This document discusses how to build and maintain an engaged community of readers by providing continuous value, authenticity, and responsiveness. It emphasizes finding your unique niche, rewarding loyal community members, taking cues from reader feedback, and creating a mutually beneficial relationship where the community becomes self-governing and defends the brand. Examples are provided of successful bloggers who prompted their communities into action, elevated participating readers, and responded to comments to create a sense of conversation and camaraderie.
2. Hint: It’s not just engaged readers and
it’s not just a platform.
What Is A Community?
3. How Do I Find And Relate To My Community?
Be sure of your unique niche and tone.
Be mindful of authenticity from day
one.
Always aim to provide value.
4. Keeping Relationships Continuously Beneficial
There’s no stopping point for providing value and building out a
community.
Reward community members for their loyalty and interest.
Pay attention to reader feedback and expertise: Take your cues from
them.
Remember that when reaching out to ask questions, open-ended
questions to generate one-time engagement is not the aim – true
listening/value is the aim.
5. 860+ comments and suggestions from valued readers, incl. changing
the kerning & modifying fonts.
6. Trolls And Grouchy People
Trust that an established and strong community will often
speak for you to defend you to negative users or trolls.
To keep in mind when confronted with negativity: think
about (1) when to step in, (2) when to let community step in,
and (3) when to walk away.
7. What Does Success Look Like?
How does community make a brand stronger?
Ability to pivot into new field of expertise,
taking your community with you.
Wider net of expertise to draw from and
learn from.
More brand recognition and wider spread
on social networks.
8. The Bloggess
Prompted her community into action
both for important and more whimsical
projects. (In this case, drawing a lady
making out with a unicorn and then
tweeting it).
Rewarded and elevated participating
readers by calling them out/drawing
attention to them.
11. Andrew Sullivan
@sullydish
After creating a valuable product, measured
that value by asking his readers what they
wanted, thus moving a popular column to an
independent site.
A month later he had earned over $625k
from readers paying $19.99/year per
membership.
12. Provide continuous value to your readership.
Be authentic and invite your readers to speak often.
Know when to stand up and when to walk away.
Be mutually beneficial to each other, always.
GRAND FINALE!
13. Questions? Concerns? Cats?
Annemarie can be found:
@travelinganna
www.frillseekerdiary.com
Jodi can be found:
@legalnomads
www.legalnomads.com/about