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Tagged: Community

5 January 2009

Ben Huh from I Can Has Cheeseburger gives you 15 top tips on how to take your community to the next level, one user at a time.

1. Convert Casual Users into Fans
The number one rule of creating a great community is to enable people to share the positive experience that they’ve had on your site. Your aim should be to convert casual users into fans because fans are the ones that will share your content with others.

2. Love on Your Existing Fans, but Not Too Much
Your current fanbase may be quite small. Of course, they are important to your site’s growth but it’s easy to spend all of your effort interacting with this very small percentage of your users. They demand so much of your time (emails etc) that you can easily spend the majority of your time on them. What you actually need is more fans.

3. Empower your Users
For I Can Has Cheeseburger this meant enabling users to save Lol cats, e-mail Lol cats they had made to their friends, and generally encouraging one-to-one sharing of content.

4. Make More People Happy
Humour and happiness is something that people are particularly willing to share with others. I Can Has Cheeseburger set a goal of making people happy for 5 minutes a day. In order to do this they decided to branch out into other areas, including Lol dogs, Lol Celebrity and Fail Blog.

5. Stop Engineering and Start Thinking About the Market
People who work in the technology industry tend to over engineer things. Don’t complicate your problems, simplify them. If you need to add a commenting system to your site don’t build it from scratch, download one. Whatever you do, do it quickly.

6. Don’t Skimp on Great Content
You may not be able to create your own great content very easily. Look at other ways to find great content (I Can Has Cheeseburger bought the Lol cats site which was already creating great content).

7. Provide Ways to Give Feedback
Enable your users to tell you what they think. I Can Has enables people to rate each image (using JS Kit). This is the most used feature by their casual users. If you enable users to give feedback they are much more likely to come back to see what happened and what others thought of it too.

8. Power of Little
Offer users lots of small, simple things to do on your site that don’t require login, such as rating, commenting, saving a favorite, creating an account and finally (hopefully) they will do the most difficult thing of all, contribute to your site.

9. Encourage ‘Thefting’
Don’t just enable people to take things from your site and reuse it, actively encourage it. I Can Has has a little block of code on each image that says ‘take this picture and put it on your blog’. Let people take your content. Why would you prevent others from telling people about you?

10. Be Willing to Prune Your Community
If you have trolls, be willing to get rid of them. Why let trolls piss off your community members who are willing to come and create a positive experience. Digg awards karma points to positive users in order to reward people but also to make it clear who is not contributing to the community.

11. Measure the Number of Shared Experiences, not Users
Try not to fixate on the number of users on your site. It’s much more useful to focus on the number of shared experiences. Admittedly, this is much more difficult to monitor but it’s a much more useful statistic.

12. Shared Experiences = Goodwill
Sharing experiences creates goodwill. Goodwill is a positive feeling that you have towards a product or service. It’s the way that Mac users feel about Apple. You want people to feel that way about your site so do everything you can to enable users to share content.

13. Create Info Porn
People love to look at data about themselves. It the reason why there is a mirror in practically every elevator that you’ve been in. If you have data about your user’s behavior on your site then show it to them. Update it on a daily basis and they will come back on a daily basis. One of the most popular pages on Lol cats is the page that tells people how many ‘fans’ they have.

14. Don’t Pay Contributors
By paying contributors you are removing the original reason why they wanted to be part of your community – goodwill. And realistically, how much can you really pay them? Answer: not much.

15. Don’t Confuse Sharing with Marketing
When your users share content with others they are not marketing. They don’t even think about it in that way and in turn you shouldn’t treat them as marketers. Don’t force marketing messages at them, it will burn their trust.

These tips were taken from Ben’s talk at FOWA London 08 which can be viewed below.

Ben Huh is running a training workshop in London on 3rd Feb. Tickets are limited but still on sale.

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29 May 2008

April 30th was my birthday and I took the day off. It was supposed to be a relaxing day. It began by making pancakes with my wife, then playing video games for a while. Soon after I went to get a massage followed by some lunch. Lunch threw my day off. We went to a new-to-the-neighborhood, upscale, sit-down sandwich place called Jerry’s. Their menu is gigantic. I figured that deciding what to eat would be the biggest problem I’d have there. I was wrong.

