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Ten tips for leading communities(deloitte)
1. Presentation
10 tips for leading communities
Stan Garfield
July 2011
2. 1. Carefully choose the community topic
⢠Make âem SMILE
1. Subject: A specialty to learn and/or collaborate about
ubject:
2. Members: People interested in the subject
embers:
3. Interaction: Meetings, calls, and discussions
nteraction:
4. Leaders: People passionate about the subject who are dedicated to
eaders:
creating, building, and sustaining a community
5. Enthusiasm: Motivation to engage and spend time collaborating and/or
nthusiasm:
learning about the subject
⢠Avoid redundancy
o Narrowing either by geography or function should be discouraged
o Local chapters can be created as subsets of larger communities
o Suggest that overlapping communities with similar topics be combined,
either directly or with one as a subset of the other
⢠Avoid having too narrow a scope
o Start with the broadest feasible topics, and narrow down as needed
o Spin off narrower sub-topics only when a high volume of discussion or
topics
communication makes it necessary
o Challenge those with a niche topic to prove that it warrants its own
community
2 Communities of Practice
3. 2. Publicize
1. Look for all existing distribution lists of people
interested in your communityâs topic â use these lists
to invite people to join your community
2. Look for related communities, calls, and sites you can
use to promote your community â ask permission to
do so, and then post, present, or send a brief
invitation
3. Ask well-connected people to forward your
announcement memo to their distribution lists, social
networks, and communities
4. Write and submit articles to existing newsletters that
reach your target audience
5. Use social networking tools such as microblogging to
inform possible members about your community
6. Ask the leaders of relevant organizations to send a
one-time message to all of their people
7. Ensure that your community is included in the master
community directory
8. Request that links to your community site be added
on all relevant web sites
9. Offer an incentive to join, e.g., a member will be
chosen at random or the 100th member will receive
an iPad or equivalent gift
10. Search personal profiles for people with relevant
interests and/or expertise, and invite them to join
3 Communities of Practice
4. 3. Increase membership
⢠Communities need a critical mass of members
o You usually need at least 50 members
o 100 is a better target
o Only about 10% of the members will be active
⢠Invite people to join who are part of existing networks
o Existing teams that practice in the community's specialty
o Existing distribution lists of people interested in the topic
o Use Social Network Analysis to identify people who may
not be part of a formal community
⢠Regularly suggest to those with questions or interest in your
topic that they
o Join your community
o Use its tools
⢠Attract members by word of mouth
o Create communities for which potential members want to
be included in discussions, meetings, and other
interactions
o Make it so they don't want to miss out on what is going on
4 Communities of Practice
5. 4. Post and reply
⢠Lay the foundation
o Enable posting and replying by email
o Seed the discussion board with example posts
o Recruit other key community members to also post and reply
⢠Set clear expectations for the community threaded discussion
board
o Members should subscribe by RSS or email
o If a member posts a question, make sure that it gets a
response within 48 hours
o If your community has a regular call, leverage the discussion
board as a means of continuing the conversation, or
providing resources covered on the call
⢠Set a calendar reminder to post every week
o Summary of a community event
o Useful link â save these in a list and share one each week
o Thought-provoking topic to stimulate discussion
provoking
⢠Redirect relevant discussions taking place in
o If questions are asked via email that the entire community
can benefit from, ask that the requestor post in the
discussion board and reply there
o Email exchanges
o Distribution lists
o Other collaboration channels such as microblogs
5 Communities of Practice
6. 5. Use blog, newsletter, wiki
⢠Blog â chronological archive
o Announcements
o Newsletters
o Recurring communications which lend
themselves to lists and archives
⢠Newsletter â one page, every month
o Stay in communication with members
o Remind about calls
o Link to key information â reuse content
already produced
§ Recent discussion board threads
§ Blog posts of interest
§ Recently-edited wiki pages
⢠Wiki â collaborative editing
o Meeting agenda
o Position paper
o Self-maintained list of resources
6 Communities of Practice
7. 6. Schedule and host events
⢠Types
o Regular conference calls
o Occasional face-to-face meetings
o Training sessions
⢠Purpose
o stay connected
o share progress
o reuse good ideas
o collaborate on common needs
⢠Activities
o Share an idea, tip, trick, technique, proven practice, or insight
o Request feedback on a presentation, document, web site, idea, program, or problem
o Lead a discussion on any topic of interest
o Provide an update on a project, program, initiative, or organization
o Speaker (community member or invited guest)
⢠Ideas
o Themed-call, where multiple speakers discuss the same subject
call,
o Post agenda ahead of time using events calendar, agenda pages, uploaded presentations
o Send reminder message
o Prime the pump prior to the call by asking others to ask questions or share their thoughts
7 Communities of Practice
8. 7. Provide useful content
⢠Review and refresh content on a regular basis
⢠Communicate changes in the newsletter
⢠Solicit content contributions from your membership
o You donât have to produce all of the content yourself
o Let members know specifically what is needed
o Recognize contributors publicly in the newsletter
o Ask for content submissions to:
§ Newsletter
§ Blog
§ Wiki
§ Site
§ Discussion board
8 Communities of Practice
9. 8. Tell members how they should participate
⢠Become a SPACE cowboy
1. Subscribe: Get email or RSS and regularly read a threaded
ubscribe:
discussion board
2. Post: Start a new thread or reply in a threaded discussion board
ost:
3. Attend: Participate in community events
ttend:
4. Contribute: Submit content to the community newsletter, blog,
ontribute:
wiki, or site
5. Engage: Ask a question, make a comment, or give a
ngage:
presentation
9 Communities of Practice
10. 9. Set goals and measure progress
⢠Go Green!
1. At least one discussion board post, reply, and new thread per week
2. At least one newsletter or blog post per month
3. At least one conference call, webinar, or face
face-to-face meeting per quarter
4. At least 50 members and increasing over time
5. At least 10 members participating in each event
10 Communities of Practice
11. 10. Solicit, find, and publicize success stories
⢠Solicit from community members
⢠Mine discussion threads
⢠Publicize in the blog and newsletter
1. Testimonials by community members on the value of participation
2. Stories about the usefulness of the community
3. Posts thanking other members for their help
11 Communities of Practice
12. As used in this presentation, âDeloitteâ means Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu and its member firms.
Deloitte refers to one or more of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, a Swiss Verein, and its network of member firms, each of which is a legally separate and
independent entity. Please see www.deloitte.com/about for a detailed description of the legal structure of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu and its member
firms.
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Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, its member firms, and its and their affiliates shall not be responsible for any loss whatsoever sus
sustained by any person who
relies on this publication.