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“The Commonsense Approach to Fresh Post Ideas” plus 1 more

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“The Commonsense Approach to Fresh Post Ideas” plus 1 more

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The Commonsense Approach to Fresh Post Ideas

Posted: 06 Nov 2012 12:00 PM PST

This guest post is by Ryan Shell of Fashables.

If you're a long-time blogger, you, at some point, have inevitably looked at a blank document on a computer screen and thought to yourself, "I have no idea what I'm going to write about."

And if you've never been a blogger, it's likely you haven't even fathomed the idea of, you know, sharing your thoughts with all of "those" people on the internet, let alone knowing what to write about.

What to write about

This is a topic I've addressed with a number of individuals during the past few months, and imagine it will continue to come up time and time again.

When the "What do I write about?" question comes up, I quickly start brainstorming and, within minutes, can develop a number of topics for the individual to write about.

My method isn't rocket science.

It's also not some wildly colorful secret that you've not been told.

It is one thing though, and I'd like to share it with you.

Common sense

Everyone’s an "expert" about something. What we fail to do is realize that what is easy and common sense to Person X (you) may not be common sense to Person Y.

What happens is that people inventory the knowledge floating around in their brain and eventually—due to their expertise—think, "that's nothing special" or "everyone already knows that." And that's a big mistake.

I recently built a website for someone and the following exchange happened via text message.

Her: "Is my site mobile phone friendly?"

Me: "Yes. Very."

Her: "Cool! How did you do that?"

What immediately came to mind after seeing her question was, "It really isn't that big a deal. I simply customized a mobile responsive WordPress theme." When I look at that short thought through a different lens, I can quickly see two blog posts develop: one about the importance of creating a mobile friendly website, and another that discusses mobile responsive WordPress themes and how they easily make mobile friendly websites.

That simple exchange, followed by what came to mind for me, is a great example of how we constantly take knowledge and our life experiences for granted.

What's simple for you very well may not be simple for someone else.

Ryan Shell is the Senior Manager, Online Communications for a global communications firm. He is also the founder of the fashion blogFashables and recently created a t-shirt line, The Home T, that helps raise money for multiple sclerosis research. He can also be found online at RyanShell.com.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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The Commonsense Approach to Fresh Post Ideas

A Community Starts with 1,000 Members

Posted: 06 Nov 2012 06:02 AM PST

This guest post is by Jeremy Miller of www.StickyBranding.com.

It’s easy to see the successes bloggers like Darren Rowse and Chris Brogan are having with social media and think, "I want that." Darren's ProBlogger Facebook page has over 43,000 Likes, and Chris has over 103,000 people following him on Google+.

I'm not in their league, but in less than two years my LinkedIn Group, Sticky Branding, grew to over 22,000 members.

People see these successes, and want to replicate them for their businesses.

But cruise the social media highway, and you will find countless Facebook pages and LinkedIn groups that are floundering or abandoned. They're virtual ghost towns. They were set up with good intentions, but failed to ever get off the ground.

For example, there are over 1.3 million groups on LinkedIn, but only 3% of them have 1,000 or more members. And less than 0.017% of groups break 10,000 members.

Vibrant, engaged and growing social media communities are not the average.

The reason so many groups fail is they don't achieve a critical mass. They don't reach the starting point of 1,000 members to form the seed of a community.

Communities start with 1,000 members

Clay Shirky, author of Here Comes Everybody and Cognitive Surplus, argues that groups function best between eight and 16 people, or more than 1,000 members. He writes, "Being a participant in a midsize group often feels lousy, because you get neither the pleasures of tight interconnection nor the advantages of urban scale and diversity."

A few hundred followers isn't enough. You've got to break 1,000 members to get your group off the ground, because as Shirky explains, "Better than 99 percent of the audience members don't participate, they just consume."

Only 1% of an online community are active content creators, the rest are not. 90% of a community is silent. They don't forward articles, respond to comments or even press the Like button. They simply consume.

The remaining 9% are curators. They share the community's content through retweets, shares, and Likes, but they aren't actively creating new comments or engaging with other members.

To carry on a group conversation, you need at least ten active content creators. They're the kernel of your community. They keep it going, and make it a fun, vibrant place.

So without 1,000 members it's very hard to foster and sustain conversations and engagement.

Grow your community through your network

Getting your first 1,000 members is hard! There are no silver bullets to achieve this milestone. It's hard slogging.

The first 1,000 members will come from your network. They will be people you know, and they'll join because you ask them. They are there because they like you, trust you, and want to support you.

I chose to build the Sticky Branding Group in LinkedIn because I was very active in the platform. At the time I had around 700 connections, and it made sense to build a group where I could invite people I was already connected to. When the group launched in May 2010, I invited all my connections, and 300 of them joined. This was a good starting point, but the next 700 members came one invitation at a time. And that was eight months of hard work.

I made a point of being an active networker. I attended conferences and events, followed up with old clients and colleagues, and reached out to people far and wide. It was a good opportunity to connect and meet people, but it was also the touch point to invite people who shared in my interests of branding, sales, and marketing. They joined because they were intrigued, and they joined because I invited them.

Avoid using promotions to grow your community

It's easy to get frustrated with the invitation process, and try to find shortcuts like promotions and giveaways to grow your group.

Avoid this temptation.

If your goal is to grow a community—a place where like-minded people engage, share ideas, help each other, and carry on conversations—you need a specific type of member. You need members that buy into the purpose of the community, and share similar interests and values.

You need members who want to be a part of a community.

Promotions and giveaways don't attract people seeking a community—they attract people seeking free stuff. You may get a surge of new members from a promotion, but it's not likely they'll stick around and become active members in your community.

Take pride in your community

People can spot a promotion-driven group from a mile away. The content is all about the group owner (the brand), and not about its members. These aren't communities, they're marketing platforms. The best groups have engaged group owners that love connecting with new people and sharing ideas and content.

Above all else, enjoy the experience of organizing a community. Have fun growing your group, and take pride in it. If you love your group it will be easy to ask people to join, and it will be easy to go out into the real world and talk about the exciting new group you're building.

Your passion and excitement is infectious, and it will accelerate your group's growth beyond anything else. It will be the most effective way to get your group past the 1,000 member mark, and enable it to grow into a community without boundaries.

Jeremy Miller is the President of www.StickyBranding.com, a sales and marketing consultancy specialized in brand-based demand generation. Jeremy recently published Nobody Likes To Dance Alone: How to grow a social media community. It is a free ebook based on his experience growing one of the largest branding groups on LinkedIn with over 22,000 members.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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A Community Starts with 1,000 Members

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