If you own a business and are just getting started with social media, have a presence but not quite sure how to grow it, or are working on behalf of a client in this situation, you’re probably wondering how other businesses got here:
Or here:
From a starting point like this:
Or even this:
When you’re getting started with building a community around your business, you aren’t really starting from nothing. You can leverage the people, blogs, knowledge sources, and communities that already exist and that are relevant to your business and your industry.
Start with what’s already been built and go from there.
Once you’ve gone through this process, you’ll have a manageable list of quality knowledge sources (mainly blogs and people) that you will read, follow on social media, and engage with in order to actually build your community.
Before you begin your journey of identifying community, there’s a few things you might want to know:
- If you're looking to build a quality following, it does in fact take a lot of time and effort
- It’s not all about the numbers
- It's an ongoing process (a more manual, human-type process)
So, where the heck do you start?
Who are you and what do you want to build?
Before you even get started doing the work to identify your online community, get very clear about why you’re even in business in the first place. Why do you matter? What are your values? What do you have to offer? How are you unique? Why should your customers care?
You’re going to build online community by being a great brand and providing something of value. But you’re also going to build community by identifying and attracting the right group of people.
Ask yourself what type of community you want to build. Who do you want in your audience?
Ideally, your community will be an audience of people who have chosen to be part of what you’re doing. Whether you’re acting as an individual or a brand, when you’re building followers, you’re building relationships. It’s not that every member of your community needs to engage or participate regularly (they won’t) but you want this group of people to care about what you do and what you stand for. You need to have some common ground.
In my experience, communities that thrive aren’t just in it for themselves. They don’t just self-promote and talk at their customers all day long. In real life, nobody wants to be around those people and that doesn't change just because you're hanging out online.
What kind of people do you want to be around in the real world? People who provide valuable and relevant information. People who welcome feedback (good and bad). People who listen. When you're building a community (whether virtual or otherwise), you're looking for live humans who, in some sense of the word, contribute to the conversation and the process. Thriving communities are full of people who want and who choose to be there. You can't just gather a bunch of numbers to make up a ginormous group of followers and call it a community.
As in real life, you may not be able to hand-select every single person who belongs to your community. That said, you most certainly can be very clear about what you stand for so that your community is a match for your values. That way, as you build a community around your brand, it is a direct reflection of who you are and what you believe as a company.
Don’t just focus on the numbers
When identifying a community, it is important to focus on quality and not just quantity. Identifying a community is the start of building relationships with people who will support and help you grow your company. It starts with just a few key people and places (blogs and forums). If you've done your job to qualify these well, and do the hard work of generating and sharing value and being an authentic person (and company), then naturally, over time, your community (and your business) will grow.
This process I’m about to guide you through is not a circle-and-friend-and-follow-everyone-you-possibly-can-on-Google+-Facebook-and-Twitter-so-that-you’ll-have-a-humungo-community-kind of a thing. I’m advocating quality in quantity.
Your goal in identifying community is to come out of this with a list of people, companies, and knowledge sources that will serve as your roadmap for growing your online community. It’s a lot like outreach. Once you’ve identified your base, you will foster these relationships, build value in your business (i.e. meaningful content and resources that your customers need), and from there you will be led to additional people and places where you will discover even more pockets of opportunity.
Get clear on your business goals
Keep in mind that social media is a vehicle, not a strategy. Ideally, you want to determine exactly what it is you’re trying to accomplish in your business, and then you can figure out if it’s social media, SEO, content marketing, email marketing, PPC, or even a combination of a whole lot of other things that will actually get you there.
Are you working to increase brand awareness? Humanize your company? Help your support guys spend less time on the phone?
Whatever it is, if you’re clear on what it is you’re trying to accomplish for your company as a whole, it makes it a whole lot easier to identify and determine the online community you’d like to build. Over time, and as your community grows, you can evolve these objectives and really make it work for your business.
Once you have clarity on who you are as a company, what you have to offer, what you’d like to accomplish, and you’re ready to put in the work to grow your business online, start by identifying your community.
Start with some seeds
There are a few different ways to get your seeds in this process of identifying community. You can answer some simple questions, do some social media digging, sift through blogs, and also use search strings. Let’s start with the simple questions.
