With more than 100 million Americans contributing content online this year, websites are doing anything they can to attract users to contribute to their site. With the notable exception of search engines, all major websites are depending on the community to drive their growth. Imagine YouTube without user uploads; Facebook without photos and updates or Wikipedia without users writing/editing articles.
There are so many advantages of fostering and nurturing a community:
- Lots of (almost) free content
- Direct feedback
- Higher conversion rates
- Higher rankings
In addition to all that, this community-driven strategy also scales extremely well. It is a clear win-win situation that has us all looking for new ways to grow our online communities.
Consequently, companies invest many resources in community building. But it’s hard to get right – just ask Google about this (Google is now making social efforts a top priority and staff bonuses dependent on it). The hard thing about online communities is that attaining critical mass is not enough – you have to maintain it over time.
Getting users to participate over a long period of time is the key to success. you want users to spend less time with their family and friends, and more time contributing to your community for free, you better make sure the users are motivated.
Extrinsic vs. intrinsic motivation
Luckily we don’t have to guess what motivate users. Decades of research in social psychology give great insights into how we can motivate users to contribute content over a long period of time. A key distinction is between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation.
Intrinsic motivation is about the joy of performing something. People are likely to be motivated if an involvement in an online community helps them reach a personal goal, if they improve their skills or if they simply are having fun. This is why people have hobbies and spend their evenings and weekends learning Ruby on Rails. For intrinsic motivation to kick in, the person must feel it’s his decision to perform a certain task. Autonomy is key.
Extrinsic motivation means that a user is driven to perform a task because it leads to something else such as rewards and benefits. This kind of motivation usually relies on tangible rewards. Classic examples of this include salary and performance bonus.
But there are many methods to reward users with tangible rewards, and several are already being applied online: Mechanical Turk rewards turkers with money for solving tasks; SEOmoz offers community members one month free software when compiling 200 mozpoints in one month; BettingExpert offers prizes and merchandise for points, and Threadless offers money for winning designs and slogans. The web is full of examples of rewarding desired behavior with tangible rewards.
The effects of tangible rewards (and why it's not sufficient)
Giving tangible rewards seems like a great way to increase desired behavior, right? Increasing the rewards will increase the desired behavior. But it is not as easy as it sounds. The challenge is that extrinsic rewards potentially erode intrinsic motivation.
For example, people often have hobbies to improve their abilities. But when someone is paid to do a hobby, it’s no longer a hobby. The person no longer does the tasks to improve his skills, and does no longer have the autonomy to perform the task exactly as he wants to. Due to this, the users are likely to stop contributing as soon as they don’t get rewards for it. Or even worse, they’ll lose interests in the rewards and then have no motivation to continue.
In other words, extrinsic rewards can give a short-term boost in motivation to participate, but is not enough to provide long time loyalty. Thus, there is a need to strike a healthy balance between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation. Besides being more sustainable, intrinsic motivation is a lot cheaper than having to pay users for everything.
5 Tactics for Increasing Intrinsic Motivation in Your Community
Now that we know balance is crucial, I thought I would throw out some ways you can help nurture this balance. It is worth noting that there does not exist a strict borderline between intrinsic and extrinsic motivations, as tactics often affect both. The aim of the following tactics is to help communities rely less on “hard” extrinsic rewards such as money, and more on “softer” forms of motivation.
1. Commitment
Have your users make a commitment to perform the desired actions. If you run a patient network, ask the user how many questions the user thinks he’ll answer a month. If you run an ecommerce site, ask the user if he’d “ever consider helping other users by rating a product he has purchased“. If you do, this will make the user motivated to honor the commitment.
Threadless used this practice embedded in their design rating. When giving a design top rating, you can mark that “I’d buy it” either as a t-shirt or a print.
2. Social comparisons
It’s human nature to better understand where we stand compared to our competition. Allowing users to compare their abilities and opinions to others is a powerful drive for many people. Especially when comparing to similar others. One often seen implementation of this is leaderboards.
But this is not the only possibly implementation: You can send out emails in which users’ effort is compared to the median score of the community and/or similar others (e.g. other users who signed up at the same time).
A recent study on MovieLens found that “after receiving behavioral information about the median user's total number of movie ratings, users below the median demonstrate a 530 percent increase in the number of monthly movie ratings, while those above the median decrease their ratings by 62 percent”.
This indicates it would be highly effective to email the users below the median, but not those above.
