# Traces of engagement **Published by:** [Subset](https://paragraph.com/@subset/) **Published on:** 2024-07-10 **URL:** https://paragraph.com/@subset/traces-of-engagement ## Content We're building a new way to save, share, and search—an approach that goes beyond text to encompass images and audio, videos and games, places and projects, products and services, concepts and memes, people and organizations, objects and experiences, activities and opportunities, methods and practices and protocols. If not those things in actuality, then proxies for them. But what is it about those things that causes them to catch in the net of our awareness? What leads us to save them, to share them, to search for them? The answer: engagement. We interact with these items and that interaction exceeds a threshold. There's a concept from forensic science called Locard's exchange principle. It states that every contact leaves a trace. We are connected to these things in proportion to the trace they leave upon us, and that trace is a function of the depth of our engagement. Below, we bucket depth of engagement into seven tiers. We use examples from a social media feed but they can be adapted to other contexts, such as the experience of a city. Each tier includes a description, an example and an estimate of the time and energy involved. The seven tiers of engagement:None engagementAn imperceptible exposureScrolling past a post<1 second, negligible energyWeak engagementA passive, minimally attentive pauseGlancing at a headline or lede1-3 seconds, low energyModerate engagementAn exhibit of slight interestConsuming a full post and liking or reacting to it3-10 seconds, low energyStrong engagementA brief scan and implicit/explicit annotationOpening a linked article, surveying it and deciding to come back to it later10-60 seconds, medium energyDeep engagementA deliberate investigation and interactionReading a full articleMinutes, medium energyTotal engagementAn immersion into the thing and its surrounding contextReading the original article, related articles, and talking to the communityHours to days, high energyAbsolute engagementAn absorption of the thing into one's character and way of beingAdopting a philosophy and changing a core part of one's lifeIndefinite, maximal energyThe prevalence of these tiers depends on an individual's default attentional stance overall and at particular moments in time. Typically, each engagement tier is less common by an order of magnitude than the previous. None engagement is the default for most people, most of the time, and occurs many times per day; absolute engagement occurs rarely across one's entire lifespan. With the seven tiers summarised we can ask the next question: what operations—save, share, search—map to which tiers? Our estimates:We save items receiving moderate, strong and deep engagementWe share items seeing strong, deep and total engagementWe search items with weak, moderate, strong, deep and total engagementThe extremes of engagement—none engagement and absolute engagement—are excluded from our estimates of what's liable to be saved, shared and searched. That's because absolute engagement is etched into the soul; things eliciting it don't need to be saved, shared or searched because they are ever-present. Inversely, none engagement doesn't exactly leave no trace. It is just that the traces never cohere enough to become a saveable, shareable, searchable artefact of experience.As we explore new paradigms of saving, sharing and search, it is becoming increasingly clear that the tiers of engagement matter. Not because they offer a legible, gameable framework for moving users from the bottom to the top, but because they make appropriate engagement an accessible reality for more people than ever before. How we save, share and search is instrumental in shaping how we engage, and that, in turn, shapes how we evolve individually and collectively. Consider your own interactions and the traces they've left. What new interactions would blossom and unfold if saving was simple, sharing was effortless, and search was easy and joyous? That's the question we're asking. ## Publication Information - [Subset](https://paragraph.com/@subset/): Publication homepage - [All Posts](https://paragraph.com/@subset/): More posts from this publication - [RSS Feed](https://api.paragraph.com/blogs/rss/@subset): Subscribe to updates ## Optional - [Collect as NFT](https://paragraph.com/@subset/traces-of-engagement): Support the author by collecting this post - [View Collectors](https://paragraph.com/@subset/traces-of-engagement/collectors): See who has collected this post