If you’re working on identifying community for your own company, then you will already have the answers to these questions. If you’re working on behalf of a client, put together a data collection document and ask them to answer the questions for you:
- Who is your target demographic?
- What specific industries do you cater to?
- Who are your partners and colleagues?
- Who are your competitors?
- Who do you respect in the industry (people and companies)?
- What organizations are you a part of?
- What industry blogs do you currently read?
- Who do you follow on social media (people, companies)?
- What events do you attend?
Identify community with social media
You’ll want to determine where your target audience lives online so that you know exactly where to look your community. There are certainly any number of starting points for the hunt: Facebook, Google+, or any other social media outlet that’s appropriate for your customers. But just so that we have an example to work with, we're going to use a company called Accent Branding Solutions (who is, of course, just getting started out building their online community), and we’re going to start with Twitter.
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Go to Followerwonk
Visit https://followerwonk.com/ and click on Search Twitter Bios.
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Enter in your search words
In the search field, enter the words that describe just one of your target audiences. For Accent, they’re targeting groups like the directors of marketing departments, admins of organizations or universities, associations, and marketing agencies. We’ll start with the group [marketing director] and, to narrow it down a bit, also specify their home town location of [Colorado].
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Do some filtering
You’re going to want to filter a bit initially as you go, and then once more when get down to your final picks of people who you think may be good to follow and cultivate as possible community members, influencers, or just great knowledge sources.
You can see that I don’t have too many people to sift through since I limited my search location to Colorado. If I don’t get a ton of prospects, I may considering removing that qualifier (though these look pretty decent at first glance).
When filtering at a high level, I’d recommend looking at number of followers and number of tweets. Number of followers shows that they have some sort of a community built around themselves already and quantity of tweets shows their activity level. Once you’ve qualified at the high level and you want to start checking through individuals on the list, consider:-
Frequency and activity
What is the frequency of their posts? Are they on social media enough to even bother? Or do they post, like, every 6 months?
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Quality and relevance
What kinds of stuff do they post about? Is it valuable? Relevant? Or do they just talk about themselves all day long? Are they sharing things that would be relevant for your customers (or your client’s customers)?
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Gut check
It all comes down to the human element. Is this person a fit for your company’s purpose, goals, and what you’re trying to accomplish with your community? You don’t have to be super picky, but don’t just put them on the follow list because you need warm bodies. This is definitely an ongoing process (you’re going to need to take these people for a test drive, evaluate, and then revise), but take the time for quality now.
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Following and followers
For the people who are looking like pretty good prospects, who are they following? Who’s on their list of followers?
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A mix of the little and the big guys
When it’s all said and done, you're looking for a mix of people who are both obtainable (the little guys) and out of reach (the thought leaders). You want people who have a lot of followers and have some influence on them, but who would also notice when you share their content or interact with them (that's the next step). If you look at the first page of Accent’s results on Followerwonk, you can see that even the top guy only has 1,700 followers.
If I click through and check out his profile on Twitter I can see that he’s pretty active (averages a few tweets a day) and has some decent stuff to share. If I click through to his first post, he’s leading an active user group on LinkedIn so I can see that there may be a few easy ways to eventually make a connection with him.
On the other hand, if I take the [Colorado] location qualifier off of my search in Followerwonk, I get a much larger set of results for [marketing director] who have a much larger following (which isn't always a good thing; sometimes it's just more).
Certainly we would need to do a lot more qualifying for Accent on this group of results, but let’s say they wanted to target Lil B (assuming, as the first rapper ever to write and publish a book at 19, that he's part of our target group). He has 622,220 followers. If Accent wanted to get in front of this guy, we’d have our work cut out for us. Not to say that Lil B doesn’t have value to offer and that Accent may want to follow him as a knowledge source, but the chances of attracting Lil B to their community may be a little bit far reaching at this stage in the game.
Basically - and especially when you’re just starting to build your community - you want to look for a mix of both the little guys and the big guys. Focus on people who you could possibly talk to in person at trade shows, meetups, or at conferences. People who have the time to get to know you and would appreciate the value you're going to share or the contributions that you're making to the industry. Not to say that influencers and thought leaders don't care about what you're doing, it's just that they have less time to take notice. So make sure you shoot for the big guys but that you also combine that with some peeps who have less on their plate.
