Do you provide your customers with a way to interact with each other and find helpful insights? Whether you offer an “official” branded community, or your customers are actively seeking information on your company and products via forums like reddit or Quora, your customers know that often the best source of information is another user. When it comes to complex technology solutions, nothing compares to peer-to-peer insights and perspectives.
Your customers want to maximize the value of the technology or software that they’ve purchased from you, and they expect their suppliers and partners to take a very active role in helping them succeed. A community – one that includes your own branded knowledge base, plus peer-to-peer insights and the chance to ask questions of a wide community of experts – is by far the most powerful and effective way to help your customers succeed with your solutions.
So from your customers’ point of view, the benefits of interacting with other users, and being part of an online community, are clear. But what’s the ROI for tech companies when it comes to developing, launching and managing an online community? Is it worth the time and resources to take the lead role, and “own” your customer community?
Beyond helping your customers to succeed, there are lots of other business reasons to develop a community:
Before you decide to introduce a community, do some research to see how your users have been managing without you. Is there a community that already exists? I.e. is there a LinkedIn group, a Facebook group, or an in-person user group, that covers a lot of what your online community would do? If something has been set up already, figure out how you will integrate your community with the existing version. And find out what sort of communities your competitors are offering. Are you already losing customers because your competitors can offer a strong community as a competitive advantage?
Lastly, consider whether you are truly in a position to commit to developing a community. It’s a long-term project that will require resources and active management long into the future. The worst thing you can do is to launch a community and then abandon it. There is nothing worse than a forum or website where the posts are all several years old, and that has clearly been forgotten by the owner. If you’re not sure that you can commit to developing a community, then consider sponsoring a third-party forum or group.
In our next blog post, we explore the specifics of managing a community, including some of the different platforms and approaches that you can use. If you’d like to learn more about how a community can help you support your customers, and strengthen your customer engagement, contact info@livingstone.eu