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Building Online Communities For Insight, Advocacy

How to build a successful community.

Published
February 19, 2010
Publication
Chazen Global Insights
Jump to main content
Article Author(s)

Aliza Freud

Affiliated Author
Topic(s)
Chazen Global Insights, Leadership

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This article by Aliza Freud, a speaker at the BRITE ’10 conference, was originally published in Marketing Daily, and she graciously allowed us to cross post it here.

Building Online Communities For Insight, Advocacy

Before Facebook launched in 2004, were you part of a community? Did you share pictures of your vacation with your friends? Before LinkedIn, did you share details of your business contacts to help out a friend? Before blogs, when someone you knew said something controversial, did you comment on it?

Of course you did. Social activity isn’t new. We’re social creatures, mostly.

But why do we act as if online communities are completely new? We make errors in trying to build communities that we would never make in real life. Some of these errors are fundamental. In everyday life, if the conversation only went one way, you’d tell me that you’re not going to build a very strong relationship. No one likes to be talked at.

Marketers spend billions on “loyalty”-building activities to build and sustain relationships with customers. The new world of social media seems like a limitless lab for brands, with tantalizing opportunities to transform brand-customer interactions. But the web is littered with sad, lifeless communities.

Social media is about scale and tools, and the elimination of social friction. At their best, online communities accelerate and deepen our social proclivities. But building a vibrant community is hard.

Everyone wants to know how to drive interest and build engagement in the communities that they create, thinking (and hoping) that because they have built a community for their product, their consumers will come. Why?

In our experience building and operating consumer communities, we’ve observed that successful online communities have the same attributes as successful offline communities. Humans have been building communities for thousands of years. As social creatures, were conditioned to respond to certain implicit qualities in a community.

Building Online Communities For Insight, Advocacy

Following are the key ingredients to building successful communities:

  • Shared Purpose: We like people like ourselves. This is not a narrow-minded statement. In fact, Shared Purpose transcends traditional segmentation or obvious classification. It might be shared history, shared interests, shared hobbies, or even shared passion for a brand. In today’s social media world, we can find those like ourselves.
  • Connection: Communities must first and foremost provide an opportunity for a free and open exchange between consumers and the brand. “Duh,” you say? How many communities have we all seen with the anemic discussion boards relegated to low importance if not absent all together? Consumers are ready to talk; it’s up to brands to take up their part of the conversation.
  • Recognition: Status is implicit in all communities, no matter how egalitarian. The best communities recognize the contributions of their most active members, and the achievement of status in a community creates implicit rewards for increased contribution. In this context, its clear that Recognition does NOT have to be monetary or rational value. The most valuable brands have always created emotional connections with their customers, and brands now have the tools to recognize those relationships.
  • Impact: If brands engage with consumers, and meaningfully participate in a community with them, they have made a commitment. Many smart brands are already taking advantage of online communities to generate insight. But, are they taking it to the next logical step? Community members become invested and want to know what kind of impact their feedback has inspired.

For any brand, it takes commitment, bravery, experimentation and authenticity to capitalize on online communities and social networks, building new modes of brand-consumer interaction and dialogue. But the connections need to be built on principles as old as the human race.

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