Excellent question! Allow me to shed my own experience on this situation. I have been a moderator for Beastkeeper, Aerithea, some Proboards Roleplays, and an Admin for the Wajas Chatroom. I also ran my own Proboards Roleplay for a few years.
I shall start with Beastkeeper as the obvious example…
I joined the day Beastkeeper I opened. I had heard about it on other sites and was waiting for it to come out. Having an older account really does help when applying for a Moderator position as generally it shows that you have experience and you know about the history and development of the game. For BK Angel had open Moderator applications (http://beastkeeper.com/thread/4046). I basically had to answer a set of questions. BK was young in the day so our userbase was so much smaller! I think what helped is I was active every day, posting on the help forums and guides, and welcoming new users. In general being an example player and becoming well known. I don't know Angel personally, and actually reside on the other side of the world! I think it helps that I am in a different time-zone, so that we will have coverage. Our time online does overlap occassionally.
Generally this is how it is done. It has happened in the past where I have been approached by site staff that felt I would be good Moderator material, and in some scenarios it has been through applications (such as Beastkeeper). However, the requirements are always the same. Mature, respected, well known, fair (to all parties), unbiased, not afraid to deal with sticky situations, active, and knowledgeable about the game.
Other sites I have been a moderator on had slightly different ways of moving “up the ranks” so to say. I even had to pass a mini “what if?” test once!
When most sites begin it seems that the Admin/Site Creators friends, or people that they know from other sites are generally moderators. For Aerithea I actually applied on the day I joined and cited past examples and how I would handle certain situations.
For the Wajas Chatroom I was approached by the current staff that were there. I was active, fair and had high standards for myself. I essentially already acted as a moderator (without mini-modding) without being one. Normally when there was a lack of staff online or the situation was just crazy (which happened).
It is always up to the discretion of the staff obviously. Normally they will let people know when they are hiring. Often they will have public applications. Rarely does messaging a staff member and asking for a position work.
Beta Testing:
A whole ‘nother monster. This can be a whole lot of luck (and sometimes money). I have been playing pet site games for at least 14 years now. I’ve been a beta on many sites… Some I stuck with. Some I haven’t. I was on Wajas the longest before I left. The funny thing is I normally find new sites on the “Other Games” advertisements on game forums. Often teasers will be posted by the staff/creators to help give the site some advertisement. Sometimes Alpha testers will post looking for referrals and such. I recommend keeping your eye on these boards on games that you currently play to find new games.
Beta testing varies by site, and whether or not the Beta testing is open or closed. Alpha testing is normally the first step. Usually that is open to contributors or donators, maybe a few others. Beta testing is usually more open. Closed would mean that it would be by invite only, or during certain open enrollments. Sometimes you may need a referral code, or know a member on the site already.
I’d be happy to go more in depth if you would like. I stalk new games like a hawk. I literally have a bookmark for them and reminders on my computer to check when things open up J
Always looking for Expand Stable Scrolls
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