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  • Blog

Rachel Happe on Social Media Vs Community

April 22, 2010 By Jim Storer

The Community Roundtable has partnered with Voce Communications to produce a new podcast series, “Conversations with Community Managers.” In this series, TheCR’s Jim Storer joins forces with Voce’s Doug Haslam to speak with people from a variety of industries about their efforts with community and social media management.

Our third episode features an interview with Rachel Happe, co-founder of The Community Roundtable.

Conversation highlights include:

  • Introduction of the topic: the difference between the roles of social media manager and community manager. Rachel has been thinking on this topic, with posts such as “Social Media is Not Community“
  • Rachel discusses social media as content-based, while community is more specifically relationship-based
  • How should a CMO hire a social media manager? What should they look for?
  • How the type of company effects the need for deeper relationships or less deep connections (is it a scaling problem?)

Download this episode.

Subscribe to this podcast series.

MUSIC CREDIT: “Bleuacide” by graphiqsgroove.

About Conversations with Community Managers*
To better reflect the diverse conversations our podcast covers we’ve changed the name of our long-running series to Community Conversations.
Community Conversations highlights short conversations with some of the smartest minds in the online community and social business space, exploring what they’re working on, why they do what they do, and what advice they have for you.
These episodes are a great way to begin to understand the nuances of community strategy and management.
Each episode is short (usually less than 30 minutes) and focuses on one community management professional.

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/CwCM_rachelhappe.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Mark Wallace on His Experience with Community

November 6, 2009 By Jim Storer

Mark and I worked together at three different companies between 1996 – 2007. During that time we worked on social media and community projects of all shapes and sizes. When he told me he was leaving to take on a lead role in EDR‘s Commonground community I was thrilled. He has a deep passion for community and this just seemed like a great fit (it is!).

Due in large part to Mark’s hard work and dedication, Commonground was recently awarded a Forrester  Groundswell Award for Outstanding B2B Customer Support Community. I congratulated Mark soon afterward and asked him to join me for a podcast to explore what he’s learned along the way. Apparently I wasn’t the only one with this brilliant idea. Another former colleague (and good friend) Aaron Strout asked Mark to do an email interview with him that same day! In the end it worked out better for you, because you get two for the price of one!

I had the chance to read Aaron’s interview before I chatted with Mark and took the opportunity to take our conversation in a little bit of a different direction. I think you’ll agree it’s a great listen. Enjoy!

Download this podcast (19 minutes/17.3mb)

 

About Conversations with Community Managers*
To better reflect the diverse conversations our podcast covers we’ve changed the name of our long-running series to Community Conversations.
Community Conversations highlights short conversations with some of the smartest minds in the online community and social business space, exploring what they’re working on, why they do what they do, and what advice they have for you.
These episodes are a great way to begin to understand the nuances of community strategy and management.
Each episode is short (usually less than 30 minutes) and focuses on one community management professional.

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/markwallace_final.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Spotify | RSS

Aaron Strout on Measurement and Best Practices

October 29, 2009 By Jim Storer

tough night I’ve been friends with Aaron since he and I were on the team together at Shared Insights. We worked on community projects like “We Are Smarter than Me” and traveled the country recording podcasts with industry rockstars. It was a bit odd interviewing Aaron since we’d tag-teamed so many interviews in the past, but we muddled through. 🙂

On the podcast, Aaron shares more about Powered, including how their “four super powers” – Strategy, Content, Measurement and Platform – support communities for clients like Radio Shack, Sony, HP and Atkins. We dug into content and measurement in detail, exploring how companies should think about these important facets of community building.

We also talked about Aaron’s role as an evangelist (or the Kevin Bacon of social media as Adam Cohen noted) and what best practices he’s picked up along the way. Given Aaron’s success and influence this is must-listen stuff. He’s humble of course, but shares a lot of nuggets about the secrets to his success.

Download this podcast (22 minutes/19.8mb)

 

About Conversations with Community Managers*
To better reflect the diverse conversations our podcast covers we’ve changed the name of our long-running series to Community Conversations.
Community Conversations highlights short conversations with some of the smartest minds in the online community and social business space, exploring what they’re working on, why they do what they do, and what advice they have for you.
These episodes are a great way to begin to understand the nuances of community strategy and management.
Each episode is short (usually less than 30 minutes) and focuses on one community management professional.

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/aaronstrout_final.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Spotify | RSS

Conversations with Community Managers – Stewart Mader

October 22, 2009 By Jim Storer

Rachel sat down with Stewart Mader (blog/Twitter), the author of Wikipatterns and a recognized expert on technology adoption, to talk about the concept of social software pilots.

Initially, Michael Idinopulos wrote a post called “Enterprise 2.0: Skip the Pilot” which sparked quite a conversation in the blogosphere. In this Quick Chat, Rachel and Stewart explore how internal workflows are evolving, the changing definition of “content ownership” and why companies should consider removing the term “pilot” from their social software and community initiatives.

Download this podcast (17 minutes/15.9mb)

 

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/stewartmader_final.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Conversations with Community Managers – Diane Hessan

October 1, 2009 By Jim Storer

Diane Hessan from Communispace is one of the most approachable CEOs you’ll meet. When you meet her for the first time she really wants to get to know you and listens intently. It’s not surprising she runs a successful social media company given this trait and it’s also not surprising she has her team actively (and publicly) sharing via a group blog.