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Organize
Using what we call a Super Fancy Spreadsheet (where we track all the things), organize and keep track of all the good stuff you’re discovering. As you identify prospects that you think would be good to include in your community, enter their data. We like to track things like: name, type (person, company, affiliation, association, competitor), twitter handle, blog URL, website URL, domain authority, target audience, industry, level of activity, and notes. You can customize this for what you want to know as you're identifying community.
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Set aside blogs
As you’re prospecting in the social media realm, you’re going to find blogs that look decent and that may be a good fit. As you discover those, set them aside (maybe even pull it over into a new window and keep stacking them up there). We’ll get to those next.
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Frequency and activity
Identify Community with Blogs
Once you’ve got a pretty good list of social media seeds going, move on to blogs. In general, you’re looking for blogs that can serve as knowledge sources, places to engage, or reveal possibilities of new people to connect with and possibly attract into your own community.
While you’re filtering blogs, you’ll probably also find more people you’re going to want to check out on social media. Go back and add them to your Super Fancy Spreadsheet as necessary.
Also, you can certainly filter the blogs you’re looking at at a high level (and at quick glance) by using domain authority (more on this below), but ideally you'll want to hand check these suckers.
Again, using your Super Fancy Spreadsheet, you’re going to:
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Set aside blogs discovered during the social media hunt
Check and see if the people you’ve qualified so far on social media have blogs. If so, set them aside.
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Check out other blogs
Look back at the seed questions that you or your client have answered. Look up competitors, partners, distributors, associations, or anyone else in their industry who may have blogs. If you find some, set those aside.
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Use search strings
A lot of times we feel like we’ve exhausted all of the above and still don’t have any solid blog recommendations to make. So we go to search strings like [service/product offering/or target audience intitle:blog] or [service/product offering/or target audience inurl:blog].
Hopefully by now you’ve got a list of a few blogs or so, go ahead and filter through them:
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Domain authority
Use the SEOmoz toolbar to get a quick look at DA. Keep in mind that there are some very good blogs out there that don’t yet have a strong DA but would be an ideal community fit. Always look for potential and quality in addition to authority. More often than not, if a blog has a low DA (say, less than 10), it’s probably not very active. However, there are some blogs that have great knowledge to share but don’t quite have the outreach thing down. Those are perfect opportunities for joining forces and figuring out how you can partner to bring awareness to the strong content and value they're providing.
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Quality and relevance
Is the content worth reading? Would you share this stuff? Would your customers (or your client’s customers) want to read this? Would you want to engage on this blog? Does it spark your (or your client's customers') interest?
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Activity and engagement
Are people sharing the posts on social media? Who is sharing these posts (those could be prospects as well) and how often? Are there any comments?
We’re kind of spoiled in that most of the blogs we’re used to in the marketing industry have strong DA, a ton of social activity, and lots of engagement. Most of the blogs in more detailed niches or specialty industries won’t have any engagement at all. If the blog you’re considering has solid content and posts new stuff fairly frequently, it has potential. Blogs like this are a great place to engage because they’re listening. They would probably be pretty excited to have someone to engage with. Once you start sharing their stuff and become an active member of their community, they’re going to take notice and probably join yours as well.
Now what? Surrendering to the process
Just like building community, identifying community never really ends. As you continue to grow, you will continue to identify people and places that you may want to be a part of, and vice-versa. This is a more manual process, but it's one that we have found to deliver quality results.
After all of this, if you were fortunate enough to come up with a ton of great people and places to start, you’ll probably want to prioritize and just pick five or ten relevant blogs, and also a group of about 5-10 people that you’re eventually (in the next stage of building community) going to commit to following and engaging with. You’ll want to start slow. This is a lot of (consistent) effort and you don’t want to burn out too quickly.
Whether you’ve identified community for your business or you’re working with a client, make sure you understand that this initial qualified list is just a start. Keep in mind that some of these seeds are going to suck (even when you thought they were going to be a gold mine). Yet even the bad seed can lead you to new places, people, and niches that will help to expand the base of the community that you’re building.
