Do you love your neighbors, your customers, your partners, your employees, and your vendors?
If you are building out a digital community, you'd better. There may be no situation in modern business that requires such a blatant need to be unselfish and to put others first. But the rewards can be well worth the effort.
In 2014, I began working on a "social community" plan for trade partners. I believed that the commonality between partners and ourselves (Universal Parks, at the time) required more than a shared Facebook or LinkedIn Group could offer. I believed our clients would respond to something more customized and personal; I felt people would appreciate the connection to others with the same interests and affinities.
As the project's executive sponsor, I received substantial pushback and resistance at the time. Still, attitudes changed when COVID hit, and the community was up and running with over 75,000 members.
And by changed attitudes I mean the global attitude about digital B2B communities. At most of last year's big conferences, such as Dreamforce 2022 in San Francisco and Inbound 2022 Conference in Boston, "community" was the week's hottest topic!
How to Approach B2B Community-Building
As a sales and marketing distribution strategy, the community approach can surpass any other method for those who manage trade partnerships, sales channels, franchisees, and resellers. That is a claim backed by both experience and research.
For example, a paper published by the Journal of Business Research in September 2020 titled "Unpacking the Relationship Between Social Media Marketing and Brand Equity" stated, "An online brand community is defined as an aggregation of self-selected people who share similar interests and communicate with each other about a brand through computer-mediated communications."
That sums up in clinical terms what a community is, but as marketers we want to review the realities to surpass the expectations of those within our communities.
The paper also stated that "customized digital content can enhance consumer-brand bonds," and that "entertaining, trendy marketing content stimulates brand memories." When we read that as marketers, we get excited about creating content; however, that can also be dangerous and get us focused on the wrong things when building a digital community.
During my process, I used a straightforward real-world analogy to help guide the type of content in our community. We would attempt to put every question into those real community terms. We even had a visual of a cartoon village that helped us map it out.
So, what makes a particular community more desirable than another? Well, the requirements of a digital community are the same as those of a real-world community:
- Safety: People want to feel as if they can express themselves honestly.
- Diversity: It's a good sign to have diversity of all types; people don't feel excluded.
- Options: Dog walks, cafes, restaurants, places of worship, etc., are all different but harmoniously tied together.
- Education: The quality of the schools says a lot about the quality of the community.
- Welcoming: Are people friendly? Are those offering services accommodating?
The "place" brings people together, whether a real town or URL. You may not need everything that the community offers you, but it's nice to see it's there and it makes you feel good to be part of a place that offers those things to others.
As in a real community, things get better when all members are friendly to strangers, when people wave hello as they walk by, when people follow the rules consistently because they want to be good neighbors, and when everyone supports education and efforts to help those in need.
Those are the KPIs we use to measure the success of a digital community.