We talked about the blog and what executives need to think about when they’re getting started in social media. Her advice in a nutshell? Start slow and be prepared to mix business with personal. Diane does a good job of this with her popular @communispaceCEO Twitter profile, where she shares what she’s thinking about and reading and isn’t afraid to be herself. It shouldn’t surprise you that Diane was named the 2009 Entrepreneur of the Year by the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce last month. Enjoy the podcast!

Download this podcast (18.7mb/21 minutes)

 

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/dianehessan_final.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Conversations with Community Managers – Michael Brito

September 22, 2009 By Jim Storer

I found Michael Brito (@britopian) through a mention on Twitter. He’d written a blog post called “Social Media Marketing Will Soon Become a Commodity Skill Set” and it somehow found it’s way into my stream. I agreed with the premise and let Michael know on Twitter. We had a back and forth and before long I asked him to join me for a podcast. We spoke a couple days later the the rest is history (captured on this podcast for your enjoyment).

We talked about listening and responding via social networks, humanizing brands and what happens when those humans move on and finally talked about the blog post that originally brought us together. It was a great chat – I hope you enjoy it!

Download this podcast (17mb/18 minutes)

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https://media.blubrry.com/608862/www.community-roundtable.com/podcasts/michaelbrito_final.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Conversations with Community Manager – Shawn Morton

September 10, 2009 By Jim Storer

I met Shawn last March while on the Innovator’s RoadTrip. He joined us for a beer in Columbus and talked about the innovative work he was doing at Nationwide. We soon realized we had a lot of friends in common and ended up at a lot of the same “social gatherings” at SXSWi. Good times!

During this podcast Shawn talks about what it’s like getting a large organization started in social media, the importance of executive sponsorship and how demonstrating quick wins is a good strategy when you’re just getting started. He also talks about Nationwide’s use of Yammer and how it’s a good first step for people getting used to the power of social media. Finally, Shawn shares the innovative way he works with the legal team at Nationwide to make sure they’re comfortable with how the team is interacting on social networks. Enjoy!

Download this podcast (22 minutes/20.6 mb)

 

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/shawnmorton_final.mp3

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A Community? A Network? An Audience?

September 9, 2009 By Rachel Happe

FacebookNetworkWe have a lot of semantic issues in the social media/online space.  The term community is particularly problematic because people tend to throw it around for any online group that interacts with content.  The problem for me is that communities are not about content, they are about relationships. Relationships do need content/programs/conversations in order to develop – just like they do in the real world – but just because a large group of people come by regularly and comment on online content doesn’t mean there is a true community.

Now I know, a lot of people are not going to agree with me on this but here is how I roughly define some terms for collections of people:

Group: A relatively small collection of people, most of whom know each other. I would say 80%+ of group members have interacted and formed a relationship with one another.

Community: A moderate size collection of people, a large percentage (somewhere between 30 – 70%) of which know and have interacted with each other.

Network: A large collection of people who are accessible to each other in a particular location but only a small percentage of whom know each other personally – perhaps 30% or less. Networks typically contain groups or communities.

Ecosystem: Intersecting networks, communities, groups, companies, individuals, and other organizations within an environment.

Audience: A large collection of people who experience the same content and may react to it but who don’t have relationships with each other (except for those people they bring with them).

None of these collections of people are good or bad, but they each are effective for different outcomes and trying to get an audience to collaborate with each other will be challenging (not impossible, but challenging). Getting a community to drive traffic is not the most efficient mechanism. For organizations, this means understanding what outcomes are needed and what activities the target population is likely to participate in is absolutely critical. And like the image suggests, you can have groups within audiences or communities within networks – architecting your management solution (which includes tools, processes, guidelines, metrics, people, etc.) to fit your strategy is key – as well as understanding the cycle time and investment that will be required to build out that management architecture.

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TheCR Network is a membership network that provides strategic, tactical and professional development programming for community and social business leaders. The network enables members to connect and form lasting relationships with experts and peers as well as get access to vetted content.

TheCR Network is the place to learn from industry leaders.  Join today

Conversations with Community Managers – Patrick Quinn

August 31, 2009 By Jim Storer

When we heard that the Kansas Department of Transportation had an online community we knew we had to speak with them. Rachel reached out to Patrick Quinn and he graciously accepted her invitation to sit and chat with her about what they’re up to. Patrick talked about how the agency uses social media, what they’ve learned in building K-TOC and shares the challenges and opportunities he’s experienced in building a community in the public sector.

Download this podcast (28 minutes/25.7mb)

 

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/podcasts/patrickquinn_final.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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#TheCRLive – August 14th

August 15, 2009 By Rachel Happe

TheCRLiveAug14

On Friday, we had a great #TheCRLive at John Harvard’s in Cambridge.  The general topic for the conversation was content creation at live events but we also covered:

  • Percentage of women speaking at events (interesting because the crowd was primarily male)
  • Semantics
  • The definition of a Tweetup
  • Disclaimers at events around the creation of media
  • How donating part of a cow is a problem… but we may change our minds
  • Different community structures
  • Boundaries, attractors, and managing complex systems
  • The transition and evolution of communities

We were joined by @jeffcutler @stevegarfield @peplau @gradontripp @Carissao @psalvitti @JonMichaeli @btrandolph @panklam @JoselinMane @NoOneYouKnow @kurteng @richsands – a great group that really surfaced some great commentary, stories, questions, and ideas.

And, apropos with the topic of the event, Steve Garfield and Jeff Cutler were awesome in creating some great content.  The above image was stitched together by Steve using some iPhone widgetry and Jeff recorded the discussion here – despite suffering some scooter damage on the way.

Interested if future events? Check out our public events list at Eventbrite. Note: People may be taking pictures, tweeting, or recording the events 🙂

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