After we ordered, we noticed three new tables of people seated at various times. We also noticed that about 20 minutes had passed without food. Again, we’re talking sandwiches, not exactly the type of food you’d expect to wait a long time for. A little more time passes and our waiter comes out to tell us that he’s sorry, but our order was “stuck behind a giant take-out order”. This changed my mood from anxious to frustrated …

… and now a tangent on how my mind works:

If someone walks into a sandwich shop to place a giant take-out order, they can safely assume they’ll be waiting a for awhile. If my wife and I sit down in a sandwich shop and order two sandwiches, we assume it won’t take very long. If the kitchen would have understood these common assumptions, they would have realized that the length of time added for the person waiting for the take-out order by having two additional sandwiches made (ours), would have been minimal compared to their overall wait time for their “giant order”. In reality, the take-out customer would likely not even notice the extra time. Instead, the restaurant left two different sets of customers waiting for the same amount of time for two drastically different-sized orders.

My point? Scientific thinking in the kitchen doesn’t always have to yield foam and/or crunchy, flavored air — it can lead to a better experience for the customer.

Back to the story. To make matters worse, after waiting for almost 45 minutes, the three other tables that were seated after us got their food before we did! Once our food finally did arrive, something interesting happened: my sandwich was so good that the frustration I felt for having to wait 45 minutes for it was calmed significantly. Significantly, but not completely … hence this article. If the food wouldn’t have been worth the wait, then this would be an entirely different story. At the very least, their food was great, and that’s a start. However, like in many businesses, the product is only part of the experience.

Before I continue, I’d like to point out that I’m well aware that this restaurant may not have any ongoing problems with their customer service. Our bad experience could easily be, and most likely should be chalked up to “sometimes, shit happens”. I’m an eternal benefit-of-the-doubt giver, but the experience did get me thinking about how this relates to the type of business I’m in.

Remember our server who apologized for the tremendous wait? He didn’t make sure the customers waiting the longest got their food first. The lesson here is to back up your apologies with actions; don’t just apologize to your customers because you think you should, or worse … to make yourself feel better.

In his book “The Last Lecture”, Randy Pausch points out that “a good apology has three parts: ‘1. I’m sorry’; 2. ‘It was my fault’ and 3. ‘How do I make it right’. The last part tells about your sincerity.” Consolation is a vastly overlooked area of customer service, which is essentially Randy’s third part of a good apology.

At Threadless, if something goes wrong that’s our fault, you’ll get a coupon code for money off your next purchase. It’s a great way to say to your customer, “We’re human and we’re sorry but sometimes these things happen. So, here’s something we hope will help soften the blow”.

Consolation could be your only chance at a do over with a customer. Take that chance.

What else could anyone who handles a product-driven, customer-service-related company learn from my experience? First, know that simply having good products won’t retain your customers (but it does certainly help). At Threadless, we’re well aware that the impression between product and customer is fleeting, while the impression between company and customer is long-lasting.

Next, recognizing an issue or problem on the approach is almost always better than reacting to it at the intersection. At the point of intersection, the damage has already been done and the only thing left to do is play damage control. In most businesses, it’s usually two different teams of people who handle the “approach” (strategy/planning) and the “intersection” (customer service). A huge part of being on the “approach” team is understanding, and more importantly — caring, that every approach you miss, the “intersection” team has to clean up for you.

So, as a customer, does this mean that I’ll go back to Jerry’s? Sure I will. Their “product” is great. Only next time, I’ll probably just get it to go.

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27 November 2006

In my previous entry, Why 50% isn’t Good Enough, I discussed why one would spend their time, money and efforts on their community, rather than advertising or PR. In this article, I discuss the how, where and when of doing this.

We’ve all heard of the ‘evangelist’ title that’s given to people inside and outside of organizations who are passionate about a specific product or service. Evangelists are incredibly powerful. They provide excellent feedback, are the key to peer-to-peer recommendation of your company and they also energize a community to a point where it is a great place to be.

What is that magic ingredient that turns people from ‘consumers’ of your software into active and enthusiastic evangelists? The truth is that there is no single magic ingredient, but there are some underlying principles to delighting your current customers that may just lay the groundwork to creating an evangelist or two.