3. Social learning
When users are new in a community, they often don’t know what to do. Highlighting desired behavior of successful users will make it easy for users to see what they should do. This is what Facebook does when showing that your friends are connecting to new people. You can do the same by prominently highlighting desired action whenever existing users perform these actions.
For example, Flickr wants users to upload, tag and geotag pictures. On the home page, the number of uploads, tags and geotags are highlighted. As a new (or existing user), you know which action will contribute to the community
Alternatively, ask employees to engage actively in the community and serve as role models for the community members. E.g. rate products yourself, post comments to blog posts, ask questions in the Q&A etc.
4. Praise
Despite the (flawed) assumption that people are always driven by self-interest, most people actually like to help each other. An obvious way to facilitate praise is to let users express gratitude easily and give each other rewards can help motivation.
On the SEOmoz Q&A Forum a questioner can mark an answer as “Good Answer”.
But humans are not the only ones who can give praise: so can your website. Although the effect of getting praise from a human is bigger than getting praise by a “machine”, the praise still has an effect. For example, the Mailchimp monkey is letting users know when an email has been sent out. But it could also praise users for creating a new list, sending out newsletters etc.
Don’t have a fancy mascot like Mailchimp? Don’t worry. You can just do like Tumblr: say that your user is great! It’s simple, but it works.
5. Mastery
One of the key components of intrinsic motivation is mastery. It is often hard to know if you are on the right way to mastery, so help is needed.
A good way to do this is to let the user get a sense of his progress. An effective way to do this is by letting the user compare current performance to past performance. This practice is being applied on Casey's mozpoints.com – a microsite that collects historical data on the thumbs up / thumbs down received on SEOmoz.
There are obviously many different ways to motivate people to participate online. There can be derived many different tactics from social psychology literature than those mentioned here (See for example Rand's Illustrated Guide to Cialdini's Science of Influence and Persuasion). But these can hopefully be a beginning in striking a better balance between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation.
Thinking of attending a conference anytime soon? You should definitely check out the Distilled Pro Seminar in Boston 16th/17th May and the SEOmoz Mozcon in Seattle July 27th - 29th.
I think I could start to ask royalties everytime I'm cited as example in a SEOmoz post :D
Jokes apart, that is why all this game we play everyday is called Marketing (online), as in marketing psychology is surely one of the key components since its invention as a discipline (i.e.: think about why cereal boxes are designed the way they are...).
The big difference between online and offline is that the constant flux users <-> website <-> users (the rows try to show a not unidirectional relation) is really much easier in the online world.
Apart from the classic SEO benefits UGC content and community driven websites receive, there is also a great brand marketing advantage in creating a community around your brand/site... that finally turns - again - in a SEO benefit because, thanks to Brand recognition, a site can be perceived as an Entity by the Search Engines (especially Google), therefore dominate its SERPs enviroment.
But, to build a real community that really supports you is not such an easy task as maybe could seem from the post. It is not enough to say thank you, or to create rewards plans for loyal users. These are tools. the key is a community driven philosophy that must guide all the marketing strategy. The SEOmoz TAGFEE is a great example of this, but, openess, transparency and attention are surely the three key components that makes any "community marketing tool" really working.
Haha yes - you can just send an invoice to the mozplex ;)
You are right - having a philosophy and sticking to it is so extremely important. In fact, there are so many factors influencing how well a community develops over time. I only addressed the tip of the iceberg in this post.
Great point about the branding benefits of building communities. There are, as you say, the "classic" SEO benefits, the branding benefits, and the fact that a loyal and engaged will be more likely to send you those good social signals which in turn, amplifies both of the previous benefits. Oh, and if they have any web presence of their own, you might get some link love from their sites/blogs. It just seems like a great big win all the way around.
Nice post !!
In course of Brand Extension and Brand Engagment this motivation factors play an important role. This is just "Tip of the Iceburg" well said mate ...
Very psychological thoughts but just the way it is. If all webmasters / web marketers would implement those tactics the ROI would increase certainly.
This post reminds me of an older post of Rand (an analysis of Dan Ariely's "Predictably Irrational) which I really loved and want to mention here, again:https://www.seomoz.org/blog/10-irrational-human-behaviors-how-to-leverage-them-to-improve-web-marketing
By the way, where do you get that url https://www.mozpoints.com - this is funny.
It was something Casey (the SEOmoz Marketing Ninja) coded some time ago, and it used to be used a lot by the community. But it seems like people forgot about it - so hope this honorable mention can spark some interest in it :)
thanks thogenhaven, yes there are most of the people or vistors try to balance their community to have sharing free online content . And the major players youtube, facebook and wikipedia play great role to help us to share such in there . .
