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Best Practices in Member Engagement

by Rachel Happe on February 9, 2010

Member engagement is one of the key responsibilities of social media and community managers but it is one of the hardest responsibilities to understand and improve.  There is no playbook that has the ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ ways to encourage engagement and what works for some communities is completely wrong for others. In this respect having an understanding of user experience and the psychology of engagement is incredibly useful.  I particularly like BJ Fogg’s model with three primary vectors:

  • Motivation
  • Ability
  • Trigger

While simplified in description, understanding and affecting motivation, increasing member ability to participate, and creating effective triggers are not always easy to understand or execute but it is a really helpful model for focusing what may yield the best results.  All of these aspects can be improved through community management and the user experience within a community but obviously manual, personal interactions can be adapted more quickly and adjusted for individuals.  Until community management understands what works in a consistent way in a particular community, it is unwise and expensive to build those attributes into the user experience of a community site. Member engagement too is impacted to a great degree by not just what is engaging to the member but by what best encourages the outcome for which the organization desires. It will take time to understand and adjust in order to optimize that balance.

While BJ Fogg offers an academic perspective, the community managers who are members of The Community Roundtable had their own set of best practices and lessons learned, among them:

  • Ensuring that new members are welcomed and feel acclimated to the new community is essential.
  • In new communities, creating a “water cooler” environment where people can go to engage in light-hearted conversation with their peers in a non-threatening way is an important way for members to establish a comfort level with each other before broaching more sensitive topics.
  • Idle chit chat is a important part of a community and it will take some creative influence to help executives understand that it is a crucial facet of the business case.
  • Be clear on the purpose and desired response to posted content and conversations – it will help members know what is appropriate and feel comfortable contributing. Clarity of purpose will also help you track and measure results effectively.
  • One of the best ways to pull people into a conversation is to let them know that they have an audience. Encourage peers to respond to new content that is posted, particularly if it is posted by a newer member of the community. Responding as the community manager is OK but it is not as satisfying as a peer response and it can inadvertently halt the discussion because it is viewed as the opinion of an authority figure.
  • Multi-modal content is very successful at driving engagement. Build in text, image, audio, and video content that can be viewed in different ways. Consider using music alongside content or online events – it can have the same bonding and energizing effect as when it is used offline.
  • Lurkers have value. Even if not interacting, lurkers are consuming content which is a way of participating and being present. Lurkers may also respond to content in a different channel which is generally difficult to track.  Additionally members have a wide variety of thresholds to participation – some people need to lurk longer than others.

Do you have a ‘never fail’ technique for encouraging member participation?  We know others would like to hear it so please share!

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The Community Roundtable  is committed to advancing the business of community. We offer a monthly subscription report, a membership based peer network, a community management training program and advisory services for corporations and individuals.

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  • http://www.sueontheweb.com Sue

    I totally agree that Lurkers have value too. For example, on the site I manage we have advertisers. So lurkers are generating page views, thereby generating an ad view. Often these ads are highly targeted toward a lurkers geographic location, etc. Some of our advertisers only want to target lurkers, and not logged in members, as they have historically generated the most interest in their products/services.

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

    Hi Sue -

    B2C communities with advertising models are ‘lucky’ in that regard in that the lurkers directly support the business model. In employee communities or marketing communities where the business model is not as direct, community managers often struggle with pressure by stakeholders to increase conversion in a slightly artificial way which can backfire. Part of this engagement picture too, it finding out how to encourage enthusiastic participation vs. forced participation which can turn members off completely. It’s short-term conversion pressure vs. long-term engagement. But yes, the experience you and others on the B2C side have should help other community managers be able to articulate lurker value even if they have no plans to launch an advertising model themselves.

  • http://www.flaviaricci.com Flavia Ricci

    Other best practices:

    * Managing the knowledge generated by the participants: write documents (and update them) with links to discussions, documents and items contributed by the most active participants.

    ** Library / Database: how do I find the main themes generated? How do I find the contributions of the most active members? Build a repository where resources and sources are contributed by participants. An alive DB. Google Search engine is not enough.

    In an online community is so important to generate as finding, because they are often generated content that generate further discussion.

    Best regards from Argentina,
    Flavia Ricci
    @flaviaricci

  • http://www.gospacerace.com Aerin Guy

    We use Ning as a platform for several teacher communities that we host. One nice feature is exactly that – the ability to *feature* a discussion. Although this is a management function, it can act as a catalyst for lurkers to become more active, in the hopes of being featured themselves. We like to feature the activities of new members to congratulate them for diving in, and to encourage them to keep sharing.

  • http://www.NoTimeToCookDinner.com Tony Pinto

    We use Ning as our platform at http://NoTimeToCookDinner.com as well. Without a doubt, the ability to feature members and their content, provide virtual gifts and special recognition for contributions, and easily send an email to the entire membership highlighting a particular video or posing a question in the discussion forums, have all contributed greatly to our success.

    Community Managers need to lower the bar for joining a network, as many lurkers are too lazy to fill out yet another application. That’s why Facebook Connect and other one-click registration options are gaining popularity across blogs, social networks, and other web-based applications. Integrating Twitter and other sharing applications makes sharing content so much easier. The person doesn’t even have to think about what to say.

    One of my favorite Facebook features is the Like button. I can tell someone I read their content without having to take the time to think of something charming or witty to say. Now if they would just bring that dislike button back…

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

    Flavia – the concept of content curation is really important in most communities and gets to Aerin & Tony’s points as well – highlighting content and members that are adding value is a great way to keep the conversation and activity going.

    Tony – the Facebook ‘like’ feature is a prime example of increasing people’s ability to participate. Really easy to do and doesn’t require time or thought if they don’t have anything to add or time to do so.

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  • http://www.whitehatmedia.com Anne

    Very interesting post. I like the idea to get members of the community to welcome and acknowledge new peers contributions. Inclusiveness is a vital key of a thriving community, provided I would think that people contribute topics and ideas that are relevant to the majority of members.

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  • http://www.keralatourismpackage.com Kerala Tour Packages

    Really Very interesting post. I very much like the idea to get members of the community to welcome and acknowledge new peers contributions.

  • dennykurian

    its really very much intresting thanks

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