How do you segment your community?
At the end of "Your Community already exists," I promised a follow up on segmentation. So much has been written about this that I hesitate to add my own spin, but I’m resisting re-researching the topic to pick who I think did it best. My goal here is not to create the "industry standard" taxonomy, but to set a framework for how I’ll discuss it overtime here at Community Group Therapy.
If you really want to explore this topic fully, it is likely well worth exploring my blogroll for others points of view on this.
So here goes. This is essentially how I think about online communities from a segmentation standpoint:
- Internals: Often forgotten in the taxonomy - but CRITICAL. Who are the internal employees in your company that are participating (or need to participate). What are their roles? Do their roles reflect your community goals (Do you have aspirations for product improvement insight, but only marketing participating)? Are they "volunteers" or is it their job to be in the communities? Are they there because they want to be or because they were told to be? You’ll have all of this - map it, plan for it, reward it if necessary, negotiate for it as needed (carrot and stick), develop your pitch to convince as needed - Just make sure you pay attention to it. Your community without participation from across your company will not achieve its potential.
- Moderators: These are sometimes employees and sometimes community volunteers. They’re critical to the tone, manner, health and managing the "norms" of the community. They need to be empowered, but very cautious in using their power. Moderation is part art, part science. Consistency is key. They need to be a very well known and respected participant in the community. Oh..and some personality helps:)
- Elite contributors: NOT to be confused with Moderators. These are your most active 1% of unique users (or even less in Microsoft’s case). This is the steep part of the curve where a small percentage of users are massively…even shockingly active in your communities. Reminder, I’m very biased, but to me, this is job #1. This is the segment that you have to deeply engage. (For Microsoft, these are the MVP’s). Their reasons for their level of activity are largely their own, but it is never (or rarely) about helping you…it is about helping other users. Their "ROI" could be described as learning, socializing, helping, "Pay it Forward," or simply as altruism. Misunderstand the motivations of this audience at your own peril!!
- Active Participants: Often described as the next ~20% of active participants. They represent the next most active (though significantly different than elites)group of participants. They are predominantly "askers" but are also "answerers" and some % of them will someday be your Elite contributors. These are your "regulars" - they come back because it was good last time.
- Lurkers/Consumers: These are the masses. They probably found you via search. They may or may not come back. In the end they have utilitarian needs from the community. This is over-simplified to be sure - in fact I’d love your input on how to break down this group a little further. Somewhere in this group are participants I’d call "curiosity seekers." They are circling the pool and looking at all the fun…building up their courage to jump in. The tone/manner/approachability of your community will determine how much courage it takes. This group I think is particularly critical to the long term vitality of your community.
- Non-Users: Well, all of the above are probably a small percentage of all your users…so you have A LOT of work to do. It is equally important to consider your non-users. Why are they non-users? What can you do to attract them? If you attract them too fast, might they damage your community. What are you doing to drive awareness of your community resources? Ease of discoverability? Re-use of the content? Remember…Field of Dreams was just a movie!
Now that you have a taxonomy (mine or another you like)…what to do. Just ensure you check your plan, end to end, against this taxonomy. If you design your community with lurkers in mind, will elite answers dislike your design. If you design for elites, will curiosity seekers ever get in the pool? Are you differentiating services and/or benefits by segment? Let’s face it, you will have budget constraints. Some services may have cost you can’t scale beyond your 1%. Consider the currencies ("coined" by my friend Lee at Commoncraft) that benefit each segment.
Whatever you do, don’t go and build your community strategy without considering segmentation. Even if you get some things wrong, having the context will allow you to identify and troubleshoot your errors much more quickly.
Sean
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