Showing posts with label community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community. Show all posts

Friday, September 10, 2010

Community Sandbox ..



Every now and then, I get asked by a perspective customer for a sandbox to try out a “community”. See, this is a typically offering from a technology or software company. They want to be able to play around in the sandbox. My memories of a sandbox stem back to Kindergarten. You know … the place we all learned to “SHARE”? These things you would think would go together.

Sharing |Sandboxes | Kindergarten.

Sadly, in the community space, sandboxes aren’t really beneficial. You see, the mistake is routed in the perspective that it is a technology purchase.
In essence, there is truth in that concept. You are purchasing social technology. However, it is really a business service that is enabled by technology. How can you assess the viability of a technology that is to engage your brand with a targeted audience without the audience? Compare this to a play. Every final dress rehearsal typically has an audience. Movies are prescreened for an audience to get a reaction. It is the same way for a successful community strategy and deployment. Social Technology without the members/fans/customers is flat. It is simply a set without the actors.

Please Please think first about your goals and strategy and then apply technology to achieve them. In other words, get your script right! For enterprises that are being cautious like this, I would first suggest doing a “pilot community” rather than a sandbox. In the theater world, this is called playing to Peoria. Develop your roadmap with a soft launch to a specific audience. This may be for a particular grouping of customers, partners, or around a particular product or service. Learn your lessons here and then expand across your enterprise as the roadmap. Make sure you choose your pilot audience carefully. It must be a big enough group to foster INteraction and attention. You require a valid business reason for them to care to INgage with you on a regular basis. Many times these groups will self identify as requesting a social application to communicate with each other.

Choose a technology partner that will scale with your success. Another pit fall I see enterprises that are tip toeing around a social INgagement strategy make is choosing a technology that doesn’t scale. Once they want to scale … they pay double to convert the existing content on to a more enterprise clad platform. 

So are you ready to play to Peoria? I am interested to understand what baby steps your enterprise has discussed in developing a successful (or not) social technology.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

The Connection between the Amish and Web 2.0 Communities.

I recently finished reading a book by Jodi Picoult entitled, "Plain Truth". http://www.jodipicoult.com/ It was a light summer read however, I believe very well researched. It takes place on a Amish Farm in Lancaster County, PA. It was the first book I have read by this trendy novelist.

As I was reading, the word COMMUNITY jumped off the pages as the members of the Amish family continued to explain the importance of blending into a group and being part of the COMMUNITY was more important than being an individual or standing up for oneself.

I have been struggling to understand if this is an entirely different way of the "English" or non "Plain" way of the definition of how community is described in the web 2.0 world. Yes, their is a sense of wanting to belong to be sure. Web 2.0 and community is based on peer to peer communication and a sense of belonging to a group of people with similar interests or profession. Yet, there is an important part to individualism with current day COMMUNITIES. We update our profiles, post photos and comment on them, we project our thoughts in blogs as being a profound statement and encourage others disagree with us... We twitter away about the importance of being "me". These are not part of an Amish definition of community.

So what can we learn from looking at the Amish definition of Communities?

Well....

  • The "Plain" leverage the strength of their community to complete tasks together as one faster than an individual. (Amish barn raisings are a keen example)
  • They believe in the strength of numbers to give them a sense of belonging and comfort.
  • Socialization is a keen part of the Amish community with hymn sing along, quilting circles and most centric .. the church services that rotate between the homes of the community members..

Finally, I am finding a common thread in my blog posts regarding this isn't a new idea. It is a return to the way humans have interacted for centuries. We have depended on each other's skills (Begs and brags in discussion boards), ratings and reviews (idea share), and experiences (blog entries) to learn and grow as society. Web 2.0 based applications simply "Bring the Conversation Online"....