You did it. You built an online community. Time to sit back and let your community members do their thing, right? Wrong. When it comes to member engagement, there’s no rest for the weary. That’s because user engagement doesn’t just happen on its own. As a community manager, you’ve got to constantly encourage users to visit, participate, and add their wisdom to the community. The key to making that happen is knowing which stage of activity each user is in—and what prompts are likely to spur him or her to the next stage. Every member goes through four stages of activity within an online community: being online, doing online, acting online and finally, thinking online. As a user moves through these stages, she deepens her engagement and involvement with the community’s content and with other community members. Here are some tips to help you move users through the stages of engagement: Stage 1 users are new or infrequent users who may be hesitant to participate or contribute. They may feel unsure about sharing their knowledge publically or uncertain about what you expect of them. They need training, resources, mentors, and models to follow. To engage members at stage 1 and move them forward, you can: Stage 2 users are occasional users. They may post documents or make comments. They are contributing but you need to encourage them to increase participation and to experiment. To engage members at stage 2 and propel them forward, try these approaches: Stage 3 users are regular users who make frequent contributions, set up new projects, offer help and support when asked, and experiment with tools. To drive these folks to the next level: Stage 4 users are your most active and involved leaders. Only a small percentage of your users (8 percent - 10 percent) will be at this stage. Your goal at this stage is to continue to develop new leaders within the community while promoting the accomplishments of your current leadership group. Here’s how you can do that: The most common mistake that community managers make is not realizing what stage a user is in. If you don’t know a user’s stage, you may approach him too cautiously or too aggressively. For example, why would you ask someone who has just joined the community (a stage 1 user) to upload content immediately or refer their peers? The user is not ready for that level of engagement, and your request could be off-putting. So what’s the bottom line? The stage matters. Knowing what the stages are—and what’s appropriate at each stage—is the key to ongoing user engagement success. This post was originally published by Leader Networks.Stage 1: being online
Stage 2: doing online
Stage 3: acting online
Stage 4: thinking online
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