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The 12 ‘R's of community engagementThe latest Web 2.0 technologies have made connecting people together significantly easier, but getting community members to engage with your organisation is not an easy task. Here are 12 key factors that any organisation about to deploy a community engagement programme needs to consider. ![]() Most businesses appreciate the potential competitive advantage they can gain through community engagement - the continuous exchange of information and ideas with the people that make or influence decisions within their business ‘value' chains. From stimulating channel partner commitment and breeding innovation to generating market intelligence and being able to respond quicker to changes in the marketplace, the benefits of community engagement are tantalising. Waking upMany businesses are also waking up to the fact that the latest Web 2.0 technologies, made popular by the social networking phenomenon, can now provide the platform and tools to make the large-scale, interactive communication required for community engagement possible. While advances in communication technology have made connecting people together significantly easier, binding them into sustainable communities that engage effectively with their host organisation is not an easy task to get right. It is far from a case of simply plugging the system in and switching it on. In fact, deploying the technology is the comparatively easy part, in many respects. For example, it is vital to ensure that every expected member of the community is likely to gain genuine value from participating (since they are otherwise unlikely to engage) and ensuring this requires considerable value proposition planning and options-engineering. The challenge is not connecting people, but keeping them connected. The 12 ‘R'sThere are numerous factors that need to be taken into consideration prior to deploying a community engagement programme, including the following list of 12 ‘R's.
Clear commercial senseCommunities form naturally. Individuals like to join groups around common interests for mutual gain. Traditional, offline communities already exist within your industry and the ease and convenience of the new generation of online communication and collaboration tools make it inevitable that these will migrate online. What's more, there is unlikely to be room for more than one online community within your industry and it makes clear commercial sense for you to facilitate and participate in it, instead of handing that strategic advantage to your competitor. About the authorJonathan Hall is the founder and CEO of The Virtual Works (www.virtualworks.co.za), South Africa's leading enterprise community engagement specialist, and he is responsible for the strategic architecture of the business programmes created for clients. He uses a unique blend of tactical creativity and modern information and communication technology to help clients interact with their business communities more effectively and efficiently. Contact Jonathan on tel +27 (0)11 523 9713 or email jonh@virtualworks.co.za. |