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  • Please, this is not a community management.

    I'm always looking for the right essence to manage the community in the best possible way. And it's still not it. πŸ€¦β€β™€οΈ But the biggest misconception I've heard is that you have to post a lot of posts. mmmm... no... you don't have to Community management, as the name implies, is about managing a community, so: – you moderate the discussion so that people don't kill each other in it, πŸ”ͺπŸ˜€ – you answer questions or respond to answers (if you're the initiator), – you remember things. ---------- I highlighted the last one because it matters a little more. When I saw some good community managers, they knew the non-work environment of the community members. For example, they would ask, "Hey, how did your daughter do in the recital competition?" ---------- The community managers had an overlap in the personal side of things. They got closer to the person on a human level. So the bond was stronger and people felt comfortable – safe. What makes a good community manager is not hordes of posts, but responsiveness on multiple levels + empathy. What community management techniques/approaches do you cherish the most? :)

    Replies

    Tymek ZapaΕ‚a
    @busmark_w_nika Agree wholehartedly. Quality over quantity and a human element in all of it.
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    Nishi Bhavsar
    Thank you for sharing this @busmark_w_nika. But can you suggest some points on how to make people join the community? Thank you in advance.
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    Jose RodrΓ­guez
    I like this point of view to community management, And remember the things is really matter, you can make friends, and also lose them :D
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    Gurkaran Singh
    Community management is like a delicate dance - you need the right moves of responsiveness, empathy, and a sprinkle of personal touch to hit the right notes. Who knew managing a community could be as graceful as ballroom dancing?
    Luca
    @busmark_w_nika thanks, I was looking for something just like this to manage the Focused community! Thanks.
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    Nick Zemlyanskiy
    From my experience, personal questions like this about "your daughter" can be easily considered as a private life intrusion. It may work in certain fields, like in Alcoholics Anonymous or similar. But in most cases we build community around some business context, from where we should move to a more private level with pretty much caution.
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    Nick Zemlyanskiy
    @busmark_w_nika Oh, you mean building more connections with community members through knowing them better. That's nice πŸ‘
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