It’s no surprise that I have community on the brain lately. Mostly because it’s my job, but I’m reflecting a lot on how much this role is starting to shift organizational mindset toward social media. In fact, the idea of “building community” is often many companies’ first thoughts when embarking on all this stuff.
So here’s a list of a few thoughts on community building you might approach today to get you started down the right path.
1. Cultivate Your Existing Network
People aren’t bottlecaps. Just collecting a pile of them for more eyeballs isn’t the foundation for a strong community. Instead, what fosters long-term growth is the fierce loyalty of a connected, tight knit few. Is your community small to start with? That’s okay. The quality and impact of a community has nothing to do with its size. EVER. Focus on them, and on bringing them what they need from you. Growth will happen.
If a community is what you really want, take the time to lay the proper foundation.
2. Tend The Outposts
If you’re going to have a presence on Twitter or Facebook, it needs tending, participation and presence from you. It’s not like a “set it and forget it” kind of thing where you just expect people to show up and do you the favor of paying attention. You need to invest in each of the sites where you maintain a presence, which means less is likely more. If you don’t have the resources to blog AND be on Twitter AND Facebook and make it a valuable experience for your community (which often isn’t the same definition you might have for value, at least at first), forget it. Stick with the gardens you can tend. Really, it’s okay.
One or two engaged networks will always be more valuable than trying to be everywhere, and doing it poorly.
3. Understand The Definitions: Measurement, Impact, and ROI.
Community metrics aren’t always valuable in and of themselves. How many followers or commenters or members or whatever you have isn’t where the gold is. Those are just statistics, and on their own, they mean little.
What matters is how the nature of your community impacts the work that you do. That means that you can have 25 members of your user group but if ALL of them refer 5 new customers every year because they love you (even if they don’t buy from you themselves), your community is *highly* impactful. Impact is about more than just revenue. It’s about what influences – for better or worse – all of the qualitative AND quantitative areas of your business, across the spectrum (not just PR or marketing or whatever).
When it comes to measurement, understand that in order to measure something, you must understand a) where you’re starting from and b) which business goal you wish to drive with your results. Until you have the two of those well articulated, measurement will always elude you. Measurement is about determining the impact of your efforts on business goals. Determine your starting line and where you want to end up. Then you’ll know what you need to measure.
As to ROI, the purest definitions are about the ratio of dollars invested in an effort to the dollars brought in through that effort. The social web also argues (and I think rightfully so) that “return” and “investment” can be articulated in terms of things like human resources, time, volunteer hours, loyalty, etc. It’s a bit of a new take, but then again, I’ve never been one to say that the old rules should never be changed. But make no mistake. Measuring “ROI” always needs to have a return relative to an investment.
4. Give Up On “Scaling”
Quality, fruitful and long-term valuable human interactions do not scale. If you want more human relationships, you need more humans on your team to create them. The end.
I’d give up a community of 10,000 sheep to have a community of 10 empassioned advocates any day of the week. And I promise you my balance sheet will reflect it, too.
5. Be Real and Human, Always. And Put It First.
I can feel your eyeballs rolling, but hear me out. Many people confuse this point.
Being human doesn’t just mean being friendly about your crappy sales pitch. I know plenty of super nice people that still try and sell me junk at every turn. What happens? I don’t trust them, because I’m always wondering what their new angle, is, no matter how outgoing and friendly they may be.
Being truly human and authentic requires two things rarely discussed in business: patience and faith. Faith that being good to people reaps its own rewards, even if the growth cycle is longer. And the patience to wait that cycle out, knowing how valuable and fragile trust is, and how much stronger your business will be tomorrow as a result of nurturing it. We don’t like leaving things to chance. But relationships, when well built, aren’t chance. They’re insurance. They just take investment.
6. Listen Carefully. And Deliver.
Your community will tell you what it needs and wants from you. Some voices will make sense, others will be shrill and ranty. You know the difference.
But do listen. Pay attention. Consider carefully the ideas and thoughts and suggestions you’re handed, and decide which of them can bridge the gap between your wants as a business and your community’s needs as your support network (and, incidentally, your revenue stream). It’s about symbiosis and mutual benefit. You’re not always right. Neither are they. But a little dialogue and attentiveness can go a long way to finding common ground, and building something of greater collective value.
