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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly recommended - Especially for 'new' community managers, August 6, 2009
Angela doesn't promise you overnight success if you follow her advice. This proves her credibility. Indeed, she actually states that success will not happen overnight and that anything short of a long term commitment will yield mediocre results.
This book could easily have been a piece of propaganda arguing that all brands need an online community and that they offer nothing but huge benefits. Angela convinces you of the realities in this book, though. Besides repeatedly stating that communities take time to develop, she also covers some of the nastier sides of community building - abusive users. She'll tell you over and over again just how much hard work community building is, and how you need to have personality, tact, an amazingly thick skin and a strong work ethic. I couldn't agree more.
Here's what I love about Angela's book. It's not just her advice and experience you are getting. During the writing process, Angela openly canvassed the opinions of others involved in community management. For example, in the chapter about how to accept and respond to criticism, Angela tells you what she does and then tells you what others do. The result is a book that is richer and more valuable.
Angela's book isn't full of theories, facts and figures. It's not an academic work. It's just full of advice, backed up with examples. Her experience shines through.
Angela knows that community managers work differently - they have their own opinions as to what works and their communities are unique. Angela doesn't pretend that her book will make you an expert. She is honest - she simply tells you what has worked for her (and others) and offers you encouragement to go out and find what will work for your community.
Martin Reed
Community Builder
[...]
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Discovering the possibility in community..., June 12, 2009
Discovering the possibility in community and the work that it requires is a two fold approach not often taken. No wonder online communities fail. Angela Connor takes a look at both in her new book "18 Rules of Community Engagement: A Guide for Building Relationships and Connecting With Customers Online." Instead of providing us a watered down pipe dream of community online, Angela takes you step by step through some of the work necessary to work towards growth and strength in your own community. It is both a humbling and exciting read; Angela expresses clearly the learning curve she is still on while managing a local online news community [...] of over 11,000 members. There is no ifs, ands, or buts about it, this work is new, unfinished, and never ending. "You can't force community. You can build it, foster it, cultivate it, and shape it. You can nurture it, believe in it, and support the members who make it what it is on a daily basis. But you can't force it" (pg. 7).
Reading though the book, I got a tangible sense of what I could do to manage an online community. I am reminded of the reality that this is real work that takes real time and without that - you have nothing. I appreciated Angela's advocacy for both alignment with an organizations goals for having a community and some emphasis on advisory from the members themselves. Although I'd appreciate more on the latter. The most influential section was that on recognizing and respecting the culture of the community you manage. Culture, as she mentions, is something that is in some ways out of your hands. You have to take the time to learn and study the community creating itself in front of you and let that inform your work. Many lessons transfer offline, but not many examples in the book emphasize the opportunity that exists offline for further connection and development.
The structure of the book into short sections make it an easy read. Occasionally the stories skip around, like on page 76, "I recently found myself torn about whether or not to ban a longtime member who had been pushing the envelope and testing the limits for months...Once he began publicly mocking the rules and posting blogs challenging my authority, I had no choice. He later came back using one of several profiles he'd created which were apparently for the sole purpose of creating chaos." We don't hear how the situation was managed after that. Online communities, unlike physical ones, create a strong opportunity for anonymity and new identities. This stands as an issue unresolved.
This was a good read that left me with a new level of intuition afterward. This speaks to the approachable nature of the book. I didn't feel an urge to take down notes like most books of this type but just read and absorb. As a offline community practitioner, its lessons serve well here too with a little bit of translation.
I'd recommend this book to anyone actively engaged in any online community setting either as a manager, designing, or as a top member looking to understand what they are working with. It's where we will all find ourselves someday anyways, right? We all need a better understanding that for the first time in a long time, you have to deal with individual people. Angela helps us do that.
Great excerpt on the 90-9-1 principle (pg. 11):
1. If you want to increase quantity of activity in your community, it's more effective to increase the total population who visit your site than to get current members to participate more (not that you shouldn't do both, but the former will typically be more effective than the latter).
2. If you want to increase the quality of activity in your community, focus your efforts on that 1% who contribute the most.
3. If you want to find out what the total reach is of your community, be sure to count the 90% or so who are spectators as well as the 10% who are posting.
I love how the structure of an online environment helps bubble down some of the essentials of any community. I will carry these three in my back pocket as solutions: (1) Add people (2) Cultivate your best (3) Keep track of those impacted by or are on the sidelines of the community.
justin fenwick
[...]
creative community consultant
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Valuable Guide for Anyone Interested in Developing Successful Online Connections, September 22, 2009
I clearly remember a time, not too long ago, when business and personal connections were forged largely in person or on the phone. During the past two decades, however, the cyber world has open portals of communications once thought impossible. People who are homebound, those who run home-based businesses, and even individuals who just look at the internet as a mean to widen their circle of acquaintances, have flocked to online communities in search of a way to spread their products or, sometimes, just to engage in interesting conversations with like-minded individuals.
Although managing an online community might mistakenly be painted in one's mind as a simple task, it is indeed a daunting venture the daring and unprepared managing editor will not soon forget. Marketing strategies aimed at enhancing the appearance of the site, personal interactions, and internal policing can indeed be double-edged tools - depending on the chosen approach, they will either be building blocks for future growth or a virtual wrecker's ball which will turn a potentially successful venture into cyber debris.
Angela Connor, whose enthusiasm and experience is fed by the never ending source of feedback she receives daily by managing a very successful online community, is destined to become a pioneer in her field, and her compelling book "18 Rules of Community Engagement: A Guide for Building Relationships and Connecting with Customers Online" is surely a must-have for anyone interested in developing successful online connections.
Offering valuable and fundamental tips on how to positively change a potentially frustrating environment into a fertile ground where everything becomes possible, this wonderful guide is written in a conversational style that calls to mind a pleasurable and informative chat with a friend.
Definitely a book worth reading. Two thumbs up.
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