online communities

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Online Communities

Post on 15-Sep-2014

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How to build and maintain online communities.

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Page 1: Online Communities

Online Communities

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Hello! My name is Bart.

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This is my daughter Merel.

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I’m passionate about coffee.

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I’m passionate about coffee.I live and work in Ghent.

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@netlash

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Online communitiesSanoma Mediaparade, 21/6/2012

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‣ What is an online community?

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Online community

=

A virtual place where people with similar

characteristics meet on a regular basis.

Definition

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You can’t create an online community.

(Those days are over.)

Communities already exist.

Create a platform to uncover communities of interest,

and to facilitate them. An online community might

emerge.

Online vs. offline

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Communities already exist and the question you should ask is how you can help them to do what they want to do.

Zuckerberg's prescription is "elegant organisation".

Mark Zuckerberg:

Elegant Organisation

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Social surroundings separate from the two usual

environments of home and work.

Third place

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Social surroundings separate from the two usual

environments of home and work.

“sense of place”

Third place

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Gathered around common interests.

Internet... not bound by location.

Third place

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By finding common interests that were previously

not connected because of physical limitations.

Create an online community

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‣ profile based

‣ object based

(often a mix)

2 main classes

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‣ Facebook

‣ LinkedIn

‣ Netlog

‣ Path

‣ ...

Profile based

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‣ YouTube (video)

‣ Instagram (photo)

‣ Pinterest (visual)

‣ Quora (question)

‣ ...

Object based

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‣ Why?

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‣ strengthen your brand (connection)

‣ CRM

‣ SEO

‣ ads

‣ because it’s hip...

Why?

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‣ Success?

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success

=

number of members

x

content (interaction)

Success of an online community

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‣ visit & read

‣ register

‣ react

‣ contribute

‣ share

Funnels

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‣ visit

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‣ SEO

‣ technical

‣ structure

‣ content

‣ use SEA if needed (boost)

Show up in search results

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‣ pains

‣ solutions

‣ questions

‣ products

‣ high in buying cycle

‣ site structure!

Show up in search results

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‣ facilitate sharing

‣ built-in triggers

‣ assign status

‣ “frictionless sharing” ?

Show up in social streams

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‣ most people organise their online behaviour

around their mailbox

‣ revisit

‣ invitations (status)

‣ don’t spam - add value

Show up in the inbox

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‣ hack e-mail (“invite your mailbox”)

‣ hack e-mail (“you’ve been tagged”)

‣ hack social (“invite your friends”)

‣ hack social (“pay with a tweet”)

‣ don’t spam - add value

Hacks

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‣ register

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‣ benchmark ( 5 % )

‣ measure

‣ A/B testing

‣ usability

Conversion

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‣ MVP

‣ use FaceBook

‣ “what’s in it for me”

Register

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The value of a network is proportional to the square

of the number of users connected.

Metcalfe’s Law

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Use these network effects.

‣ ICQ

‣ FaceBook

‣ Dropbox

‣ Delicious

‣ ...

Metcalfe’s Law

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Facebook’s already built...

Why build your own site?

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Play on someone else’s terrain, play by their rules.

Why build your own site?

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‣ react & contribute

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Small steps.

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‣ use micro-interactions

‣ “consistency”

Gradual engagement

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1

10

100

1000

Piramid

Creators

Reactors & sharers

Lurkers

Strangers

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1

10

100

1000

Piramid

Creators

Reactors & sharers

Lurkers

Strangers

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(Actually: 80% - 15% - 5%)

Piramid

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Piramid

Creators: numbers!

Reactors: acknowledgement

Sharers: aggregation tools

Lurkers: activating content

Strangers: search & social

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‣ people like to help -> questions

‣ people like to share -> facilitate sharing

‣ people like to belong -> discovery of likeminded

‣ people like to be acknowledged -> status

Build in engagement

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Use micro-interactions to evoke

gradual engagement.

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‣ simple

‣ easy to understand the implications (feedback loop)

‣ safe

‣ revokable

Micro-interactions

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Gamification

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‣ reward wanted behaviour

‣ sharing, contributing, commenting

‣ micro-interactions

‣ leaderboards

Gamification

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‣ reciprocity

‣ consistency

‣ social validation

‣ authority

‣ scarcity

Persuasion techniques

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‣ discovery (search & serendipity)

‣ random rewards

‣ short feedback loops

‣ social pressure

‘addiction’ techniques

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‣ meme

‣ jargon

‣ choose an enemy

Shared history & rituals

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‣ best practices

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‣ involve influencers

‣ get user feedback early

‣ prime with content

Launch in beta

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Empty bar syndrome

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‣ set the tone of voice

‣ acknowledge wanted behaviour

‣ root out unwanted behaviour

‣ define rituals

‣ create a shared history

First months are crucial

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Silbermann said he personally wrote to the site's first 5,000 users offering his personal phone number and even meeting

with some of its users.

Ben Silbermann

Pinterest

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Caterina Fake said the success of Flickr depended on the premise that “you have to greet the first 10,000 users personally”.

Caterina Fake

Flickr

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‣ ‘safe & sure’: guidelines and policies

‣ own content

‣ provoke

‣ ask questions

‣ promote leaders

Maintain

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‣ “build it and they will come”

‣ pre-moderation & censorship

‣ hardcore vs. newbies

‣ bad usability & complexity

‣ neglect

Watch out!

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‣ metrics

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‣ quantity, quality, efficiëncy

‣ conversion choke points

‣ inactive members

‣ content & engagement

‣ business metrics

Define the right metrics

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‣ visits to registration ratio

‣ returning login ratio

‣ login to post/comment ratio

‣ creation to reaction ratio

‣ sharing ratio

Define the right metrics

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‣ sales

‣ leads

‣ brand awareness

‣ sentiment

‣ sharing

Business metrics

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Building & maintaining a community

requires hard work. Measure the

business metrics.

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‣ automate where possible

‣ empower the community where possible

‣ human management is necessary

Hard work

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The Soylent Green moment.

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The web is people

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Communities are populated by people.

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Real people, not ‘users’.

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People with children.

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People with passions.

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So, treat them as people.

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Conversation

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Questions?