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The Importance of Community Management in Social Media Projects (part 3)

By William Azaroff on August 23, 2007 11:55 AM

Note: Read part 1 and part 2.

Many articles and blog posts will tell you that the cost to enter into the world of blogs, wikis, RSS, podcasts, social networking (Facebook or MySpace), social bookmarking (del.icio.us or ma.gnolia), or  Application Programming Interfaces (or APIs) mean that you can start a blog or social media project for your bank or credit union at a total cost of zero. Right?

Well, sort of.

One of the critical, but often unsung factors of success of a social media project is the resourcing. If you're going to invite the public to play, make sure you have someone who can help create the kind of community you want.

As we planned ChangeEverything.ca at Vancity we had many discussions about how to create a vibrant and postive community. We have all seen online bulletin boards, discussion forums and blogs degenerate into the kind of name-calling no one wants associated with their brand. This was one of our worst fears. Since then, we've learned a great deal about community building.

In my first part of this post, I mentioned nine success factors for a social media project. An important one is hiring someone who knows how to nurture and grow an online community. Here's why.

Whether or not hard dollars are spent launching a social media project, someone needs to manage the initiative and ensure that it achieves its goals. This is a very specific skill-set with the following requirements:

  • Someone who can inspire visitors to come back, readers to register, and registered users to add good content.
  • Someone who knows when to get involved in discussions and threads that are degenerating, going off topic, or just going nowhere.
  • Someone who can elevate good material to the homepage so it will hook like-minded people, as well as delete remarks you don't want on the site.
  • Someone with good taste.
  • Someone who understands the business goals of the site and can act appropriately and decisively.

Recently I have seen a few interesting posts speaking to the issue of good online community moderation. One was on Jeremiah Owyang's excellent web-strategist.com: For the Community Managers. I also saw a very good piece on Seth Godin's blog: Jobs of the future, #1: Online Community Organizer. So it seems that more and more people are catching on that this free revolution has some resourcing costs built in if you want to achieve success.

Here are three examples of financial institutions that blog and how they manage their resourcing.

Wells Fargo

wellsfargoBlog.jpg

Wells Fargo has a total of four blogs, the most for any financial institution. According to their VP of Social Media, the amazing Ed Terpening:

Although we have an Experiential Marketing group dedicated to social media activities for Wells Fargo, all of our bloggers are team members who have other full time jobs. They add blogging - writing, posting, reading, replying - on top of those jobs, and our lead bloggers take a more active role than others. The culture of blogging is unique and we strive to connect with that culture through many different voices at Wells Fargo. Finding the person with the right passion + knowledge is our goal, whether they have a professional communications role or not (most do not).


Verity Credit Union

verity.jpg

Verity was the first financial institutions to blog, beginning in late 2004. It recently received an excellent facelift and functional overhaul. It's a highly usable and readable blog. According to their CMO and VP Shari Storm, they staff their blog with volunteer employees from around the credit union. Employees who want to blog go through a quick 10-15 minute training on the dos and don'ts of blogging, and they are allowed to spend no more than an hour a month blogging so their managers won't get upset with the project. This is a nice way to save money on resources. Until their recent overhaul, their blog was even hosted for free at Blogger. Says Storm, "One of the unexpected successes of our blog is how much employees like writing for the forum. We’ve heard from employees that it provides extra job satisfaction and a sense of employee pride."

Vancity

changeeverything.jpg

One of the key success factors of ChangeEverything.ca was the investment in a full-time Online Community Moderator, Kate. Kate has been instrumental in nurturing the community, providing them with contests and activities, connecting the site to the press to get earned media exposure, moderating comments and understanding the needs and wants of the site's registered users. Not an easy job, and I always say that Kate is one of the key reasons why the site has grown and excelled in the way it has. She has an amazing balance of clearly knowing the purpose of the site, and also being open to where the community wants to go. She deserves amazing credit and her skillset will only make her more and more valuable. (NOTE: no poaching!)

So, by all means try out social media. There are many low-cost, even free, options. But realize  that for a site to achieve longevity and success as a communications vehicle, branding tool, community platform, or whatever you have planned, you may need to invest in social media management. This means either tapping good people internally to devote time to the project or hiring a community moderator to ensure your project develops to its full potential.

William Azaroff is the Interactive Marketing & Channel Manager at Vancity where he develops interactive marketing initiatives, and pioneered ChangeEverything.ca, the groundbreaking change-themed online community. William also plans strategy for the online channel, with a view to its potential to help Vancity, its members and the community. William brings nine years of experience in Vancouver, Seattle and Los Angeles producing web projects for such clients as Honda, Disney, Intuit Canada and Nike Jordan. He writes about the intersection of online branding, social media and the world of banking on his blog at azaroff.com/blog

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Comments (5)

Great post - I concur.

I think Kate has done an excellent job nurturing the tenor of the community at ChangeEverything. I am someone who is occasionally too candid when online (many of us can relate I'm sure), but I've learned a great deal about tact and politeness from the relatively gentle nature of the ChangeEverything community.

This mostly positive attitude manifests itself very subtly at ChangeEverything. For example, when a disrespectful, or over the top comment appears on, or within, a post, there is typically either no response, or a very polite, understanding reaction that nullifies the situation fairly quickly. I can't recall ever seeing the volatile exchanges that denote many other sites.

People who come to visit the site quickly learn that it is a drama free zone, and adapt, or they move on out of boredom.

This emergent characteristic of the community is also demonstrated by witnessing how members will often correct their own bad manners before someone else gets a chance (myself included). It has certainly enlightened me as to the implications of my own tone, and communication style when engaging in online dialogue.

Thanks Jeremy. It's good to hear from a member of the ChangeEverything.ca community about this. Kate deserves much praise for keeping an adult (mature not pornographic) tone on the site.

So... how does Kate feel about the New England climate...? :)

Seriously - this is a great series William - good combination of practical content with strategic thinking. Just what this banker needs to keep me thinking.

Have you had a chance to see the recent Jupiter report on Viral Marketing?
http://www.jupiterresearch.com/bin/item.pl/research:vision/1231/id=99653/

Thought it related to the whole Social Media projects - Being bottom line folks that my Exec team are - they keep pestering me about "what real business are they getting?" - Got any thoughts on tangible sales tracked back to your Social initiatives? I know Sheri had reported some numbers awhile back - wonder if anyone else is hearing anything they can quote.

Thanks Ted. First of all, and let me make this perfectly clear, Kate HATES New England. I'm sure she does. She even hates clam chowder. Very bad.

I would love to get my hands on that report, it looks great.

The issue you bring up is the central issue. I'd be curious what Ron Shevlin would say about it, but I'm still working this through. I have not found a good way to link this back to pure ROI. There's earned media, ad tracking back to your brand and then metrics around engagement (# of Facebook members in your group, etc...)

Verity knows that 1% of new members cite the blog as their main reason for becoming members. I think the human tracking part is key, and banks and CUs will need to put in manual ways of measuring impact in order to gauge success.

Did people have similar discussions in the early days of email marketing or DM? Are there similarities?

For the record, I quite like chowder of all varieties... ;)

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