7. Stand Aside.
Some of the strongest communities are the most interconnected and vibrant among their members. You don’t always need a leader, but you often need a connector. Ways and means for people to find one another to have a relationship outside of (and often in spite of) you. Your value isn’t always in connecting people to your thing or your stuff. It’s often in connecting them to each other based in mutual interest, and discovering that their affection for you is because of that bridge, not because of the thing you have.
You want things that engender loyalty? Often, they have nothing to do with you being the center of attention, and everything to do with your creating something of importance that’s a bit more broad than your business or brand. Put yourself in your customers shoes and ask what you’d look for.
But How?
I chose the word “sensible” for a reason. These are some fundamental building blocks for community longevity, but they’re not easy. They’re not small nor even simple sometimes, and I know there’s a whole pile of you that are going to say “yeah, but my company doesn’t get why that’s important”.
Then here’s the truth: your company isn’t ready for this. Community is not an entitlement, it’s earned. If you want me to tell you how to justify the need for community to your boss, I’m going to ask you first to tell me why they need convincing. Then I’m going to ask you why YOU think they’re missing the mark. Then I’m going to tell you that all the tools you need to make the case are right here on the vast interwebs in places like here and here and here and here and here.
Not everyone will have a successful community, nor should they. Communities are formed out of curiosity, but survive because of purpose and affinity.
If your company isn’t ready, that’s okay. Be a bricklayer instead. Form the foundations and be a mindset leader, not a tactics leader. Revolutions have been started with less.
I know of a community which used to be vibrant and have a lot of life to it but over time the company which created this “Community” failed to deliver on the content over time. Which is sad, because fan clubs such as these I am sure with content updated regularly probably make good money off of this. But with poor content, and value moved to easier, cheaper ways of doing things. The community is no longer and they have gathered elsewhere.
The sad thing is this said community, donated time and money to fundraisers with the name of the organization involved, spends thousands of dollars on memorabilia and travel to distant lands to see their team. This is an example of how it failed.
They failed because their was never a connector, never a voice to listen to their concerns and not enough time to put into it to make it worthwhile.
Jamie Favreaus last blog post..#journchat LIVE Aug 17, 2009
I know of a community which used to be vibrant and have a lot of life to it but over time the company which created this “Community” failed to deliver on the content over time. Which is sad, because fan clubs such as these I am sure with content updated regularly probably make good money off of this. But with poor content, and value moved to easier, cheaper ways of doing things. The community is no longer and they have gathered elsewhere.
The sad thing is this said community, donated time and money to fundraisers with the name of the organization involved, spends thousands of dollars on memorabilia and travel to distant lands to see their team. This is an example of how it failed.
They failed because their was never a connector, never a voice to listen to their concerns and not enough time to put into it to make it worthwhile.
Jamie Favreaus last blog post..#journchat LIVE Aug 17, 2009
Another great post, Amber! I especially like your observation that quality of community trumps quantity, a clear nod to nurturing the evangelists among your flock. Your words are particularly resonant for small businesses, who frequently express concerns about how much amount time investing in social media will take. I can almost hear the sigh of relief: it’s so much easier to be human and authentic to a smaller, more manageable community. Interestingly, the folks who seem to “get” social media quickly, once they take the initial plunge, are the ones who already know that “being good to people reaps its own rewards.” For these clients, all they need is a little help refining their business goals and strategies relative to social media and some initial guidance. Fun to watch them take wing.
@wvpmc
Another great post, Amber! I especially like your observation that quality of community trumps quantity, a clear nod to nurturing the evangelists among your flock. Your words are particularly resonant for small businesses, who frequently express concerns about how much amount time investing in social media will take. I can almost hear the sigh of relief: it’s so much easier to be human and authentic to a smaller, more manageable community. Interestingly, the folks who seem to “get” social media quickly, once they take the initial plunge, are the ones who already know that “being good to people reaps its own rewards.” For these clients, all they need is a little help refining their business goals and strategies relative to social media and some initial guidance. Fun to watch them take wing.