Principle #1. Become a community evangelist

How can you expect people to get behind you unless you get behind their needs first? Who are you designing your software for anyway? Your VCs? Your own fame and fortune? The cool kids who won’t give your site the time of day? Sure, if you want to host a barren wasteland. But if you want a thriving, growing community, you need to put the needs of those who are there already ahead of everyone else.

If you’re getting negative feedback from those using your site it’s a pretty good indication that there are people who care enough to provide it to you. Don’t get defensive, get responsive. The single biggest mistake of new entrepreneurs is that they take criticism of their software personally. Sure, not all feedback should be integrated, but it pays to hear people out and discuss various options for solving their issues. In fact, your biggest critics can turn into your biggest fans.

Principle #2. Design to delight

There are plenty of great articles on Vitamin that help you with this, but a really good rule of thumb to stick with is that details should not be overlooked. In fact, scaling back on the features (especially upon first launch) and concentrating on making each step of the process delightful (i.e. the language on the error pages, the ease of the signup process, and so on) is essential.

There is a great deal of competition in the online application space right now. We certainly can’t compete on price (since most everything is free), so we need to compete on experience. Take a look at every application that you can’t live without and go through each step. What you will most likely discover is that the designers have sacrificed features for detail.

Principle #3. Embrace the chaos

Too much planning can be as deadly as too little. There is one thing you will learn over time about community: people rarely behave the way you think they will. The more nimble you are, the more vulnerable you are, but the more ready you will be to react to any situation that arises.

Planned for 20,000 people to join day 1 and only 2,000 signed up? Great – it gives you more time to spend with those who come in. Or, the opposite happens and you plan for 2,000 and 20,000 sign up and take down your servers. It’s an ideal chance to reach out and thank everyone for the overwhelming response, then apologize for not being prepared.

Principle #4. Find your higher purpose

Higher purpose? Huh? At Citizen Agency, we won’t work with a company unless they have a higher purpose. I know that sounds harsh, but a company born to merely make money or achieve some sort of notoriety for the CEO won’t have the community’s interest at heart.

We, ourselves, started out with a higher purpose (which we always come back to): giving a voice to the customer. I want to turn marketing on its head, to humanize it and reduce its negative impact. Chris wants to create a world of engaged individuals.

A higher purpose isn’t just a ‘nice to have’; it becomes your mantra, your mission statement and your grounding point for everything you do. It keeps you real and ethical. To find your business’s higher purpose, all you need to do is think about how you want to be remembered. What kind of mark do you want to leave on the earth (besides fame and fortune)? You’ll find your higher purpose there.

Principle #5. Get focused.

Once you have found your higher purpose, you are ready to get your strategy focused around it. I’ve always been a fan of Marcus Buckingham’s list of leadership questions, which I have appropriated as a focus exercise for our clients:

  1. Who do we serve? (pick one specific core group)
  2. What is our core strength? (why would they give a darn?)
  3. What is our core score? (a metric of success)
  4. What actions can we take today to get there?

There have been too many situations where we’ve taken on a client whose ‘audience’ includes all males, ages 18-45, and females from the ages of 18-29 – white, middle-class, university educated, etc… Everyone seems to want the mainstream. But what is the mainstream? And have any companies who are ‘mainstream’ actually started there (especially with a small promotional budget)? Nope. Wal-mart is Buckingham’s favorite example of this. Who do they serve? People who live paycheck to paycheck. Only. Everyone else is welcome to shop there, but what they stock, how they present themselves, how they price, merchandise and greet… that is all grounded in their core audience.

Principle #6. Inbound rather than outbound communications

This one is tough. Really tough. Even I struggle with this. If I can’t shout about what I’m doing from the rooftops, who will know? Well, arguably, writing this article is an outbound tool of promotion. But I was asked to write for Vitamin because I built a relationship with the great people at Carson Systems first. I didn’t send them endless emails, pitching them on the possibility. I kept writing valuable articles on my own blog and my traffic kept increasing. I built relationships with everybody who came to my blog, listening to their feedback, incorporating their comments and spending loads of time emailing back and forth suggestions.

