This week on Friday, I’ll be speaking at the Module 09 Midwest Digital Conference about building internal and external communities. The internal bit is something that I don’t think gets talked about enough, but it’s something incredibly powerful about what’s happening with all this social communication stuff.

(By the by, if you’re going to be in Detroit and haven’t yet signed up for the conference, come do so here, or even sign up for the streaming version of the event for just $25. They’re letting me hang out with the likes of Shannon Paul, Ken Burbary, my CEO Marcel Lebrun, and Chris Brogan.)

Your Community Doesn’t Classify Social Media

To me, part of the power of social communication is uniting disparate parts of a business that haven’t talked to each other in years. Maybe ever. Why? Because the outreach you do out onto the web has implications far beyond whether or not people heard your brand messages.

People want to talk about your product and what makes it great (or not so great). They want to talk about your customer service, your executive team, your charitable and community initiatives, your website and the article that got published about you last week. They want to talk about their experiences with you, for better or worse.

Your customers don’t park social media neatly in a “communications” bucket, nor do they care whether you put it in PR or marketing or customer service or all of the above. They probably don’t even identify or label the social media they’re using, or consciously choose a “social” tool over another.

They’re just trying to open up a line of communication to your company.

Inside the Firewall, Things Need to Mesh

So given all of that, if you’re a community person inside a company, it’s my view that part of your job is uniting the clans inside your own walls to work together. If your customers aren’t distinguishing between the buckets of marketing or customer support or public relations, your team for approaching outreach and engagement needs to be multi-disciplinary.

As a community professional, it’s partially my role to not only build community within and among our customers, but to help our internal teams work better together. I’m often the conduit for a lot of information and insights from our community. And I also need to touch lots of areas of the business – business development, product support, communications, and content – so that we’re all working together to ultimately meet the needs of the people that drive our business.

We need to communicate well, be able to track our engagement and outreach efforts, and collaborate as a team on the best way to support our company and community goals along side each other. There’s just no way you can keep this stuff confined to the PR department and ever hope to scale it or have it make a fundamental, positive impact on your business.

So I’ll be talking this week about some of the things that define strong community management, both inside the walls and out. And if I don’t see you in Detroit, I’ll have the presentation up on Slideshare with some notes for your review later on.

What else do you think folks need to know about how to build and bridge communities?

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