Top Community Engagement Methods to Boost Interaction and Build Stronger Connections
Community engagement is all about creating a clear plan and using effective community engagement methods to support members and help them grow. By fostering community-led growth, where members actively participate in shaping the community, organizations can improve the engagement level and create a more vibrant environment that benefits everyone.
Some people believe that community engagement happens naturally after a few activities or posts. But in reality, it takes ongoing effort, careful planning, and dedication. Conversations in a community don’t just happen on their own—it’s up to the community manager to create meaningful connections and keep the community active.
A good community engagement platform is important for creating a lively space where members can easily connect and interact with each other. At Bettermode, we understand the challenges of fostering online engagement. That’s why our customer success managers partner closely with clients, offering guidance, tailored recommendations and actionable tips to improve community interactions.
Since every community is unique, engagement tactics must be designed specifically to fit its needs and lifecycle stage. Before we dive into specific community engagement strategies, let’s look at why community engagement matters.
Why community engagement tactics are important
The outcomes of community engagement are simply endless - however, the key factor is that it is closely tied to the end goal of the business objective for community building. It develops and nurtures the sense of belonging in the community which results in more members, member retention and brand loyalty.
Without the engagement, the members would gradually lose the connection and it would become increasingly hard to move them through different lifecycle stages of the community.
Top community engagement tactics
As discussed earlier, there are no clear-cut engagement tactics that can be applied to any community at any kind of lifecycle stage. However, the following ideas give a sense of the possibilities and help you build on top of these by adding a touch of creativity.
Build an open platform for expression
Every single community thrives on user-generated content and the members are the most valuable resources a community can have. So, why not give a secure space to the members to express themselves?
Coming to the first rule of community building, i.e., it's all about them (not you) — always allow members to share what they are working on, what matters to them, their story, and experiences. This can be a great way to cultivate networks by helping members discover peers with similar passions or journeys. After all, stronger networks build stronger communities and people are always eager to get updates from people they follow.
The members of your community are more likely to stick to your community if they believe that their voice is valued and others care about what they have to say. At Bettermode, for example, our success managers often recommend our customers to ensure that they have a space in the community that resonates with an introduction, first-look feedback, etc.
Sensible moderation
It is great to offer the members a place to express themselves, however, there should be control on what people can post and cannot post. That's when your community and content guidelines come into the picture.
Each community has its own set of content policies and engagement rules. However, the moderators should not be rigidly forcing the rules and rely more on common sense. For instance, trust your community members to take care of the community guidelines. If it doesn't work, moderators can message privately and then, take appropriate action.
Also, it is time to put the community at the center. So, when a member posts something and it is useful, then it certainly makes sense to allow the content (even though it might be self-promotion or not). The yardstick here should be about value delivery to the community instead of putting a blanket ban on something.
Ideally, the community space should invoke a sense of confidence in the members — their contribution is valued and they can truly post anything valuable without worrying about getting punished.
Activities based on member cohorts
There is a range of members in your community -- right from lurkers to super users. And each category of these members expects something different from your community.
So, your engagement must also be tailored to suit their needs. If you have direct integration with communication and user engagement tools such as Intercom, you can easily log the member activities inside the tool. This would help you further segment the members based on the level of engagement.
For example, your superusers would want more exclusivity and better access to the team. The members who are not engaged can be motivated by showcasing the benefits of the privileges of superusers.
Run competitions and reward
Conduct occasional competitions in the community in a healthy and friendly manner. The objective of the community can be directing certain user behavior, collecting ideas, or rapid content generation. Run the competition and reward the winners with something tangible -- a great way to achieve this in the online community is to offer virtual coins that are closely tied to your payment processing. That way the members can redeem the coins to purchase your products and services.
Here is an example of our client, SmartNora (a snoring solution) running a campaign in their community to source stories from their members around snoring:
SmartNora's campaign to source members stories around snoring
Add game mechanics
Gamification is yet another tried and tested way to improve engagement. You can promote quality contributions in the community by setting up gamification tools such as badges, reputation scores, and leaderboards.
Here is a leaderboard of Bettermode Community:
A popular example is the Product Hunt leaderboard that was created by a community member to showcase the top products, hunters (members who submit new products), and makers.