@wvpmc
Point 6 is one that people sometimes get confused. There’s a reason you put ‘and deliver’ because it’s more than just listening to what people are saying within your community. It’s about taking action. Understanding what is being said, taking that back to your desk or drawing board, and seeing how that fits into your strategy and how it can benefit your community.
Great list here, Amber.
Sonny Gills last blog post..Exceptions in Customer Service?
Point 6 is one that people sometimes get confused. There’s a reason you put ‘and deliver’ because it’s more than just listening to what people are saying within your community. It’s about taking action. Understanding what is being said, taking that back to your desk or drawing board, and seeing how that fits into your strategy and how it can benefit your community.
Great list here, Amber.
Sonny Gills last blog post..Exceptions in Customer Service?
I prefer to leave comments that disagree or further the debate. But in this case I can’t. Your post is clear, useful, relevant to anyone wanting to build community and make it worth the effort. There is an awful lot of pontificating that goes on out here (on blogs). Yours actual offers information that readers can use.
edwardbochess last blog post..What does it take to become a creative director?
I prefer to leave comments that disagree or further the debate. But in this case I can’t. Your post is clear, useful, relevant to anyone wanting to build community and make it worth the effort. There is an awful lot of pontificating that goes on out here (on blogs). Yours actual offers information that readers can use.
edwardbochess last blog post..What does it take to become a creative director?
What I love about this post is that it’s equally applicable for someone who is about to start managing a community or someone who has been managing communities for years (and for that matter, most of it can carry over to many other areas of marketing as well). I think something more marketers need to pay attention to is this line, “I’d give up a community of 10,000 sheep to have a community of 10 empassioned advocates any day of the week.” So often, companies are focusing on the number of Facebook fans and Twitter followers they have. If I had a choice between tweeting a link to 10,000 followers (not that I have that many) hoping for a retweet or 10 engaged, passionate followers who I KNOW are going to aggressively share it with their networks, I don’t see how I (or anyone, for that matter) wouldn’t choose the latter. With the firm I work for, we’re big advocates of fostering relationships that nurture evangelism rather than focusing on page views or follower numbers. Good to see we’re not just thinking crazily. Great post, Amber.
Mike Billeters last blog post..Does United Airlines deserve its social media punishment?
What I love about this post is that it’s equally applicable for someone who is about to start managing a community or someone who has been managing communities for years (and for that matter, most of it can carry over to many other areas of marketing as well). I think something more marketers need to pay attention to is this line, “I’d give up a community of 10,000 sheep to have a community of 10 empassioned advocates any day of the week.” So often, companies are focusing on the number of Facebook fans and Twitter followers they have. If I had a choice between tweeting a link to 10,000 followers (not that I have that many) hoping for a retweet or 10 engaged, passionate followers who I KNOW are going to aggressively share it with their networks, I don’t see how I (or anyone, for that matter) wouldn’t choose the latter. With the firm I work for, we’re big advocates of fostering relationships that nurture evangelism rather than focusing on page views or follower numbers. Good to see we’re not just thinking crazily. Great post, Amber.
Mike Billeters last blog post..Does United Airlines deserve its social media punishment?
Your words are real, authentic! It takes a village, a community and a group of individuals that collectively work together for a common goal.
The time is now for us to be real, because that is the value that we are all looking for. It is tough to trust in today’s society. We have been played upon. Overmarketed to, and over sold!
If you believe in what you do, and have empathy that is true. You will become a natural attraction, like bee’s to honey, creating a hive that you won’t get stung in, but will only grow sweeter with time!
Your words are real, authentic! It takes a village, a community and a group of individuals that collectively work together for a common goal.
The time is now for us to be real, because that is the value that we are all looking for. It is tough to trust in today’s society. We have been played upon. Overmarketed to, and over sold!
If you believe in what you do, and have empathy that is true. You will become a natural attraction, like bee’s to honey, creating a hive that you won’t get stung in, but will only grow sweeter with time!
