Situation: A company has built a good online community. Between their site and newsletter, they are contacting tens of thousands of executives weekly. The CEO constantly seeks new ways to encourage active participation in the discussions. What have others done to effectively build regular participation in discussions? How do you build meaningful social media participation?
Advice:
- Know your audience and focus on topics that engage people. For example, one company does a semi-annual compensation survey. This generates great response when the results are published.
- Another company has found that they learn more from mistakes than they do from success. People love to talk about business blunders, particularly if the discussions include well-intentioned humor.
- Reach out to individuals with interesting backgrounds, experience and situations. Encourage them to post, or feature them in a discussion.
- Another company sends out weekly emails with titles and synopses of articles posted in the last week. This enables newsletter recipients to quickly scan topics and click on those of interest.
- A common challenge is filtering posts which are trivial, self-promoting and lack relevance to the focus of the site.
- The bottom line is that there is no magic bullet. Social networking sites are rapidly evolving so it is important to continually seek creative additions. This takes time, work and investment.
- Consider your own experience. What has drawn you to a social networking site? What have this site done to effectively build regular participation in meaningful discussions?
Thanks to Ken Ross of ExpertCEO, Inc. for his contribution to this article.
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