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Interview with a Community Veteran – Michael Pace

April 15, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

Michael PaceOur last interview with a community veteran is with one of our earliest members and most vocal supporters – Michael Pace. Michael has worked tirelessly to advance the ideas and practice of community customer support and has been a great leader in and out of TheCR Network.

You can connect with Michael on twitter, or follow him on his blog: thepaceofservice.com.

1. How have you seen the community management space evolve over the past five years?

Interesting question.  Oddly, I feel I have seen two separate paths for community management over the last five years.  Path #1:  I call this the status quo path.  People who still preach and practice exactly the same way they did 3,4,5 years ago.  They seem to be adding very little to the conversation, and continually regurgitate the same old same old spiel.  Many of them do not believe you should or could quantify the value of your community, and believe in many of the original “isms” of yesteryear.  Path #2: I call this the edge of the box path.  This is the true evolution of community management.  They look at how to leverage the skills, competencies, and tools to push our thought on what can be done.  Folks interested in social business have moved down this path, because it is bigger and immensely more valuable than just social media networks.  They have operationalized social, their communities, and tools to distill the insights necessary to move forward.

2. What are some of the biggest differences from when you first started out in community management?

The biggest difference (for me) from when I first started is the incorporation of customer service into the social space.  In ’09 it was still all Marketing and PR, except for Frank Eliason at Comcast.  Finding others interested in social/community management for customer service was very scarce.  In a lot ways I appreciate that open range today, because I may have fallen lock step with the crowd if it wasn’t so scarce.  It pushed me to find ways to make social work for customer service.

3. What would you do differently in your first community management role knowing what you know now?

Executive champions, executive champions, executive champions! Did I mention executive champions?  Without executive championship, you are going to be Sisyphus pushing your rock up the hill each day.  I had relatively strong executive championship, but if I was to do it again, I would have made it bigger and more pronounced.

4. Where do you see yourself in five years?

Five  years from now, I see myself with my own customer service shop/contact center.  But it wouldn’t be your father’s contact center.  It was be rich with efficient communication and collaboration.

5. Did you have any community management mentors along the way? Any specific advice they gave you that stood out to you?

Not just saying this for the purposes of this questionnaire, but Rachel and Jim were my primary local mentors.  I had a Facebook page to keep track of idiots I didn’t like in high school, and a LinkedIn page to source job opportunities.  Beyond that no social training what so ever.  They helped me ramp up so quickly that I was speaking about social customer service in front of audiences within a few months.  Best advice came from Rachel. She told me my Twitter stream was boring.  “Who wants to only hear about email marketing all day.  Show your personality.  If I am interested in you, I’ll be interested in what you share.”  Three months later, I was making Movember shower videos. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glPko3I-EHc&list=UUZLGMCmn9LcpxOaRwm8vIow

6. What would you tell someone who has made the career leap and is in the early stages of their career in community or social business?

If someone was making the career leap over to social and community management, I would tell them regardless of what you believe this role will entail, you should continue to focus on core business competencies, as well as social networking skills.  Core business competencies should include (but might not be limited to) communication, influencing others, analyzing data, teamwork, customer focus, results focus (getting things done efficiently), and people development and management.  Odds are is your community management role will be cross functional, and you will need to (continue to) learn how to develop these competencies in order to effectively advocate for funding/people, deliver on cross functional goals, communication activity and vision, and gain insight.

7. If you could go back and give yourself advice five years ago what would you say?

“Hey this Facebook and Twitter thing may actually take off, go get yourself involved.”

 

 

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Did you know that TheCR Network members work with all kinds of communities? In fact, about 25% work in either internal or external communities and 50% work with both! No matter what kind of community you work with membership in TheCR Network will save you time and improve the quality of your work by connecting you with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining TheCR Network can improve the work you do.

Podcast: Community Retrospective – Part Two

April 14, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

Jim and Rachel at Hugh O'NeilsTo celebrate our 5th anniversary I spent an afternoon with our founders, Jim Storer and Rachel Happe discussing the history of The Community Roundtable, how community management has evolved in the last five years and what is in-store for the future.

In the second part of our discussion Rachel and Jim dig into how the community management space has changed in the last five years, the evangelization that continues to take place  and the idea of community management as both a role and discipline.

Missed part one? Check it out here.

