Comments may add value and may not. This presentation maps comments into theirtime-value quadrants. Some comments are volatile or even leave behind residual harm. In contrast; other comments add value sooner or later and become inputs for further works.
2. Comments as Inputs If I write a presentation and I get comments soon enough to modify/improve my presentation then these comments serve as inputs that yield better outputs
3. Comments on Presentations These are initially outputs. Readers add them after a presentation is published
4. Comments on Presentations- 2 Only when authors or interested readers use these comments as an input for further work ….
25. Comments on SlideShare But they recoup their value later on High Value Low Time Early on Later on
26. Comments on SlideShare Time transforms Types 3 and 4 comments into valuable inputs High Value Low Time Early on Later on
27. Comments on SlideShare They become an input for great products, presentations and services High Value Low Time Early on Later on
28. Volatile Comments Volatile comments (Types 1 and 2) come fast and go fast They are short-lived High Value Low Time Early on Later on
29. Volatile Comments- 2 They come in great numbers. Their flow might at certain flow rate become chaotic High Value Low Time Early on Later on
30. Volatile Comments- 3 They confuse the reader and the writer They have negative value added High Value Low Time Early on Later on
31. Volatile Comments- 4 In which quadrant would you place comments like? Thanks for sharing Nice presentation Well-done! It not your business to write on this subject
32. Comments That Are Not Comments The output is never an input for the writer and the reader
33. Comments That Are Comments For great examples of comments that inspired me, see the comments on my presentation entitled “Human behavior Vs. clay behavior”. These comments inspired with this presentation