Okay, one more thing. If you’re working with a client, once they start working with their list, encourage open communication about how it’s going. Make sure that you’re consistently touching base about whether what you’ve delivered is a fit for them. If they provide you negative feedback about a specific blog, ask them what they don’t like about it. What’s not a match? Maybe the contrast will help them to better identify what they are looking for and then you can help them find it.
A few (more) things to remember
As if this post isn’t long enough (have you met me?), there’s just a few more things for you to remember:
This is just the first step
Identifying community (i.e. prospective knowledge sources and people to follow) is just the first step in building an online community. To do this right, you’ll want to develop a strategy that will guide this and your other online marketing efforts.
This will (eventually) help your rankings
Building a community is a supplement to search. Remember that all of this building community stuff has to do with helping you bring more value to your customers and more visibility to your business. All of the efforts that you make when growing a community will not only build value in your business, it will help your rankings.
The benefit of going this route is that it’s sustainable. If you understand by now that it’s important that you’re not just chasing algorithms and want to invest in something that will weather the changes, this is probably a pretty good way to go.
I call BS on boring (or non-existing) niches
Communities don’t build themselves. Even the big brands had to start somewhere. But complaining about the fact that there is nothing there is just an excuse for not doing the work.
We work with all kinds of clients who start from scratch which means, when they begin, there is (wait for it) nothing. All that means is that you’ve got some hard work to do and one stellar opportunity in front of you. So hunker down and get to it.
Using this process of identifying community has helped our clients to get over their misconceptions about social media and discover niches and verticals that they didn’t realize existed to help them grow their business. The possibility is there, but you’ve got to do the work and quit making excuses.
Don’t give up
Like anything that’s worth having, the reward is worth the wait. There isn't a magic pill. It just takes time and consistent effort. A lot of it. For a while you’re going to feel like, 'what’s the point?' But remember that this is just a stage.
After you've identified your community, you're ready to start building it. The one thing that I want you to remember going forward is this: your purpose is providing value, not making it all about you. Be the kind of community member you're looking for: generous, knowledgeable, and engaged. And, while your community should support and foster your business, it is primarily a means to provide better service, knowledge, and support to your customers.
As always, give it a shot, and let me know how it goes.
Great, actionable, and useful post, Mack! I love how you bring growth and success back to the things that really matter: purpose, core values, and identity. That's all spot-on, in my experience.
Thanks for featuring our local Ballard Farmer's Market - one of my favorites in Seattle. I'm going to pass this on to my wife, who's building a community for a small business.
Also: "DJ Nothin' Nice" (from your second FollowerWonk visual) is, quite possibly, the greatest stage name ever.
Hey Jonathon! Thanks for your comment!
Lucky for me, Jen Lopez brought Ballard Farmer's Market to my attention a few weeks ago along with several other more local or home grown companies who are doing a great job with their social media. It would be great to get Ballard to comment on how long it's taken them to grow their community of more then 4,500 on Facebook. I'm sure it wasn't overnight. And I'm sure it's because they do great things and really focus on their customer.
Please let Marja know that I'm happy to coach her through or answer any questions she has along the way.
(P.S. I was really hoping that I would get a follow out of Lil B from the Pack from this post. I'll have to work on some outreach strategies)
Very Informative Post Mackenzie Fogelson
Thanks!
Really useful information. Thanks Mackenzie
My pleasure.
Well you provide a really nice information here. And thanks for all of that. mackenzie
A great comprehensive post, very useful, thanks!
Great article identifying real resources to help connect with the right people on social media.
Thanks!
You hit the key points I would recommend to anyone starting out on this venture - build value, this isn't about building numbers but adding value and stick with it long term in order to see the payoff. I agree on the comment that there are no 'boring niches'. If you are passionate about something there is someone else out there who feels the same way and would like to join you.
So true Hansen. It's all about being an actual human and building relationships with people. That's why it's hard work; it can't be done by machines.
Good post. A few times I have seen companies buy/sponsor already established blogs and/or forums and turn them into their "community" ...Do you see any negatives in doing that VS building a community organically?