 

https://www.communityroundtable.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/TheCRFoundersRetrospective_part2.mp3

 

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Did you know that 95% of TheCR Network members agree that the content and peer input improves the quality of their work? It’s true! Membership in TheCR Network saves community and social business leaders time and improves the quality of their work by connecting them quickly with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining TheCR Network can improve the work you do.

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/TheCRFoundersRetrospective_part2.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Friday Roundup: Five Year Anniversary Edition

April 11, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

The First TheCR Live - Five Years Ago

The First TheCR Live – Five Years Ago

Yesterday we shared this picture via twitter in honor of #tbt (throwback thursday) of Rachel and Jim at our very first TheCRLive, at the Barking Crab in Boston, MA. It’s hard to believe that was five years ago. This month we’ve been looking back at those five years though interviews with veteran community practitioners (so far we’ve chatted with Heather and Nigel), a podcast series with our founders and a fun infographic of our favorite milestones.

You can catch up on any content you missed in our links, find new community jobs, and more!

  • Infographic: Celebrating Five Years of Community
  • Last call: our 5th Anniversary Happy Hour is next Tuesday – Join us!
  • We’re excited about three upcoming events in May: the J. Boye Philadelphia 14 Web & Intranet Conference, Collective 2014 and Lithium LiNC – will you be attending any of these events? Let us know – we’d love to catch up in person!
  • New community/social jobs from Nike, Microsoft, Edelman and the Human Capital Institute
  • Predicting when users will leave an online community based on their language use
  • A Shared Purpose Drives Collaboration
  • Interview with a Community Veteran: Nigel Fortlage, Vice President, Information Technology (CIO) at GHY International
  • Podcast: Community Retrospective – Part One – Jim and Rachel share how they met and their earliest ideas for The Community Roundtable
  • Talking with IBM’s @Sandy_Carter About Social, ROI, and Women in Tech
  • The cresting of the enterprise social stream
  • Helpful advice on discovering your purpose
  • Community Comes From Difference, Not Just Commonality
  • How to be More Productive and Eliminate Time Wasting Activities

We’ll be back next week to share one more week of anniversary content before we release the 5th annual State of Community Management 2014 report on April 22! Stay tuned for the final two parts in the founders podcast series, another interview with a community manager and a podcast with a very special guest!  Have a great weekend!

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Did you know that 95% of TheCR Network members agree that the content and peer input improves the quality of their work? It’s true! Membership in TheCR Network saves community and social business leaders time and improves the quality of their work by connecting them quickly with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining TheCR Network can improve the work you do.

Infographic: The Community Roundtable’s 5th Anniversary

April 10, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

A BUTCHY SKYWRITING 25

When we started thinking about how to celebrate our five year anniversary we threw around a lot of ideas. Sky writing! Singing telegrams! Surprise visits with flowers and candy for every member of TheCR Network!

Ok, maybe grand gestures like that weren’t in the cards. But, we did want to find a way to share our excitement and highlight some of the coolest moments in our first five years. If you’ve been reading along you’ve seen our interviews with early community practitioners and our podcast series with Rachel and Jim about the history of the Community Roundtable. We’re even hosting a party on 4/15/14 in Boston that we’d love to see you at.

The truth is, you know we love a good infographic, and that seemed like a natural way to share some of our favorite moments. Without further ado, please enjoy our retrospective infographic – celebrating our most memorable milestones from 2008 until now.

anniversary infographic

Do you have a favorite moment that we missed? Add it in the comments! Who knows, maybe it will make our 10-year infographic!

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Looking to take your career in community management to the next level? 92% of members agree that TheCR Network supports and advances their personal and professional goals. Learn how our research, access to peers and experts, targeted content and exclusive concierge service can help you achieve your goals. 

Podcast: Community Retrospective – Part One

April 7, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

The Community Roundtable RetrospectiveTo celebrate our 5th anniversary I spent an afternoon with our founders, Jim Storer and Rachel Happe at their first office – a corner table at the pub Hugh O’Neills in Malden, MA. Over a few pints of Guinness we discussed the history of The Community Roundtable, how community management has evolved in the last five years and what is in-store for the future.

In the first part of our conversation, you’ll hear Jim and Rachel reminisce about how they met, their original ideas for The Community Roundtable and the ah-ha moments they’ve experienced over the last five years in a changing industry and more.

https://www.communityroundtable.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/TheCRFoundersRetrospetive_Part1.mp3

This is the first part in a three part series, we’ll published parts two and three on the blog next week. Have a question you’d love to ask Rachel or Jim about the history of The Community Roundtable? Tweet us @TheCR or leave the question in the comments. We’d love to hear your take on the last five years in the community management space, or where you think the industry is headed! Please share!

