Wendy Piersall

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Wendy Piersall

Description:

Give discounts, coupons. Contests & giveaways. Keep content fresh, relevant & valuable ... Case Study :: Dell. 20 year-old Forum. Empower their community ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:116
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: wendyfp

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Wendy Piersall


1
Building a Community
  • Wendy Piersall
  • (Formerly eMoms at Home)

2
Behind the Scenes
  • Hobby turned to business
  • Scaled to a blog network in September 2007
  • Brand blowup
  • Renamed relaunched

3
Behind the Scenes
  • Hobby turned to business
  • Because community started to form
  • Scaled to a blog network in September 2007
  • Built channels based on what the community
    enjoyed the most
  • Brand blowup
  • Because the community had grown beyond moms and
    even dads
  • Renamed relaunched
  • Community is already expanding under new name

4
Lets Build Some Community
5
Build it The Foundation
  • Forums
  • Blogs
  • Social Networks
  • Content Management Systems
  • Combine multiple social ecosystems
  • Ratings/Reviews/Voting/UGC
  • Social Bookmarking
  • Digg, StumbleUpon, del.icio.us
  • Conversation Platforms
  • Twitter, Utterz

6
Build it The Foundation
  • vBulletin
  • phpBB
  • WordPress /MU
  • TypePad
  • Drupal
  • Joomla
  • Pligg
  • Wikis

7
Build it The Foundation
  • Plan for Scalability

8
Define Your Community Goals
  • A community is a place to
  • Build product awareness
  • Connect your customers with each other
  • Indirectly promote your products/services
  • Educate your audience
  • Support your customers
  • Build monetize a niche forum

9
Define Your Community Boundaries
  • A community is usually not a place to
  • Hard sell products or services
  • Preach or lecture a message
  • Build a leads database
  • Use as a façade for a different purpose
  • Post adverquestions or introtisements

10
Answer this Constantly
  • WIIFM

11
Answer this Constantly
  • Whats In It For Me?

12
How Many Needs Can You Meet?
Communities form among people looking for a
solution to a problem/unmet need
13
How Many Needs Can You Meet?
Communities form among people looking for a
solution to a problem/unmet need
  • Need answers
  • Need tech support
  • Need emotional support
  • Need connection
  • Need significance

14
Psychology 101 - Growth
  • Those Who Need Answers Come to You For
  • Facts, Figures, Reference
  • Ideas, Brainstorming
  • Advice (Peer/Mentor)
  • Reviews, Ratings
  • Driven by
  • Specific Question
  • Thirst for Knowledge

15
Psychology 101 - Certainty
  • Those Who Need Tech Support Come to You For
  • Specific troubleshooting
  • Upgrade/purchase planning
  • Reviews, Ratings
  • Ideas, How-Tos
  • Driven by
  • Specific Problem
  • Passion for Product/Interest

16
Psychology 101 - Love
  • Those Who Need Emotional Support Come to You For
  • Find people like themselves
  • Tend to be vulnerable
  • Frequently need anonymity
  • Need both factual answers a place to vent
  • Driven by
  • Specific Stressor
  • Need for love/connection

17
Psychology 101 Fun/Fellowship
  • Those Who Need Connection Come to You For
  • Finding friends
  • Self-expression
  • Networking
  • Driven by
  • Boredom, lonliness
  • Need to belong
  • Self-promotion

18
Psychology 101 - Ego
  • Those Who Need Significance Come to You For
  • A place to show off what they know
  • Can be fanatical
  • Are competitive
  • Can be prone to too much self-promotion
  • Driven by
  • Need to feel important
  • Rewards

19
Build it Attracting Members
  • Dos
  • WIIFM!
  • Ensure your site is easy to navigate
    understand
  • Participate add value to other communities
  • Give without expecting to receive
  • Moderate negativity
  • Be Exceptional

20
Build it Attracting Members
  • Donts
  • Forget WIIFM!
  • Expect to Build it they will come
  • Recruit from other forums
  • Hog the traffic
  • Imitate existing communities

21
The Really, Really Important Stuff
  • People want to connect with People. Not brands.
    Not companies.
  • Be authentic
  • Dont pitch
  • Be as personal as possible while maintaining
    relevancy

22
The Really, Really Important Stuff
  • Lay out the welcome mat
  • Create sections for new members
  • Encourage stupid questions
  • Make it OK to be uncomfortable
  • Dont make them have to think about it

23
The Really, Really Important Stuff
  • Give members a voice
  • Conversation, not a lecture
  • Solicit feedback, suggestions
  • Ask questions
  • Be inclusive

24
The Really, Really Important Stuff
  • Make your members Rock Stars
  • Reward participation
  • Give public recognition
  • Create membership levels
  • Showcase their talent

25
The Good Problems to Have
  • Listen to feedback suggestions
  • This means they care enough to want more
  • Unaddressed issues will alienate members
  • Invest the members in the future of the
    community

26
The Good Problems to Have
  • Used Car Salesmen, Attacks TrollsYou have a
    growing community!
  • Keep your cool
  • Have easy to understand rules enforce them
    consistently
  • Turn negatives into positives
  • Mediate disagreements offline
  • Ban members when necessary

27
Evolve Grow your Community
  • Surprise Delight
  • Add free /exclusive features
  • Give discounts, coupons
  • Contests giveaways
  • Keep content fresh, relevant valuable

28
Case Study Dell
  • 20 year-old Forum
  • Empower their community through peer to peer
    support
  • Rewards program for valuable contributors
  • Blog was created to build relationships with
    customers, not sell products
  • Participate add value to others communities
  • Back up talk with action
  • Give without expecting to receive

LIONEL MENCHACACHIEF BLOGGER, DELL
29
Sparkplugging
  • I LOVE my community!
  • www.sparkplugging.com
  • Sparkplugging.com/presentation-downloads/
  • )
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)