I often get asked for advice on setting up and running a community – so I thought I’d share my top five ‘hacks’ (or hints and tips if you are not a millennial).  I’d be interested in your comments on these or if you have got any alternative or additional ideas.

Don’t restrict yourself: Communities are a fantastic tool, but can often be even more effective in combination with other methodologies, such as telephone interviews or f2f UX testin

Know your objectives: are you looking for an ‘on-tap’ resource to give you quick access to customers for a variety of needs?  Or is the main goal of your community to support a specific project such as a new product you’re developing?  Long-term and short-term communities require different designs.

Small can be beautiful: communities don’t always have to be huge to be effective.  50 to 100 highly engaged participants can deliver a wealth of insights on a longitudinal basis.

Incentivise everything: it doesn’t have to be a lot – but it has to be something. Small incentives for every task work much better than big prize draws

Avoid embarrassing silences: you need to keep the community ticking over to keep people engaged. If it goes dead for a couple of weeks people drift off – so make sure there’s always something going on.

Phil Morrison, May 19

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