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Looking to take your career in community management to the next level? 92% of members agree that TheCR Network supports and advances their personal and professional goals. Learn how our research, access to peers and experts, targeted content and exclusive concierge service can help you achieve your goals. 

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/TheCRFoundersRetrospetive_Part1.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Friday Roundup – Spring is Here Edition

April 4, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

Spring

Photo credit: 3rd House Pary

Spring has finally sprung in Boston! Today there are crocuses blooming, marathoners training in shorts and the Red Sox open their season at Fenway Park – so many things to celebrate! I hope you’re enjoying spring whereever you are – even if it’s been warm for longer than three days!

This week we celebrated April 1st and kicked our month-long anniversary celebration, leading up to the release of our 5th annual State of Community Management report on 4/22/14. We are so excited to share a look back at the last five years in the community management space, and doubly excited to share the results of our 2014 research. In the meantime, you’ll have to wait it out with this week’s links. We’ve got a few new community jobs, an interview with long-time TheCR Network member Heather Strout, a recap of our March Community Manager spotlight webinar, an interesting look at community-driven game development and more!

  • Are you going to be in Boston on 4/15? Join us for a Happy Hour!
  • Recap: Community Manager Spotlight Webinar with Heather Ausmus
  • Did you miss our April Fools joke?
  • Interview with a Community Veteran – Heather Strout
  • Free webinar: Employee Communities – What they can do, and how to get them there.
  • Mapping Twitter Topic Networks: From Polarized Crowds to Community Clusters
  • Community jobs at Nike, Reputation.com, Nokia/HERE and Salesforce
  • Thoughts on Community Driven Game Development
  • Podcast : State of Community Management 2014 Sneak Peek
  • The Risks of Having A Community Without Management
  • Using Online Community to Increase Member Retention

Thanks for reading! We’ll be back on Monday with the first in a three-part community retrospective with Rachel Happe and Jim Storer. Have a great weekend.

 

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Looking to take your career in community management to the next level? 92% of members agree that TheCR Network supports and advances their personal and professional goals. Learn how our research, access to peers and experts, targeted content and exclusive concierge service can help you achieve your goals.

 

Recap: Community Manager Spotlight Webinar with Heather Ausmus

April 3, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

In March, Jim chatted with Heather Ausmus as part of our ongoing Community Manager Spotlight webinar series. Heather has used the Community Maturity Model in her community work and shared how she has developed a plan through FY18 using the model as a framework.

 Heather Ausmus is the Online Community Manager at Johnson Controls Building Efficiency where she manages the Connected Community, an external community for customers, partners and prospective customers. She recently also started managing Johnson Controls Building Efficiency social media programs. Prior to Johnson Controls Building Efficiency, she helped consumer brands develop and implement social media programs and was the Marketing Manager for a global consumer brand.

Watch the video below to learn more about Heather and her team’s use of the Community Maturity Model in their work, and hear her answers to great questions, including:

  • How she has proven the worth of the community internally
  • How she was able to scale her effort with such a small team
  • What tools she uses to run reports, capture the data and methods of distribution
  • How her community team engages with product management teams

Have a question for Heather? You can connect with her on Twitter or leave them in the comments below.

This content has moved inside The Network.

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Did you know that 95% of The Network members agree that the content and peer input improves the quality of their work? It’s true! Membership in The Network saves community and social business leaders time and improves the quality of their work by connecting them quickly with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining The Network can improve the work you do.

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/communityroundtable.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/heatherausmus_webinar.webm

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

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Interview with a Community Veteran – Heather Strout

April 2, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

Heather Strout

To celebrate our 5th anniversary this month I sat down with a few of our long-time members to chat about their community experience over the last five years. Today I’m happy to share my conversation with Heather Strout, Director of Product Marketing at Lithium. I’m actually lucky enough to know Heather in real life – we worked together many moons ago, and can personally vouch for her awesomeness.

In addition to her day job at Lithium, Heather is part of the team that hosts a monthly community manager breakfast in Austin, TX. If you’re in the Austin area tomorrow (4/3/14) you should join them!

1. How have you seen the community management space evolve over the past five years?

Community Management for business is no longer uncharted territory. We can rely on the documented experiences of others to shape a successful community today. Five years ago, we were still relying on other industries and precursors to community to chart community strategy.

