Community Management by Kate Kendall

I attended a community management workshop by the lovely Kate Kendall last night. I have worked properly in community management the last 2.5 years, and spent the three years before that dipping my toes in the water and experimenting with various projects I was working on, both on and offline. I’ve learnt all that I know while on the job, through self-initiated research and by getting in touch with some very clever people. Last night was a good way for me to get a bit of grounding on the subject, and listen to the difficulties and obstacles that other community managers have come across in their work.

I definitely got a lot out of the session. Kate and some of the other participants brought up some really interesting thoughts and ideas that helped me think about different and more interesting ways to approach some of the projects that I’m working on at the moment.

Some points that I managed to scribble down between frantic coffee guzzling, nodding and mm-hmming:

  • I always find myself going on about this, and I’m glad that Kate brought it up at the start of her presentation. Social is a medium. It facilitates. The reason behind using social as a medium? Building a rich, and organic community.
  • Understand why people should care about your brand in a cluttered market. What is their motivation?
  • Online vs. offline communities. Working with them as separate entities will hinder a smooth and, again, organic communication flow.
  • Is community management a junior role? A lot of fresh graduates are getting into the scene, but does it take more than owning an active Twitter and Facebook account to do the job well? The consensus was yes: one needs to have a solid foundation in marketing communications and branding to be able to execute effectively.
  • We talked a lot about content curation. In an environment where people are craving quality and rich content amidst so much clutter, it is being exceedingly important to be able to weed out the best stuff. The focus is taken away from creating great content, and from trying to outdo each other. Instead, try paying more attention to opinion leaders and existing ideas and then evaluating, analysing and sharing. Kate’s The Fetch is a fantastic example that I highly recommend.
  • How relevant is your 6 month, 12 month, or 5 year plan in today’s climate? Community managers, and everyone working in the tech industry need to be extremely reactive and adaptive to change.
  • The importance of storytelling. Create a story for your brand, stick to it, and let it grow.

It was definitely an interesting workshop that got me thinking about a couple of things. At the moment, I am managing/developing strategy for three communities: in grassroots sport, music and fashion retail. All three are extremely different in terms of content and communication structure. However, the framework is always the same.

I’m always looking to get involved in anything exciting, creative and innovative. If you think we can do something good together, email or @ me. I’ve got some ideas in the pipeline that I’d love to bring to life (thanks Kate, for inspiring me to get off my bum and get things going!), so if you’re a developer/designer looking to partner up with a strategy dude (read: me) to do something fun, also get in touch.

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QR codes

I’ve been a fairly slow to accept QR codes as a effective (and creative) method of content distribution. For me, personally, I always found it too much of a hassle to install a reader and scan the code, only to get directed to a website. But then I realised that I was being boring, not thinking out of the box, and not seeing the big picture.

There have been some great creative QR code integration, that have allowed me to look at these little bits of graphical code in a completely different light.

Following my previous post about virtual resumes, here’s a good one by Victor Petit, who turned his otherwise boring, two-dimensional resume into a cross-platform, interactive, multi-media masterpiece.

Tesco/Homeplus launched one of the most interesting and engaging uses of mobile web with their subway virtual store in South Korea.

I’m also a big fan of these Victoria’s Secret ad mockups.

These innovative uses of QR codes lets us experience the message, allowing you to interact with the ‘real world’ and the virtual space simultaneously. Think of different and exciting ways to engage your audience through your mobile site. Even better? Relate it to that physical space. Create a new dimension. Deliver.

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Ink

I like to have chaos in my life. Things are always happening, changing and evolving and I welcome that. I am not committed, I prefer to go with the flow and “see what happens”. I am always moving, making and creating.

Is there a chance I might lose myself in this madness? I think so.

I sometimes just take a minute to stop and breathe; then I realise that maybe it would be good for me to have at least one constant in my life. Something permanent that is with me 24 hours a day that can remind me of who I am, in spite of all the madness around me.

This is me, taking a break from work at 3AM, trying to figure out what this “something permanent” could possibly be.

A symbol of honour and loyalty. Also, delicacy and precision.

‘Real’ is a distinction of a naive mind: Part of a title of Terence McKenna’s book, where he advocates the use of natural hallucinogens to to increase human awareness. Who are we to say what is real and what is not?

Because that is all you have to do. Just. Be.

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Redd Inc

Following that much talked-about Ridley Scott + Kevin MacDonald YouTube project, emerges Redd Inc: another crowd-sourcing film project. This one is a little more interesting, purely because it includes “strippers, murders, medical experiments gone awry”. Intriguing! If you’re an actor, director, musician and/or artist, the film wants you. All you have to do is go over to the Redd Inc website, join, submit and rate.

Easy peasy Japanesey!

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