Thanks for coaxing me out of my shell. 🙂
I like that you point out the differences between being friendly. Friendliness was always important in the old one-way marketing style… approachability, too. Being real, human, and at least somewhat transparent require a willingness to let down the guard and let people see us when we’re not smiling for the cameras. It lets people peek behind the curtain and catch a glimpse of the behind the scenes action – sometimes it’s pretty and sometimes it’s not. But, it requires a lot of maturity on the part of the company (just like humans… hmmm). In the end this sends a great message: choose us for us, and we (as a company) trust you to make the right decisions based on the gritty reality as opposed to the picture-perfect presentation of yore. (Yes, I just said “yore”).
You are one of the smartest people in the biz and I’m glad you like me back.
Shannon Pauls last blog post..If you abandon your online presence can you get it back?
Thanks for coaxing me out of my shell. 🙂
I like that you point out the differences between being friendly. Friendliness was always important in the old one-way marketing style… approachability, too. Being real, human, and at least somewhat transparent require a willingness to let down the guard and let people see us when we’re not smiling for the cameras. It lets people peek behind the curtain and catch a glimpse of the behind the scenes action – sometimes it’s pretty and sometimes it’s not. But, it requires a lot of maturity on the part of the company (just like humans… hmmm). In the end this sends a great message: choose us for us, and we (as a company) trust you to make the right decisions based on the gritty reality as opposed to the picture-perfect presentation of yore. (Yes, I just said “yore”).
You are one of the smartest people in the biz and I’m glad you like me back.
Shannon Pauls last blog post..If you abandon your online presence can you get it back?
Hi Amber –
This is a great post – one of the things that I think is so interesting is that marketers are looking to get the same volume in the same way from communities as traditional marketing techniques. The problem is that, as you so nicely articulate, you need to get a passionate core first. That is always step one because if you try to grow a community too fast, you will have a very difficult time getting the impact and engagement that you need to make it effective. But as you also point out, spending time nurturing that smaller community into something that grows to the size you need takes patience and faith. Typical marketing spend is a little more linear – you spend 2x and you get 2x – so the dynamic of community growth doesn’t make sense in that context. They require a lot more investment than they deliver for a while…but then, if you do it correctly, they take off and you see dramatically higher returns for your investment than more traditional methods.
Let’s hear it for a little faith!
Rachel Happes last blog post..Why Organizations Need ‘Social Labs’
Hi Amber –
This is a great post – one of the things that I think is so interesting is that marketers are looking to get the same volume in the same way from communities as traditional marketing techniques. The problem is that, as you so nicely articulate, you need to get a passionate core first. That is always step one because if you try to grow a community too fast, you will have a very difficult time getting the impact and engagement that you need to make it effective. But as you also point out, spending time nurturing that smaller community into something that grows to the size you need takes patience and faith. Typical marketing spend is a little more linear – you spend 2x and you get 2x – so the dynamic of community growth doesn’t make sense in that context. They require a lot more investment than they deliver for a while…but then, if you do it correctly, they take off and you see dramatically higher returns for your investment than more traditional methods.
Let’s hear it for a little faith!
Rachel Happes last blog post..Why Organizations Need ‘Social Labs’
Community isn’t an entitlement, it’s earned. I almost sprained my neck nodding so vigorously. Amazing, useful post. Thank you for it.
Jason Baers last blog post..Beth Kanter – The Twitter 20 Interview on Social Media and Social Change
Community isn’t an entitlement, it’s earned. I almost sprained my neck nodding so vigorously. Amazing, useful post. Thank you for it.
Jason Baers last blog post..Beth Kanter – The Twitter 20 Interview on Social Media and Social Change
Wow, this post is great timing for me – I meet my new team of interns tomorrow for the first time and I’ve been trying to hash out a lot of these points (and then some) in my head for our meeting but they were too scrambled in there. I’m convinced you’re psychic sometimes. Thanks for unscrambling my brain (albeit inadvertently). I can’t agree with you and Rachel more in the “if you try to grow a community too fast, you will have a very difficult time getting the impact and engagement that you need to make it effective” and all that. My gawd, if I had a dollar for every time I heard “We need X amount of people signed up for [insert project/community here] by [insert date here]”, I’d be a rich woman.