Organizations like The Community Roundtable have allowed Community Managers to evolve their community, and thus the industry as a whole, so quickly. It’s still a nascent business strategy but is considered a core strategy to so many companies now. Five years ago, it still seemed as if many companies were in the experimental stage.

2. What are some of the biggest differences from when you first started out in community management?

Now, businesses take the role of community manager, and the value of community, seriously. It’s no longer a secret weapon for those who have figured out the value. In some industries, having a customer community is not an option; it’s a necessity to stay competitive.

3. What would you do differently in your first community management role knowing what you know now?

I would have been more insistent on making sure the business knew how to make a successful community and what it took to get there. Specifically, getting senior management buy-in to not just why a community can be valuable but the effort needed to make it a success.

Thanks, Heather! We are so lucky to have long-time members like you advocating for community management! If you want to connect with Heather you can find her on twitter.

 

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Did you know that 95% of TheCR Network members agree that the content and peer input improves the quality of their work? It’s true! Membership in TheCR Network saves community and social business leaders time and improves the quality of their work by connecting them quickly with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining TheCR Network can improve the work you do.

Podcast: State of Community Management 2014 Sneak Peek

March 31, 2014 By Jim Storer

By Shannon DiGregorio Abram, Relationship Manager at The Community Roundtable.

April marks not only the 5th anniversary of The Community Roundtable, but also our 5th year publishing the annual State of Community Management research reports.

Last week I caught up with Rachel Happe for a preview of the research and got to chat about how the State of Community Management research has evolved in the last five years, what’s new for 2014 and got a sneak peek at three key findings in this year’s research.

https://www.communityroundtable.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/SOCM2014_sneakpeek.mp3

The complete 2014 State of Community Management report will be released in late April. In the meantime, you can check out past reports from 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013 – or download our State of Community Management Toolkit to access reports, the Community Maturity model and a helpful reference guide.

Stay tuned for the full findings!

—–

Did you know that The Network members work with all kinds of communities? In fact, about 25% work in either internal or external communities and 50% work with both!

No matter what kind of community you work with membership in TheCR Network will save you time and improve the quality of your work by connecting you with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining TheCR Network can improve the work you do.

https://media.blubrry.com/608862/thecr-podcasts.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/SOCM2014_sneakpeek.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Spotify | RSS

TheCR Network Sneak Peek: March 2014 Wrap-Up

March 27, 2014 By Hillary Boucher

By Hillary Boucher, Community Manager of TheCR Network

March = SXSW

And lest we forget SXSW! Many of our members rendezvoused in Austin earlier this month. That’s our fearless co-founder, Jim Storer, on the left.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As promised, I am back to share a snapshot of what went on inside TheCR Network this month. In February, I gave a pretty extensive overview of our regular programming, content offerings, and range of conversations that take place over the course of one month. Today, I picked out highlights from March:

  • Community Manager Exit Strategy (Discussion). A good community manager builds real and solid relationships with their community members. But what happens when you change roles or companies? Members are discussing the proper etiquette of saying good-bye to your community and the best practices to ensure clear communication and a clean hand off to the new community manager. It was particularly helpful (and touching) to have a member share the private message she posted to her super-user program members and the the public announcement she made when she left her community of two years to start a new role.
  • How to Build a Mentor Program (Case Study). Earlier this month we had a TheCR Network member share an excellent case study on a live, virtual Roundtable call. We got an extensive overview of this member’s adventures in building a traditional mentoring program within her community. In the past we have discussed the merits of reverse mentoring program, but this dive into a traditional mentor program was a popular and well-received case study.
  • Best Practices for B2B Customer Engagement (Live Virtual Roundtable Session). We find that our members who manage B2B customer and partner communities come up against some specific engagement challenges that are different than their consumer facing counterparts. Tomorrow we have an experienced member sharing his more successful engagement strategies for B2B communities and facilitating a discussion amongst our practitioner participants to gather the group’s collective wisdom on the subject. A true meeting of the minds!

This is only a small sampling of the events and discussions that took place this past month. I’d love to hear your top priorities and topics of interest from this past month in the comments. If you are anything like our members, I bet you were juggling a full plate. Tell us about it!

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Did you know that 95% of TheCR Network members agree that the content and peer input improves the quality of their work? It’s true! Membership in TheCR Network saves community and social business leaders time and improves the quality of their work by connecting them quickly with peers, experts and curated information. Learn how joining TheCR Network can improve the work you do.

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