Hi Scott. Thanks and good question. The only experience we have so far is in the organic side. Think about the 'what you want to build' angle and just make sure that you're targeting the people you really want to attract into your community.
I love the step-by-step guidelines in this post. It couldn't have come at a better time for me. Thanks for this!
Great! Let me know how it goes.
This is a great post on developing an online community. I enjoyed reading it. These are some great steps for someone beginning to develop their online brand. What would you recommend for a brand that is established but wants to continue to grow their brand.
Hi Dara. That's a great question. I really strongly believe in building community with value and explain how to do that in this post: https://www.seomoz.org/blog/building-community-with-value. Be sure to focus on the needs of your community (survey and ask them). Leverage neighboring communities by becoming friends with them and support each other.
As your community grows, goals and needs can change very quickly. Be sure to assess when management of the community may need to change in order to keep everyone happy. Jen Lopez of SEOmoz would be a great person to talk about all of that great stuff.
Good luck :)
Great post Mackenzie. I couldn't agree more with your statement that "you’ve got to do the work and quit making excuses." Like the Nike tagline goes, "just do it!"
It is hard work and the only way to effectively learn is to experiment and trying different things to find what resonates with your community.
Your summary reminds me of a favorite Ben Franklin quote that was a response to a question about his many failures on a particular experiment to which he replied "I didn't fail the test, I just found 100 ways to do it wrong."
Thanks for sharing.
Great insight Rick. Thanks for your comment.
"The price of success is failure after failure after failure"
Everything I know I have learned from mistakes.
There is no recipe for success. You have to try different thing to see which one actually works.
Thanks for sharing your tips!
Isn't it so (painfully) true?
My pleasure Bojan. I stole that graphic out of Rand Fishkin's slide deck on his lessons while building SEOmoz. I'd highly recommend checking it out. That slide has been on my office wall for a year and has motivated me on several occasions.
Of course it's painful when you make a mistake, but you can learn a lot from them.
Thanks for reply and for link. Great slideshow!
You really took time writing this post.. Ever since implementation of Penguin and Panda keeping a site up in the rankings has been very hard. I know the importance of building a community or actively having participating to help businesses. The problem I find when selling promotional products, most people are too busy to participate. I am not giving up, just said it is tough
Completely agree with your point Garrett: "The problem I find when selling promotional products, most people are too busy to participate."! We found that using education over selling works every time. Instead of providing content on "why you need my product," it's more along the lines of "How to use this tactic/strategy" - the latter without focusing too much on your brand/company.
Thanks for the article Mackenzie!
Hi Mackenzie, great posting! I'm going to try using Followerwonk the way you showed. Also great use of enticing and informational images here, they really enhanced the content of the posting! Thanks for sharing!
Hi Mackenzie,
Thanks for providing us with a new white paper on how to start up with a social media campaign. I have a handle on defining the target community, but your nuggets of wisdom "Who are you and what do you want to build?" and your 9 questions for seeding the client are priceless.
Cheers and thanks.
Mark
Thank you Mark :)
This is the only way in online marketing if you want to grow your business then first of all you should make your group for that category in which you are working other wise it could be prove like dump.
Great article. Thanks for sharing this valuable information.
I think that hard work and patience are the key takeaways from this post!
Yes, so very true. That's the hard part. You've got to have both :)
Thanks for the advice on prioritizing what often seems like an social networking nightmare!
Really fabulous information.
Thanx
Mackenzie, as a small business owner with a niche real estate market your post just keeps reminding me to stay on my right path and not stray! great post that i will come back to again! thanks!
Great. Glad it will help.
Ginnyl- I too am in a small real estate niche. My advice is not to try and compare your numbers to agents in bigger markets. I also wouldn't worry about connecting to hundreds of other agents. A community filled with possible clients or referral sources is much more important. Good luck.
This is exactly what I've been wondering about recently. Great app as well. Thanks, cleared up most of my questions and I also agree, anyone who says a market is saturated or cannot build a community anymore in a certain niche is just using excuses. At the end of the day, you can't beat hard work!
Thanks for reading Rowan.
Amazing, Great, Marvelous, Awesome, Excellent....and etc words are also less for this post... :)
Mackenzie you just simply awesome and sharing great stuff about Social Media Marketing..... thank you so much....
