I have yet to start a blog about my experiences running The Chainlink. It would be an open journal and communication piece sharing the back end of The Chainlink, how it is run, and my job on a daily basis managing the site.
Some people think the site runs on its own and others can't believe how much we have done without one full time employee. For those of you who know me personally, I live and breathe the site and want to improve what I can and grow our reach so everyone who rides a bicycle in the region is aware that we exist as a community and one stop shop resource.
In the meantime (and until I get my butt in gear with this blog idea) I wanted to share how I start my day. Every morning at 3 am an email tip (like this one from Dec. 6th) arrives in my gmail. It is geared specifically for online community managers, sent from Richard Millington of Fever Bee. He has run several online communities and chat rooms over the years and helps us improve our own experience and our audiences' experiences. Brands all over the world are catching on to this concept too. He is supporting himself with a book (that I have), an intensive course he teaches on community management (that I would like to take someday), and consulting. I recently sat on a webinar he gave for Ning managers.
Below is today's tip. It is especially relevant with the upcoming redesign and improvement we'll be implementing in the next few months.
If you find below's tip interesting, you can sign up for free at feverbee.com.
Community Sites -vs- Content Sites Look at these two platforms; HR.com and the HR Business Network. Both cater to the same audience, yet one is designed as a content site and the other a community site.
HR.com, below is a community site. It's designed to connected HR professionals with one another. When you visit the community you seek the contributions of other members in the most prominent positions.
If you create a content site, you're in the content business. You're not building a community, you're building an audience. You're competing against every other source of information on the topic. Loyalty levels are quite low. Average length of visit is low. Members only visit when they want information, and might not be that often. It might only be when they have a problem. If you're building a community site, you're in the connection economy. You're competition are other social groups. People keep visiting because they feel part of a peer group. They want to know what their peers are doing. They're participating to satisfy their social needs (ego, validation, self-esteem etc...), not their information-needs. Loyalty to communities is extremely high and members visit for longer periods of time. Both have their uses, but they're very different approaches. Pick one or the other with great care. Design your platform to be a great content site, or a great community site. Don't try to do both. If you want to learn how to design (or redesgin) and develop your community's platform, join us for FeverBee's Community Management Masterclass at the London School of....
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Julie, that is really interesting. I follow the Chainlink because I love the community, but also because almost every day another Chainlink member passes on really useful information. The tip says you have to do one or the other, but is is possible to design a site that is a community site with a component that collects information in one place and makes the information easily accessible? And just in case we have not said it lately, thanks Masterlink!
I do think that is possible. But one needs more prominence.
Lisa Curcio 4.0 mi said:
Julie, that is really interesting. I follow the Chainlink because I love the community, but also because almost every day another Chainlink member passes on really useful information. The tip says you have to do one or the other, but is is possible to design a site that is a community site with a component that collects information in one place and makes the information easily accessible? And just in case we have not said it lately, thanks Masterlink!
In this case, I think that the strong sense of community does a lot to encourage people to bring plenty of content. I feel strongly the community is the heart and soul of the Chainlink. An improved search function would strengthen the content side.
Yes! exactly. Content is an inevitable consequence of such a smart, caring and involved community.
The site redesign presents a great opportunity to move beyond the clunky and deeply flawed ning platform and onto something where the content can shine for more than a day or two.
Anne Alt said:
In this case, I think that the strong sense of community does a lot to encourage people to bring plenty of content. I feel strongly the community is the heart and soul of the Chainlink. An improved search function would strengthen the content side.
Sifting the content from the community may be kind of cumbersome. Sure, it would be great to have staff or volunteers to do things. It might be a luxury but it would be great. There are gems that get passed along whether they be routes, or other tips. Finding a way to reclassify these gems so they could be searched, or simply having a good search engine may do the trick. One might search "restaurant Lincoln Avenue" and find Wishbone because of the upcoming bar night.
Aside content generated by users in their posts you may consider obtaining content in the same way all great internet exploiters have done so...invite un or underpaid scribes to provide content - Guest essays, guest blogs, guest photo essays, video contests... I am sure you would get takers. They want a place to express and you want more traffic. You already get some of that. Users often re post articles from elsewhere. We get pictures including Gene's daily photos.
I agree with Anne that the community is the strongest aspect of The Chainlink
I was going to link to a site, but it's changed from what I remember. It was basically a forum but the homepage had recent posts, popular posts, and hand picked. I really liked seeing the hand picked content because it was often things I would otherwise miss.
For anyone interested, Richard compiled a list of essentially all his tips on how to start, build and run a successful online community.
I had to paste in 3 separate posts below since we are capped at 40K characters per post.
How To Build An Online Community: The Ultimate List Of Resources (2...
Posted: 26 Feb 2013 11:30 PM PST
This is a collection of my favourite and most popular posts from the last six years. It should give you a great overview about both the strategy and the process of creating an online community from scratch.
The Online Community Basics
Strategy & Planning
Growing Your Online Community
Increasing Participation
Managing an Online Community
Content
Community Psychology
Measurement/ROI
Monetizing
Branded Online Communities
Non-profits and Online Communities
Examples
Resources
Misc
Reports & eBooks
Websites & Assocations
Blogs
Academic articles
FeverBee's Products
Hi Julie:
I think the community focus of your website is what makes it so useful and compelling. Along the way I feel that you have to generate income to make the site more sucessful, to add some headcount, and most importantly it should give you an opportunity to make a living from all the hard work you put into this. BTW, your shirts look terrific.
Thanks Tony. And happy you like the shirt!
Tony Burdick said:
Hi Julie:
I think the community focus of your website is what makes it so useful and compelling. Along the way I feel that you have to generate income to make the site more sucessful, to add some headcount, and most importantly it should give you an opportunity to make a living from all the hard work you put into this. BTW, your shirts look terrific.
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