In an online community, the gamification rules could be set up for the points that members earn for submitting answers, asking questions, etc. Another example is Quora that rewards the members with badges as "top writer of the year".
Act quickly and positively
When the members post their ideas, issues, share feedback, and offer suggestions to improve the community or the product itself be highly receptive. Ensure that they know you have indeed recorded their concern and swiftly convey that your team is looking into it.
It is a general practice to not have an unanswered question in the community for more than 24 hours.
Entertain with fun content
If your community can add joy to the lives of the members, then it is of significantly high value. Make it a practice for your internal team to share fun and interesting content. Never overload the community with promotional content. Also, it can be a good practice to imbibe fun elements in the general posts.
Here is an example of a community for healthcare students (yes, quite a serious topic) running on Bettermode that keeps things light-hearted by adding humor.
Plan activities to keep members invested
Ensure that your community members are invested in your community (preferably with time). For instance, keep a solid mechanism to encourage the members to complete their profile and add additional services that help you with engagement (e.g., connecting Telegram channel).
You can run monthly competitions to reward the members with the most creative profile. This is yet another tactic to encourage members to open up the new members and allow the existing members to find people with whom they would ideally connect.
Onboard new members
Onboarding new members of your community is a critical socialization process. Note that I have used the term socialization as it is very similar to going to a place, meeting new people, and adopting behavior relevant to that place.
The right onboarding program is not a one-shoe-fits-all type of program. It varies depending on the type of community, the goals associated with the onboarding process, and a certain level of expectations with which members join. Managing those expectations with the right expertise and specialization is what makes the onboarding process efficient. The right onboarding process will have the following key steps:
- Simple, precise, and valuable information
- Must have a mechanism to drive member engagement
- Introduce the community and content guidelines along with the culture
- Provide standardized and personalized onboarding instructions
There are several ways for onboarding new community members -- from introduction threads and email sequences to guided tours, buddy programs, and a welcome video.
Use engaging content format
Videos have proven to be highly engaging when compared with text and images. That's the reason, popular social media platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn are heavily pushing for video content and trying to replicate the success of YouTube.
Videos instantly capture the attention of the audience and make it really easy for the content creator to relay the messages.
Techniques to boost community engagement
We explored a list of some of the common community engagement tactics, now it's time to check out the really long (but detailed) list of engagement techniques.
While the members of a community share a common passion, each community is unique because of the distinctive experiences, aspirations, goals, and the expected value. This means the community engagement strategy, or community engagement initiative, would be tailored based on the community and there is no all-encompassing strategy.
That said this exhaustive guide for community engagement will inspire you and help you mold your strategy by selecting what could work for your community.
Understand
Engaging with the community starts with a deep understanding of the members because the community engagement journey is always about the member roles, not your business. The business benefit that you gain from community engagement is the by-product of the value you deliver to the members. Read on to explore how you can better understand the dynamics of the community and lay a strong foundation for the engagement process.
- Discuss with a selected number of members and interview them to learn about their challenges and the direction they want the community to take.
- Extract the common elements from the interviews and craft a survey (e.g., polls) to validate the ideas on the broader set of members.
- Establish a process to continuously connect with members at different community lifecycle stages to understand the needs. For example, someone who is a lurker would have a different need in comparison to someone who is a prolific contributor.
- Consider expanding the coverage of your community into a wider range of topics as your community evolves with time and grows. For instance, a community dedicated to marketing practices can also introduce a section for lifehacks. But, this decision needs to be taken only after deeply studying member behavior.
Build trust
Listening to the customers and understanding their needs is crucial; however, you must showcase that you are going to act on the feedback. This is the stepping stone for cultivating trust and closing the feedback loop.
- Act on the feedback, take steps to incorporate the changes and communicate the same.
- Showcase how you take care of data privacy and regulations by implementing various compliance tools (e.g., Cookie Consent and features to comply with GDPR).
- If you are processing payments, emphasize the security guidelines (e.g., encryption level) you are following and showcase the official badges or logo of your payment processor (e.g., Stripe).
- Create polls asking for feedback on different topics related to your product. For example, you could ask which third-party integration your customers need the most.
- Ensure that members are empowered to have their say in the direction of the community and show that their voice is always heard.