Having a blog isn’t about broadcasting – or at least it shouldn’t be. It is about opening up a channel of communication between you and your community. It gives people a chance to get to know you. It gives them a way to communicate with you. Don’t stop at a blog, though. Post your email, your IM, your photo URL, on forums, wikis and any other site that you can receive messages through. Answer your emails. You’ll be amazed at what you will learn from this level of interaction.

Principle #7. Put community first.

Don’t have time to concentrate on your community? Too busy coding and meeting with investors? Craig Newmark still answers all of his customer emails himself. He insists on it: it keeps him close to the needs of his community.

If you don’t have time for your community, you may lose it. Hire extra help. Make it part of everyone’s jobs in the organization. Whatever you have to do, just make those relationships your priority.

Principle #8. Be part of the community you serve

Some companies hire outside firms to interact with their community members. This is okay, but not ideal, because the relationships being built are between your community and a third party. Although it is perfectly fine to have someone come in and consult on the steps for you to take to reach out to your community, actually reaching out should be done by you and your internal team (consultants can be part of it, but not the only part of it).

An obvious way to do this is to use your own software, interacting with your community members – if you have a photo sharing site, comment on photos, add people as friends, personally welcome them and interact with them along the way. You will not only build bonds, but you will also find your own bugs and realize where your software needs to go next. Don’t just use it casually, use it religiously.

If you want to take it a step further, learn more about your community. Where else do they hang out? Online? Offline? Do they attend meetups? Schwag? Are there standards organizations around what you are doing? Hang out in the wider community and get to know your audience, your competitors and the various people working in the space. You’ll be amazed at what you may find.

Principle #9. Remember the tripod: Environment, Product & Community

Marketing isn’t something you do after you create a product, it is a function of everyone on your team and at every step of your process. We take a tripod approach to community marketing:

Environment

Nothing happens in a vacuum. What works one day may be a disaster the next for various reasons. Is the technology too far advanced? Months behind? How many competitors are in the space? Are they seeing pick-up? Why or why not? What are the world events? Are you dealing with touchy political matters? What came before? Why didn’t it last? What mistakes can you learn from there? What did they do right?

The environment you are in cannot be changed, but it can be made aware of. We watch history repeat itself way too often. To save time, money and heartache, take a good look around you.

Product

It is much easier to gain acceptance of a good product. So, what makes a good product?

  • User flows
  • Design
  • Low barriers of entry
  • interoperation
  • Stability
  • Speed
  • The right features
  • Attention to detail

There are oodles of other factors that are harder to pinpoint and sometimes it just requires loads of real user testing and feedback gathering. Other times, it requires sticking to a vision.

Either way, product development is an ongoing and tricky process and has to be balanced with both the environment and the community around it.

Community

The input to this leg of the tripod is communications, the output is community. How available are you to feedback? How simple do you make it for people to interact with you and other community members? How often and well do you communicate with your members? Are you keeping everyone in the loop with upcoming changes?

Community and communications go hand-in-hand.

We look at it as a balanced tripod because not every situation will be the same. Environment will effect the balance of product and community, and there is always a delicate balance between product and community itself.

Principle #10. Have patience.

Above all else, building relationships takes time. Trust doesn’t happen overnight and trust is essential to any real relationship. Anything less is fleeting and unstable. Advertising, PR and mass emails can get a company fleeting attention and, if your product is outstanding, may even stick with those who give it a whirl. However, in today’s crowded space, even outstanding products have outstanding competition. The best way to long-term growth is through building real relationships with your community members – and it has to be personal.

The beautiful thing about building relationships is the impact is real and overwhelming when it does happen… and it is quite scalable. Your delighted community members can become your ambassadors. Building relationships is also incredibly good for the soul!

Now, remember that even if you employ all of these principles, you may still have a difficult time building those relationships. Could it be the environment? Your product? Maybe even your reputation? Perhaps there is just someone in the space who has captured the hearts of many and moving into that space creates tension. But, unlike spending oodles on advertising, you’ll have spent hours of time down in the trenches, hopefully learning from what is going on around you.

The next article in this series will be about how NOT to build communities and signs of ‘unhealthy’ interactions, as well as how to rectify difficult situations.

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