I think the most important thing to take away from this post is committment. You have to be dedicated to the social space if you want to make an impact over time.
Good post.
Great post. Staceyann Dolenti
This is a great article, really well written and some good ideas. We've spent the past year building a community specifically around sports content and tips called Favourit, not to dissimilar to betting expert and have learnt many lessons about our users largely by surveying and rewarding people who help us improve various features and functions. We've implemented a heap of small improvements given the great feedback we constantly get. One thing we find in particular is that a simple 5 step survey with a small incentive works really well.
Very well written post - simple isn't it? BTW: Your Flickr link goes to Flikr.comsteve
Great post - I think one point to consider is definately that people do tend to get obsessed with points and 'status' if you will. Like connections8 said you get people fighting it out to try and be the 'best' because they have the most points, thumbs, cred - whatever you call it. I also think timely moderation is key too as a thumbs down only goes so far (aimed at forums and Q & A sites).
Everything comes down to incentives. I've peronsally experienced the incentive factor of leaderboards and rankings in several sites over the years (including this one! I'm in the top 400 already!) and I'm surprised more forums don't use it. Most of them show you how many posts you have, but not your rank in posts (Or for sites that value quality over quantity, your rank in whatever voting-up sytem is at hand). I'm definitely going to look into mod'ing a new phpbb forum I'm working on with such a feature.
I must say, I really enjoyed reading the post. Gives me all the more reason to think that I am spending moeny for a good thing here. Community engagement is definitely a pain point for people like us (SEOs, online marketing folks). Most websites do not focus on community development and perish over a period of time.
Great post!
Good post, I agree with the moz points thing it does get kind of addictive, and a great way to get cred online but it is annoyoing when you make a mistake by saying something silly and it costs you -40 points.
Community ranks go crazy but on some forums you see users with around 10,000 + posts all fighting it out to try and get the most cred on the forum.
Ask me how much I am obsessed with Moz Points… simply loved it and I keep track of it sorry but several times a day…
There are different techniques to boost the moral of the community members may be by offering a fame (Interview), money or something else but at the end of the day if the community is not spreading love and information that members want then it’s very much possible that sooner people will started to leave.
Creating a community that have lot of fans or that is rapidly getting fans and followers are not enough… community should be focused to work on delivering the information that users love and share… SEOmoz Community is a finest example….
Quite an insightful post. But i believe that there are many more factors to it. e.g. Facebook has seen sudden rise in number of users all over the globe. In India, Orkut was the most used social networking site but Facebook swiftly replaced it. I too shifted from Orkut to Facebook and i am sticking there. I believe the intrinsic motivation has a larger role to play in the success of Facebook
Well written article. We should also consider that metrics that can be associated with motivation and tesing.
I love this article, very well written.
I have a slight issue with the line: "Imagine YouTube without user uploads; Facebook without photos and updates or Wikipedia without users writing/editing articles".
I see what you're saying but those websites are inherently community driven, rather than having a community tacked on.
I agree with that point that there are differences between a website with a community attached to it, and a community-driven website. But both kind of websites need the users to contribute content over site to suceed.
For example, Facebook does a lot of research in community engagement. A lot of it is really fascinating - especially this one.
Great review. I'm amazed at how complicated extrinsic motivation can be. People will complain about their jobs and goof off for a decent paycheck, but then spend hours trying to win a tiny prize or get paid $5/hour for some pointless online activity. I caught myself with a serious Zynga addiction last year, all to just gain levels and points so that I could buy more levels and points so that I could eventually pay them money to award me even more levels and points. all of which was pure fantasy (luckily, I stopped before the actually paying them money part).
And before starting shouting "Zing Heist"... ?
Anyone interested in a case study for using incentives to engage your userbase needs look no further than Farmville...
But also to understand when too much is too much for real. I believe I am not the only one who has banned all status' publication on my Facebook timeline of the Zynga games...
Also good point... It is easy to lose sight of long-term/indirect value in the pursuit of short-term/direct value.
Yes that is kinda crazy. I also like how people (myself included) will go to a store far away to get a $15 item for $10 or a sale. But when buying a new camera for $800, we don't bother going to another store 2 blocks away to save $5.
So much good literature has been written on this form of predictable irrationality. Especially this one by Scott Plous.
I really enjoyed Priceless - it brought together some good research and made it pretty accessable for everyone. Amazing how little consideration we consumers give prices and the general pricing structure used by countless industries. Really makes it all seem completely arbitrary.
I enjoyed Priceless too....
Staceyann Dolenti