Onboard
When a guest arrives at your home, you don't simply open the door -- you greet them and show them around. Also, you ensure they are comfortable and offer your help if they need anything. This applies to your communities as well.
- Send a welcome email to greet the members and showcase important information.
- Create a guided tour to introduce the key functionalities, features, and guidelines to the members.
- Leverage the insight generated by interviewing and surveying the member to craft a message that would appeal to the new members. Use a banner to prominently display the message.
- Create prompts or a clear path for the new members to introduce themselves and post their first content. For example, an introduction thread or a group for new members to post content.
- Keep a solid mechanism to encourage the members to complete their profile and add additional services that help you with engagement (e.g., connecting Telegram channel).
- Create a video explaining your community, what the members would gain from the community, how to conduct and contribute to the community. You can add testimonials in the video to reinforce the value and leverage social proof.
- Set up automated email sequences to introduce key elements of your community in small chunks.
- You can also create a buddy program in which a new member can get guidance from experienced members.
Give voice to members
Creating a safe and encouraging space for the members to express themselves is paramount since the user-generated content is what would drive your community.
- Create channels (e.g., “speak your mind, “show and tell”) in the community to enable the members to share what matters to them, their experiences, post feedback on the community as well as your offerings.
- Create a space for the members to showcase their best tips based on the domain in which you are operating. For example, if a Community of Practice operates in the customer success space, a dedicated space could be created to share the best tips on churn management.
- Encourage users to ask good quality questions and emphasize that asking questions can be as effective as posting questions. This can help when you have members who are not confident that their expertise can deliver the right answers.
- Integrate the community into your website and product so it is frictionless for the user of your product to participate in discussions (without separately opening up the community website).
Notify
Notifications are pivotal when it comes to getting your members back to the community to improve customer retention and participation.
- Reach your community members via notifications on messaging apps and allow them to interact with the community right inside the messaging app.
- Deliver email digests based on the members' preferences and activities to bring them back to the community so they interact with content that interests them.
- Send instant email notifications whenever the members are interacting with the content. For example, if a member has posted a question and another member answered the same, then an email notification would be sent that someone posted a response or commented.
- Send in-community notifications to the members for answers, questions, comments, mentions, and more.
- Send browser-based notifications and leverage cloud messaging solutions like Firebase to reach members on mobile devices.
Apply gamification
Gamification techniques are widely used via businesses to improve engagement and this works especially well in online communities to promote healthy competitions.
- Set up automated gamification techniques for common activities, like awarding badges when the member creates five posts, replies, or gives upvotes on another member's post.
- Boost the ego and social status of the members by providing special privileges. For example, the most helpful and active member could be promoted to become a moderator.
- Involve your internal team to give special personalized treatment and publicly acknowledge the good contributions of a member. Start by thanking the member of the community.
- Apply special badges when your superusers and advocates create detailed content to help peers. This type of content also helps in deflecting support tickets, so they are highly valuable.
- Bring in the colleagues into the community since they might have a certain expertise that the community management team might not have. Reward them for participating as well!
- Every time a member of the community likes, comments, shares, or posts, they should be awarded several points according to each action. Based on this, you can create a leaderboard system.some text
- Set up an MVP (Most Valuable Person) program to recruit the most active and empathetic members to help with community management, advocacy, and promotion. Check out the Spotify Rock Star program for more inspiration.
- Create exclusive groups and add members to those groups when they hit certain milestones in terms of contribution. For example, a group for the members who got 1000 upvotes for a single post.
- Consider adding rules for staying in a group -- those rules could be configured to remove members when they become inactive in those groups.
- Literally, play games with your members. For example, if you made subtle changes to the product or community UI, then ask the members to spot the difference between new and older screenshots.
- Offer swags to the members based on an acquisition milestone. For instance, you could send goodies to every 1,000th member.
- Give points to the community members when they share your community content on other third-party sites and popular social networks.
Run competitions
Competitions are yet another type of technique to promote participation in community activities. This is based on incentivizing the members to take certain actions. However, this should not the primary driver of community engagement.
- Post a challenge and reward the members who solve the challenge most effectively. For example, the challenge could be around creating something using your product. If you can reward with virtual currencies that can be redeemed to purchase your services, it'd have added advantage.