You are very welcome. Thank you for your kind words.
Great one Mackenzie! Thanks a lot for the post. Everything in the world of SEO and online marketing has been challenging post Penguin and Panda. Building a community or actively participating in one helps businesses to build a great brand and do a lot of word of mouth marketing. Certainly social media is the best way to identify an online community. Having part of a business model around online communities can also help businesses be in the right track and in the process grow at a rapid pace.
Mackenzie
After the changed scenario in SEO, the importance of online community is on high. We need a proper platform to get updates but it happens many times that we don't know where to login and from where we can get the authentic information. But after getting this article i properly got to know that how to get an online community regarding a particular topic or interest. You have done a great job....
Thank you Nazre. I hope this helps you get started.
Good stuff Mackenzie. Definitely agree with the need to tie all social media undertakings to concrete goals. What we've found is it not only helps us measure outcomes, but also serves as a guide for our efforts.
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for making that point. If you don't start with goals, you cannot measure your efforts. Especially when working with clients to help them on this building community journey, setting up (the right) goals and communicating how we're helping them to reach them, is one of the most important parts of our efforts.
Very helpful tutorial. I knew Followerwonk was associated with SEOmoz but never checked it out until today. I'm definitely in the camp of companies lacking Twitter followers and I've felt like "what's the point?" Thanks for posting some real actionable suggestions.
My pleasure. It can be painful. Trust me, I know. We've been working on it as a company (and also for myself individually) for almost a year. Definitely making progress but a lot of hard work that has gone into our successes.
Just remember to focus on sharing valuable content (doesn't have to be your own) and being consistent.
Its good Mackenzi, i didn't knew that follower wonk app before. Thank you so much.
You're welcome Chinna. Followerwonk is a really great tool, but so is just the regular old human element. I'd recommend the both.
I just wanted to say that having read this post and found it really useful, in a very practical way. I actually joined SEOmoz officially so I could leave a comment to say so. Honestly though, as someone new to marketing and SEO in many ways, it is these kinds of resources, that are thorough and well exemplified that are making things easier to do and understand every day.
So thank you very much for taking the time to post it!
My pleasure Rachael and so glad you found the post useful. I appreciate you leaving a comment and welcome to the SEOmoz community!
Hey Mack -
To add to the echo chamber of comments, this was very well thought-through and executed.
It's funny how with so much content being produced literally every moment so much of the important foundational elements; purpose, values, etc. (to Jonathon's point) are lost in translation.
I will be sending this along to those who are stuck trying to build their communities.
Thanks!
Thank you for your feedback Nick.
There is definitely a lot of noise right now. I'm hoping this will help companies understand how to get started, but also that it takes a tremendous amount of work and commitment ongoing. Something I will address in future posts :)
Mackenzie- I love that this post started with goals instead of just jumping into the tools. So many business owners want to jump into the action (especially with the newest social media platforms) without taking the time to create a strategy or to answer the most basic question - "why?"
So true. Many businesses actually forget to ask that question at all. The answer to that question is where companies will find their passion and unveil creative ways of reaching their customers.
I like the overall post!
As I am going through the process at the moment I would like to mention that there are few things that people should consider especially SEOs and Social Media enthusiast who are building communities on behalf of the client.
1. Building a Community is different for every business and niche so in order to get success you must try different tactics and see which works for you!
2. Events are very important when building a community, for instance if you are targeting a community and launch an offer for them… always makes sure that there is no event (i.e black day or any other religious event) intersect with your dates.
3. One Offer or effort for building a community is not enough… in order to build a community and engage with them you must have to come up with activities from time to time.
Just my 2 cents!
Thanks for your input Moosa. I appreciate you adding your tips. Helping clients build a community can definitely be challenging. The most important factor for us has been buy-in. They've got to know up front how much (ongoing) work is involved on both sides (not just us) and they need to be willing to commit to it in order to see results. You've got to commit 100% to experience a match in ROI.
Love the post - Even Boring Niches can do social it just might take more creativity A great way to build your community is by leveraging existing communities and cobranding things with them.