I could insert some kind of cliché gardening analogy here but I won’t. Y’all get it.
Stacy Lukass last blog post..Introducing a new kind of journalism for a new era
Wow, this post is great timing for me – I meet my new team of interns tomorrow for the first time and I’ve been trying to hash out a lot of these points (and then some) in my head for our meeting but they were too scrambled in there. I’m convinced you’re psychic sometimes. Thanks for unscrambling my brain (albeit inadvertently). I can’t agree with you and Rachel more in the “if you try to grow a community too fast, you will have a very difficult time getting the impact and engagement that you need to make it effective” and all that. My gawd, if I had a dollar for every time I heard “We need X amount of people signed up for [insert project/community here] by [insert date here]”, I’d be a rich woman.
I could insert some kind of cliché gardening analogy here but I won’t. Y’all get it.
Stacy Lukass last blog post..Introducing a new kind of journalism for a new era
A great post, all the nitty, gritty, and none of the fluff.
Sues last blog post..Community Manager Gigs
A great post, all the nitty, gritty, and none of the fluff.
Sues last blog post..Community Manager Gigs
There’s a simple yet devilishly persistent reason a lot of organizations don’t “get” community. It’s different. The concept of carefully tending horizontal networks of customers, advocates and, yes, gadflies represents a radical departure from a deeply entrenched model that up to now has consistently delivered satisfactory results.
But as the poet said, the times are a-changin’.
With that in mind, two points in your post stood out for me. First is the notion that relationships don’t scale. Anyone who has been married as long as I have grasps that. But a communications paradigm focused on aggregating eyeballs — even carefully selected sets of eyeballs — is simply incapable of investing in dynamic relationships with stakeholders.
Second is the concept of patience and its second cousin, faith. Neither are really part of the modern the business vocabulary. Yet it takes both to invest in a strategy that delivers delivers 50 percent ROI over five years when an alternate will net 20 percent in two.
There’s a simple yet devilishly persistent reason a lot of organizations don’t “get” community. It’s different. The concept of carefully tending horizontal networks of customers, advocates and, yes, gadflies represents a radical departure from a deeply entrenched model that up to now has consistently delivered satisfactory results.
But as the poet said, the times are a-changin’.
With that in mind, two points in your post stood out for me. First is the notion that relationships don’t scale. Anyone who has been married as long as I have grasps that. But a communications paradigm focused on aggregating eyeballs — even carefully selected sets of eyeballs — is simply incapable of investing in dynamic relationships with stakeholders.
Second is the concept of patience and its second cousin, faith. Neither are really part of the modern the business vocabulary. Yet it takes both to invest in a strategy that delivers delivers 50 percent ROI over five years when an alternate will net 20 percent in two.
Great stuff. I agree with Sue – all the nitty gritty, none of the fluff.
But I would add an 8th stride, from what I call the Digitalls to the Digicools – in other words, strides from just reaching those with social media ability to those who use Facebook but not much more.
There is a vast gap forming, and we need to close it!
Scott Goulds last blog post..Digitall, Digicool, Digitool and Diginots
Great stuff. I agree with Sue – all the nitty gritty, none of the fluff.
But I would add an 8th stride, from what I call the Digitalls to the Digicools – in other words, strides from just reaching those with social media ability to those who use Facebook but not much more.
There is a vast gap forming, and we need to close it!
Scott Goulds last blog post..Digitall, Digicool, Digitool and Diginots
I love the article, it was a great read! For me, 5 and 6 are the most important ones. People want to feel that they are listened to, they want to feel that they are “special”. Understanding them, their ideas and likes as well as listening to them will make them value the time you’ve spent talking to them. Therefore, they will value you more in return.
Marcys last blog post..12 Top Facebook Tools & Applications for Your Business
I love the article, it was a great read! For me, 5 and 6 are the most important ones. People want to feel that they are listened to, they want to feel that they are “special”. Understanding them, their ideas and likes as well as listening to them will make them value the time you’ve spent talking to them. Therefore, they will value you more in return.
Marcys last blog post..12 Top Facebook Tools & Applications for Your Business
Great useful post TAG Heuer watches
Great useful post TAG Heuer watches