- Leverage Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) by posting short-lived offers and prompt the members to take action. For example, if you are running a sale on your e-commerce store, you can post an exclusive offer for your members and in return ask them to spread the word.
- Consider running a “caption this” contest to encourage your members to comment on the images and GIFs and improve brand engagement.
- Set a scavenger hunt by hiding clues in your posts and offer a reward to the members who can find the right answers.
- Run competitions and encourage users to showcase how they are customizing your solution. It can apply to anything from sneakers to software products.
- Create a trivia contest by posting questions around your product, company, or domain in which your business operates. That way you are educating as well as improving the community engagement.
- Another way to run a contest is to encourage members to fill in the blank. You can post a statement - “My favorite part of working with <product name> is _____” and ask members to post the complete sentence based on their experience. This can be a way to gather feedback as well.
- Run a contest by asking members to associate your brand with celebrities. A great way to assess the members' perception of your brand personality.
Moderate sensibly
Moderation is critical to ensure that your community remains safe from spammers. Also, it helps you control and eradicate members who would potentially harm the engagement in your community by demotivating other members.
- Ensure that you have a solid community guideline and members are aware of the code of conduct. You can include the link to the guidelines during the onboarding process.
- Never put a blanket ban on the type of content -- the last thing you want for your members is to be apprehensive of posting content out of fear.
- Promptly take care of the reported content and use the judgment to take action. For example, a content border on self-promotion might be actually vital content for the community.
Educate
A customer who clearly understands the solutions you offer and exactly how to leverage everything at their disposal is the one you can consider fully empowered. With empowerment comes confidence and the belief that they can recommend the product to others. Given below are some of the ways to educate the members.
- Create webinars to showcase how your offerings add value and share the same in your community to propagate the message.
- Create resources based on problems that your members are facing and share in your community. For instance, if your support team is receiving high-volume tickets related to a specific issue, you can create questions in your community, provide answers, and facilitate discussions.
- Invite industry leaders to your community and conduct AMAs to help the members learn best practices.
- Create a section in your community to allow members to share their experiences and learnings so the peers can also get the benefit.
- Send monthly or bi-weekly newsletters with the best content curated from the community.
- Host AMA sessions by inviting your product team and directly connecting them with the customers. This is also a great opportunity to unlock the tribal knowledge base.
- Ensure that the most popular and high-quality posts in the community are clearly displayed and easily accessible. This prompts the members to actively participate and contribute. For example, you can create a section called “Editor's pick”.
- Use your super fans to share video testimonials about how they use your products and how your product makes their lives easier.
- Empower the members to request answers from other members with the right expertise. In fact, if the community platform can automatically detect the expertise of the member and suggest the right members to get answers from, the community engagement rate can increase automatically.
- Create Product Therapy sessions to address the ambiguous sections of your product and areas in which your customer community is facing the maximum difficulty. You can source the pain points based on the support tickets and customer communication
Have fun and celebrate
It is important to enjoy and celebrate in your community as moments of success need to be shared and cherished. This inspires the members and allows them to get involved.
- Showcase how the existing members are achieving different milestones and successfully implementing your solutions. Celebrate the small bits of success with the entire community.
- Create content that would most likely drive engagement based on the data that you gather from the way different posts perform in the community. For example, content from certain topics and themes might generate better engagement in comparison to others.
- Look into the content formats like videos that are more engaging than traditional formats such as text and images. For example, you can create video-based online sessions as icebreaking events.
- Create live streams on specified days or special occasions to involve the community members with your brand. For example, if you are celebrating Halloween, do a live stream to keep the members engaged with your internal event.
- You can also schedule a time to hang out with the members in a virtual setup via Zoom call. Consider this as a digital event with all the things that an in-person event would have.
- Surprise and delight your members to improve the community experience. For example, a simple thank-you note along with a gift voucher for the most active members or valuable members goes a long way.
Create valuable networks
Networks are the lifeblood of your community -- the more intricate, widespread, and valuable connections you form in the community, the better the engagement. It also highly impacts the longevity of the community.
- Enable members to follow or connect so they get notified whenever there is an update.