Thanks David. Yes, boring niches definitely provide the opportunity for creative companies to stand out. I definitely recommend leveraging other companies and their communities. It's great to reach out and find the ones who are a value match and who can become a colleague and support system.
Thanks for the article. I am having a lot of trouble building a community on Facebook for my side business. Too much information to digest, will have to reread it a few times. Thank you!
Thanks for sharing Very Informative Post Mackenzie
Thanks!
Great post. I have also start experimenting with followerwonk to identify common groups followed by some of members of my community. For instance, if there is a core group of twitter accounts followed uniquely by two of my community members, then I can filter this list further and determine who I should follow.
Building a social following is truly an arduous process. This is a great breakdown of the process and really shows that, if you put in the time, it is possible to go from 0 to 1000+ Likes/Followers. Well done!
Your generous work on this valuable reference are priceless Mackenzie. Thank you. And your timing is great. I am right now launching a new local business and need every bit of this.
I think another great thing to add is don't be scared to not participate in a popular community if it doesn't bring in any additional value to your business. Copyblogger just did this by shutting down their Facebook page.
Its a really helpful post and online community is needed for making brand. Thanks Mackenzie.
Thanks Mack. I find myself in a new CMO role and finally able to implement all of the lovely strategies I've admired for years, but did not have the influence or capacity to do with my book of clients (probably more of my fault than anything else).
So, here I am, starting from scratch with a fun new start-up, anxious to dive into community building and content creation strategies. Can't wait. I just need to take all of this great data into an actionable one step at a time plan.
I watched the recent video on Distilled you presented at Search Love. It was great, I plan on diving into all of your articles here on Moz.
Thanks Eric. That's really great to hear that you're prioritizing community building in your new role. If there's anything I can do to help, let me know.
In case you haven't seen it yet, we just recently released our free guide to building online communities. That is our most recent stuff and should walk you through the entire process. You can download it here.
Followwonk and data from topsy will help you identify top movers and top content in your community that your trying to identify and market to.
This article is exactly a precise summary of everything that have been taught in my Social Media Marketing class. How to find customers and improve it through social media networking tools. It's just awesome all the incredible improvement and success we can find if you use Social Media Marketing wisely.Thank you for such as valuable information.
A helpful comprehensive post, thanks for sharing. Businesses should utilize the power of online communities and social media. Just like SEO and search engine marketing, we also have to give more time on analyzing social media insights and metrics so that we can come up with better campaigns and be successful in targeting our goals.
Thank you
Mackenzie, you are just Google for me. This post is very helpful to me a lot as i have just started SMO in past 2 days. Now i am going to follow your strategy for networking sites. Thanks for sharing.
My pleasure Thomas.
Great post Mackenzie, thanks! I think many find the idea of trying to build an online community quite daunting. Hopefully by usoing your post they will gain confidence and success in creating a targeted community and offering good value to their followers/users.
Thanks Laura. I really hope so as well!
Fantastic Post Mack!
I got first hand experience in building a community on twitter, facebook & Google+. Though, I've succeeded in twitter & facebook but couldn't made the same impact in Google+.
Very informative post. Ever since the need for new strategies calling for social media marketing has taken the run on internet, there have been numerous takes on such initiatives, but this post, i must say, is on the top of all those. And the way you have used those stats through the infographics, makes it very insightful.
Great, thank you for reading.
Its awesome Mackenzie, social media platform is the great way to identifying any online community.
Thanks keep it up !
There are a lot of articles talking about identifying your own community, but this is definitely one of the best.
Thanks so much Javier. Glad you've found it useful.
Thanks for putting together this post, Mackenzie, your efforts provide great guidance to anybody who's looking to engage and connect with same-interest communities. Cheers!
Followerwonk tool can be very effective if used properly. Thanks for the post Mackenzie.
Thanks for the incredible post!
Regarding Followerwonk - it's a great tool but I've recently checked its results against Klout's for finding relevant, authoritative Twitter users, and I'm finding that Klout provides results that are more tailored to my search.
Awesome post Mackenzie. In today's world it is very important to identify an online community and get involved.
There is only so much a business can achieve from SEO & PPC but with social media a business owner can actually interact with its target market.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading your article.
Yes effective information but can any one share thought the web site name for best community to get seo client and approach them into business