Community is a Mindset

community

Rachel Happe just wrote a great post Community is a Management Approach, not Just a Role.  It was partially based on some of the passionate discussion we had on the topic earlier in December when a bunch of us gottogether in Boston.  It’s something I’m very passionate about so I thought I would expand on the topic a bit further.  Please let me know what you think?

‘Community’ is a mindset that you either adopt or don’t when it comes to running a business.

Many successful businesses obviously understand and use the ‘customer’ mindset to drive everything they do.  The business, in that case, is focused solely on what the customer wants and needs and it drives the decision-making.  However, over the years this thinking has meant that everyone who’s not a customer gets a different approach.  Marketing has gradually moved their focus off of the ‘customer’ mindset and on to the ‘audience’ mindset.  And with the availability of mass media the approach of blasting one way messages to this ‘audience’ to try to convert them to ‘customers’ has been the predominant mode.  On the public relations side, we have the ‘media’ mindset and an approach to target them and so on.

In a non-interconnected world (or at least a manually connected one) all of these approaches seemed to work well enough.  But with the advent of social media the world began to change.  The ‘audience’ became aware of itself and everyone in it.  Customers became mixed in with the audience.  Media mixed with customers and the audience.  Everyone was conversing and learning from each other.  The walls came tumbling down.  Communities formed around subjects people were passionate about – including products, and including brands.

For me, this is the new world we live in.  Companies that continue to operate using the old mindsets are probably wondering why things just don’t seem to work like they used to.  It’s because they don’t.

And remember the new community principles where everyone communicates, learns, and shares with each other?  Well, companies need to adopt that approach as well.  This means living in the communities they serve, not visiting them when they want to or trying to buy their favor.  Companies need to adopt a ‘community’ mindset in how they approach everything they do.  It’s how the new world works and the old ways of doing things just don’t cut the mustard any longer.

What do you think?

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December 18th, 2009 - Posted in social media | | 3 Comments

3 Responses to ' Community is a Mindset '

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  1. on December 22nd, 2009 at 12:22 am

    I agree with this on so many levels and if you don’t mind, I’ll reference this post in my blog as well.

    First of all, companies are all to focused on surviving and forgetting to be apart of communities the current the holiday season and time of giving. It’s fairly understandable given that funds are low. However, even volunteering within the community builds a based with your “audience” and makes companies even more visible. So next time a an individual consumer that is part of that audience a comapny served is in the market for a particular service or product, they’ll chose the company they say working within the community versus the company that just placed a few ads.

    Lastly, the walls are definitely coming down. And it’s great to see so many individuals join online communities to voice their concerns and opinions. It’s about time they were heard!

  2. David Alston said,

    on December 22nd, 2009 at 10:05 am

    Thanks for you comment Andreea. Indeed, investing in your community can be via sharing content, organizing events, helping and volunteering time. As with any friendship, a relationship usually starts with giving, not getting. Definitely a great theme for this time of year. Happy holidays.

    David


  3. on May 6th, 2010 at 7:33 am

    Community is a Mindset | TweetPR…

    Бытовая техника Ariston

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