- Create sub-communities or niche communities to bring like-minded people closer and enable yet another channel for member discovery. A popular way to approach this is to create groups for members from different locations.
- Ensure your internal team is not always jumping first into the discussion or responding to criticism. If you hold back and let a community answer and solve the issue via peer-to-peer value delivery, it'd have a much powerful impact on networking.
- Create “Happy Hour” hangouts via virtual meetups by randomly grouping different members and enable networking.
Foster culture
Creating and establishing community culture is highly valuable since that will set the tone of the community. It will also enable members to learn how they should interact with each other. And new members will adopt this culture to assimilate with peers.
- Consider assigning a name to the members of your community. For example, avid users of popular social Twitter, are called “Twitterati”. This type of symbol and internally used terms can uniquely bind the members.
- Create a “Cheers for peers” space for the members to nominate a peer who has been the most helpful to them or the community overall.
- Set an internal culture to ensure that every question receives an acknowledgment or a form of response within 24 to 48 hours.
Conclusion
Community engagement requires careful planning and the consistent work of community managers to create a thriving and active space. By using community engagement strategies such as gamification, fostering meaningful connections and ensuring a supportive environment, community managers can significantly increase participation and loyalty.
By focusing on various aspects of community engagement strategy, these efforts contribute to the long-term success of any community. To further increase your engagement process and streamline management, try Bettermode today for free.
This article was originally published on December 9th, 2024, and was updated on November 15th, 2024.
FAQ
What are the methods of community engagement?
Here are some key community engagement methods:
- Information sharing:
- Face-to-face community meetings: Share information directly with people in person.
- Press releases: Share official announcements with local news outlets.
- Social media: Use platforms like Facebook and Twitter to quickly reach your target audience.
- Consultation:
- Surveys and questionnaires: Tools used to collect people's opinions on specific topics.
- Focus groups: Small, guided discussions where a group talks in detail about their concerns and ideas.
- Public meetings: Open events where community members can share their views and opinions.
- Collaborative planning:
- Workshops: Interactive sessions where participants collaborate to create ideas and solutions.
- Stakeholder interactions: Involves bringing key community stakeholders together to actively participate in discussions and decision-making.
- Participatory mapping: Activities that engage local communities in mapping resources and identifying needs.
- Active participation:
- Community conferences: Events that bring together diverse stakeholder groups to share ideas and plan projects.
- Participatory Action Research (PAR): A way to involve community members in research to solve local problems.
- Advisory committees: Small groups that give advice and feedback to help guide projects.
- Innovative engagement techniques:
- Pop-ups: Host informal events in public spaces alongside a town hall meetings to gather feedback and share information with the community.
- Interactive displays: Create setups where community members can share their feedback on key topics.
- Legislative theatre: Use drama to spark discussions about local issues and encourage community input.
What are the three types of community engagement?
Three types of community engagement are:
1. Informative engagement: This type is a one-way communication where organizations share information with community members. The goal is to inform local residents about plans, events or changes that might affect them. Common communication tools include newsletters, press releases and social media updates. This engagement strategy keeps community stakeholders informed through multiple channels.
2. Consultative engagement: In this type, organizations ask the community for feedback on specific issues or plans. This community engagement strategy may use public meetings, surveys or focus groups to gather feedback and understand the needs of local communities. The aim is to encourage participation and create a feedback loop to improve decision-making.
3. Involved engagement: This type goes further by getting community members directly involved in decision-making. It includes stakeholder interactions through advisory panels, working groups or regular meetings. This type of stakeholder engagement builds meaningful relationships within communities and fosters a more inclusive environment, encouraging members to stay actively involved in shaping the outcomes that affect their communities.
What are the 3 C's of community engagement?
The 3 C's of community engagement stand for communication, collaboration and commitment. These are key elements that help create effective community engagement, making sure everyone in the community feels connected, works together and stays involved.
What are examples of good community engagement?
Good community engagement can include regular updates, recognizing members for their contributions and sharing useful content like guides or webinars. Hosting interactive events, using rewards or points and asking for feedback also encourage members to stay involved.
A strong community engagement plan includes these strategies. Bettermode makes it easier with features like gamification, customizable spaces and tools to manage the community, helping build long-term relationships.