belligerence).
Jax Beach
February 14th, 2012 at 1:14 pm
Hi Brian! That’s awesome! Neat and easy to navigate, impressive features, reasonable prices. Can’t wait to give it a try!
PRC Board Exam
February 17th, 2012 at 2:38 pm
Ribbot looks promising. Glad to know that it’s free. Can I use my own domain name for my own forum on Ribbot?