Educator, entertainer, help desk and cheerleader. The many hats of a community manager

Educator, entertainer, help desk and cheerleader. The many hats of a community manager

“Good community managers need to be able to go back and forth between strategy and execution – they need to live in both worlds. They need to listen deeply to understand, ask powerful questions and not assume all issues are solved by the ESN (Enterprise Social Network). They connect dots that others might not even see.” - Keeley Sorokti

 The comments from Keeley were prompted by a question I posted on Twitter several weeks ago, asking people to share their views on the top three tasks performed by Community Managers.

Doing the ‘business of the business’ in enterprise social doesn’t happen by accident. Pinaki Kathiari summed it up well in his response, when he described community management as “part customer service, help desk, educator, entertainer and cheerleader”. Community Managers wear many different hats.

The reality is if you want to have a thriving enterprise social network, you need to have professional community managers leading the effort to ensure communities are strategic, relevant and valuable to the organisation and the people engaging in them.

What follows is a rough role mandate for a community manager, based on input from people in the job. We start with the most important task and move down the ranks. Here goes.

1.    Influencer, connector and knowledge broker

“Know everyone and build strong relationships.” – Tom Boden. Great community managers are skilful connectors, facilitating relationships all over their organisations to improve how work gets done. They identify influencers and enlist their support as ambassadors and champions to demonstrate how community can work. Influential community managers also know how to ‘encourage’ people or groups to ensure opportunities to make valuable and productive connections are not lost.

2.    Strategic business enabler

“It requires … the ability to translate community needs into tangible business value for the company.” – Mary Thengvall. Smart community managers align use cases for enterprise social with the organisation’s goals and strategy – the real work of the business.  Enterprise social networks exist to help organisations and their people to progress. Savvy community managers understand what’s going on in the business and can articulate a clear strategy demonstrating how working in communities adds real, measurable business value.

3.    Community strategist and tactician

“Sourcing content to support the community goals.” – Daniel Leonard. Community managers own and lead their community strategy. This means setting the direction, as well as curating, creating and seeding content aligned to community goals. Strategic community managers moderate their communities and are always experimenting, trying to work out what type of content will engage, entertain and help their audience learn.

4.    Advocate of the people

“Protecting the vulnerable by advocating for their value and insight.” – Jeff Merrell. People are the focus for decisions about communities. Insightful community managers look at who’s in and who’s out of a conversation to ensure the right people are engaged. This could mean finding a subject matter expert to chime in to help sort out a problem or getting the right leader to answer questions about a big issue. They’re skilled at creating an environment in which "people are seen, heard and feel safe to share" (Rachel Happe).

5.    Role model and champion

“Be engaged, observe, lead, guide and be the most enthusiastic participant.” – Catherine Shinners. Community managers set the tone for participation. They know they can’t expect others to adopt a social way of working if they don’t do it themselves. This means being active and open in their enterprise social network and doing it regularly. They also identify and reward people demonstrating the right behaviours, picking great examples to share in reporting and communications so others may learn.

6.    Trainer and coach

“Helping the organisation cross the chasm from early adopters to majority of employees participating – the most critical point in the life of a community.”  - Dennis Pearce. People are at different stages in their journey to become socially engaged, from those who are happy to give it a go, to those who are anxious about working in a fundamentally different way. Community managers address this by providing training, coaching and support catering for different stages of social adoption – and the different learning preferences of people – in their organisation. 

7.    Trouble shooter and technician

Being able to identify, mitigate and manage risks and put out the occasional fire featured on the list of top tasks. Unsurprisingly (for me anyway), working with IT and vendors to ensure your enterprise social platform is fed and watered regularly received but a brief mention. This demonstrates the further we go into the digital age, the more we realise we’re dealing with people’s mindsets first and technology second.

Who’s right for the job?

A great community manager is patient, persistent and resilient. A good networker, strategist and tactician. Curious, open-minded, empathetic and a good listener. They are slow to judge and quick to help.

Clearly, community management is not for the faint-hearted. But it's a rewarding job leading organisations and people to take up an open, networked way of working.   

Thank you to everyone who contributed. Is there anything else that should be added to the list?


Ian Andersen

Script doctor at large … open for lunch

4y

Thank you so much for this summary, Rita. Very useful. Anyone done any work on how community management might differ for public authorities or public organizations? I am currently helping birth a community of practice that aims to pull together a string of collaborative practices with platform technologists and knowledge managers. We are very aware of the need to focus more on the human side than on the tech. But some platforms are also limiting in how they allow you to collaborate (i.e. on documents only). What systemic obstacles have you found that will keep people from engaging on ESN, even if there is a clear-cut strategic case for doing it? I have lots of questions... :-)

Christian DeFeo

Software Community Manager @ Shell | Inner Source, Open Source, Web Development, Communities of Practice

4y

I agree with all this - in addition, I often thought of my role as being the impressario of the element14 online community, providing the next show to bring in the public.

Mad scientist! When I wrote the nine hats of community management post so many moons ago, my (then) team had no idea how the power of community would continue to grow in strength and maturity. Amazing to see. Thank you for sharing!

Jon Ingham

Director of the Strategic HR Academy. Experienced, professional HR&OD consultant. Analyst, trainer & keynote speaker. Author of The Social Organization. I can help you innovate and increase impact from HR.

5y

I agree this is important for Organisation Design as well as Comms, HR and IT, etc, especially as I believe internal communities need to become a more common basis for org designs, on top of, or potentially separate to any ESN use. These communities, which I call communities of performance, are resourced and supported and make a significant contribution to business performance, through focusing on the common passions of their members. And it's perhaps because of this perspective that I think community level Organisation Development needs to be a core part of the internal CM role, as well as perhaps why OD people are probably the most natural fit for it (other than with the tech side of the role). This is about facilitating and developing the dynamics within the community, developing closure and effective relationships between the community members, not just between themselves and the members (which I think goes a little beyond point 1?) Or for larger, more distributed communities, it becaomes about brokering the connections within the network. This is something OD has always done in teams and other organisational groups, but is an even better fit and also even more important as organisational communities become more common.

Jodie Goulden

Guiding senior leaders to design organizations with impact. Certified Organization Design Professional (CODP)

5y

Some valuable insights for our #EODF community Ana-Maria Cocean Maja Asaa Nick Richmond

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