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Community Is A Management Approach, Not Just a Role

by Rachel Happe on December 17, 2009

HerdingThe way we currently think about community management – for the most part – is a role played by someone managing a set of relationships often mediated by an online destination.  One of the reasons Jim and I started The Community Roundtable is that we saw it emerging as a career path for many and that some of the most interesting work in community management was being done by mid-level executives who were thinking about how to restructure business operations to become more community-driven.

Over the last nine months working with and speaking with a wide array of individuals who are practicing community management it has become apparent that community management is not only an explicit role or career but also a general approach to management.  This came up in an early discussion with David Alston which resulted in a bit of exploration about what defines a community manager. Jim has taken the stance that ‘everyone is a community manager’ which has led to some spirited conversations and personal explorations at #TheCRLive lunches. Ultimately what we’ve found is that community management can be a discrete role and that role is an important one if an organization has a defined community approach.  Someone has to ensure that the needs of each constituent group is balanced, engagement is encouraged, community members know the scope and guidelines of the community, a programming plan is in place, and community information gets addressed by the right people.

However, for functional managers and leaders who want to use social tools and processes to accomplish their goals, community management is more than the tactical details of community management – it is a management approach and discipline that weaves an interactive element into everything they do because that allows them to execute better, faster, or more cheaply.   This is ultimately the purpose of our Community Maturity Model – to guide the management practices of organizations to adapt to this new real-time interactive approach to business processes. The discipline of community management at the tactical level is just one element of becoming a community-oriented organization.

Are you an executive looking for what a ‘social’ approach means in terms of a leadership, cultural, strategic, measurement, programming, or tools perspective? You are likely looking to build your community management skills – even if that is not exactly how you think about it. What are you likely to gain?

  • A better understanding of how to incorporate real-time conversation into traditional workflows in order to improve communications, expectation-setting, quality, and adoption of a business process.
  • An ability to see the systemic effects of your position in a network and knowledge about how to strategically improve that position and with it outcomes.
  • A persuasive approach to business outcomes such as inbound marketing that lowers costs, reduces cycle time, and increases satisfaction.
  • A better understanding and sensitivity to the needs of your constituents – whether they are employees, customers, peers, vendors, or partners.
  • A more social approach to management and negotiation that allows everyone to win and thus become advocates for your position.
  • Better understanding of your risks and opportunities because of better intelligence – created from an open and discursive culture across employee and customer groups.
  • Methods of looking at and tracking not just the last touch point before a business outcome but the behavior paths that drive business outcomes.
  • Familiarity with the different tools that can be used to manage communities and how/why different tools optimize for different business outcomes.
  • Understanding of the role of the community manager – what they do and the value they bring.
  • The role of information/content development and distribution in a network and ultimately how to reduce the cost of content development and management.

Community approaches can be used effectively for many business processes, particularly those that rely heavily on information, content, and relationships. However, community dynamics are fairly different than traditional operational dynamics so planning, investment, and organizational structures needed to adapt to really take advantage of its benefits. While we typically recommend that the metrics used to measure business outcomes today be the same as the ones used to measure performance in a community-oriented approach, the cycle time and investment/return profile look different. That dynamic is critical to understand as business processes become more social.  A better understanding of community dynamics is a great place to start.

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  • http://charityhisle.com Charity Hisle

    How did I miss this blog of yours? Excellent content! I plan to share with everyone I know. Consider me subscribed!

  • http://www.radian6.com David Alston

    Rachel, thanks for encouraging the discussion of community in a wider context. I really do think that ‘community’ is a mindset that you either adopt or don’t when it comes to running a business.

    Many successful businesses obviously understand and use the ‘customer’ mindset to drive everything they do. The business, in that case, is focused solely on what the customer wants and needs and it drives the decision-making. However, over the years this thinking has meant that everyone who’s not a customer gets a different approach. Marketing has gradually moved their focus off of the ‘customer’ mindset and on to the ‘audience’ mindset. And with the availability of mass media the approach of blasting one way messages to this ‘audience’ to try to convert them to ‘customers’ has been the predominant mode. On the public relations side, we have the ‘media’ mindset and an approach to target them and so on.

    In a non-interconnected world (or at least a manually connected one) all of these approaches seemed to work well enough. But with the advent of social media the world began to change. The ‘audience’ became aware of itself and everyone in it. Customers became mixed in with the audience. Media mixed with customers and the audience. Everyone was conversing and learning from each other. The walls came tumbling down. Communities formed around subjects people were passionate about – including products, and including brands.

    For me, this is the new world we live in. Companies that continue to operate using the old mindsets are probably wondering why things just don’t seem to work like they used to. It’s because they don’t.

    And remember the new community principles where everyone communicates, learns, and shares with each other? Well, companies need to adopt that approach as well. This means living in the communities they serve, not visiting them when they want to or trying to buy their favor. Companies need to adopt a ‘community’ mindset in how they approach everything they do. It’s how the new world works and the old ways of doing things just don’t cut the mustard any longer.

    Thanks for enduring my long-winded comment :)

    @davidalston
    Radian6

  • http://www.community-roundtable.com Rachel Happe

    Charity – Thanks for stopping by and glad you enjoyed the post!

    David – Your approach and insight in this area is unique and important. In a more rigid world we are able to simply and box in relationships such that we could throw leads over a fence and call them prospects and then throw them over another fence once they were customers. That’s simply no longer the case and it makes the environment much more organic and less ‘manageable’ in the traditional sense. It is a really important mental and process shift in the way we think about business operations.

  • Pingback: Homing Social » Community is a Mindset

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