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ProBlogger: The 5 Stages of Building a Culture of Community on a Blog [Case Study]

ProBlogger: The 5 Stages of Building a Culture of Community on a Blog [Case Study]

Link to @ProBlogger

The 5 Stages of Building a Culture of Community on a Blog [Case Study]

Posted: 26 Mar 2013 08:49 AM PDT

Yesterday we looked at some of the benefits and costs of building community on a blog – today I’d like to move onto some of the ‘how to’ by examining the stages of building community that I went through on Digital Photography School.

Build a CULTURE of Community – Not Just Engagement

Let me start by repeating the advice I gave yesterday that building community and reader interaction on a blog takes time. It won’t happen over night but develops day by day.

It is also something that YOU need to take the lead in as a blogger.

Be the community you want to have‘ is advice I regularly teach at our live ProBlogger Training Event because what I’ve found is that readers often take a bloggers lead when it comes to engagement.

If YOU are obviously engaged with your content, passionate about helping your readers, interested in who they are, writing in an inviting way and willing to interact with others then you’ll be on the right track to developing a culture on your blog where interaction is normal.

Note: I really want to emphasise this idea of building a ‘culture‘ of community on your blog. This goes way beyond using certain ‘techniques‘ to get comments or engagement.

Engagement is great – but the most successful bloggers I”ve come across go beyond that to build something deeper with their readers whereby readers not only interact but have a deeper sense of belonging, ownership and where they embody and live out the values of the blog with one another.

The Stages of Building Community on a Blog

Stage 1: You

In the early days of your blog community generally looks like this:

Problogger Stages of Community1

Yep – just you.

Maybe if you’re lucky you have a partner, or a parent, or a friend who drops by once in a while – but it’s largely you. This is totally fine and normal. I remember my first 10 or so blog posts going up to the deafening roar of silence – I couldn’t even get my wife to read them!

In those very early days you can still write in an engaging way – but probably more important than lots of reader engagement is you writing engaging and compelling content so that when people do arrive they’ve got something to read.

This is also an important time to get your mindset right. Identify what type of community you want to have. What values do you want it to have? What are the boundaries of acceptable behaviour? The clearer YOU are on what you want to achieve the better position you’ll be in to start building and modelling it to your readers (remember – YOU have to BE the community you want to have).

Hopefully – with a little time and you putting yourself out there you’ll begin to find a few readers for your blog.

Side Note: ‘Finding Readers’ of course is a topic for another series but a key component is putting yourself out there into the places your potential readers are already gathering. I cover this (and a lot more on the topic of Finding Readers in this free webinar). It is probably the most comprehensive thing I’ve produced on the topic of finding readers for a blog to this point.

Stage 2: Readers Engaging with You

After a few readers begin to arrive on your blog here’s what community looks like:

Problogger Stages of Community2

At this stage YOU are still the centre of your community and all interactions revolve around you. Your readers tell YOU what they think of your posts, they email YOU with questions and YOU need to take the initiative a lot.

In my own early days of blogging I used to email every person who left a comment on my blog to thank them for their comment and to let them know I left a comment responding to theirs. This had a BIG impact – in fact I know of a couple of readers who still read ProBlogger today who read my first blog because I emailed them in that way.

This is really where your ‘culture of community and engagement’ needs to find its foundations. If you look after the small group of readers you have really really well – in time you’ll find they’ll start to ‘catch’ what you’re on about and do it themselves.

Stage 3: Readers Engaging with One Another

What often happens next is pretty cool. It looks like this!

Problogger Stages of Community 3

This is like when you have a party where you invite lots of friends who didn’t previously know you – and your friends start to hit it off with each other.

It’s actually something that I know some bloggers struggle with a little because suddenly readers start showing up on a blog to not only talk with you – but to interact with other readers.

It can be a little disconcerting to see this happen (and to see some readers run off with each other to start interacting on social media or their own blogs) but it is actually where real ‘community’ starts to happen on a blog.

When you start see readers interacting on a deeper level with one another you have a much deeper level of community engagement than you did when YOU were the central point of contact for everyone.

Stage 4: Community Evangelists

The next stage doesn’t always happen – but when it does you know you’re onto something pretty exciting!

Problogger Stages of Community 4

In this stage you begin to see engaged readers begin to evangelise your blog for you. They’ve found something that they’re so engaged with and find so useful to them that they can’t help but bring others in.

I saw this at Digital Photography School when we started a forum for the blog. I noticed a small group of readers who had been reading since the start of the site and who’d been starting to get to know each other began a thread in the forum about asking how they could help to grow the forum.

They’d found dPS to be a useful site for them but realised it’d be more useful with more members. That began a competition within this small group to see who could recruit the most new members to the site. They did it purely for bragging rights and because they wanted the community to grow!

I promoted this small group to be the forums first moderators!

Stage 5: Engagement

The final stage is a mess…. but at the same time music to most community managers ears.

Problogger Stages of Community 5

YOU as the blogger are still there but relationships and interactions go on above, below and around you. In fact some days you may even wonder if anyone would notice if you disappeared (although they will).

How to Build Community on a Blog

I’m sure not every blog develops in the above 5 steps exactly – but it is how I’ve seen emerge a couple of times now on my blogs.

Tomorrow we’re going to get a little more practical on the topic of building community on a blog by really drilling into some specific tactics on how to do it!

Subscribe below to be notified of the links to future posts in this series.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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The 5 Stages of Building a Culture of Community on a Blog [Case Study]

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Should I buy a “make money online product”

Posted: 26 Mar 2013 06:50 AM PDT

Post image for Should I buy a “make money online product”

Yesterday I made a post for people looking for the magic bullet.  A lot of the post made the point about how you don’t need money to try to make money online.

With what I said people are probably thinking that they should never buy a info product to teach them anything, especially when getting started.  False - within reason.

To date, over the last 8 years, I have purchased more than $150,000 worth of info products.  But stick with me here…   Over the years I have set aside a budget specifically for that as it has been relative with my income.  It’s like continuing education for me.

The Start

When I started my product I bought that made the difference were books on how to build a website.  How to write programs.  Probably started with a hundred dollars worth of books.  This sounds like chump change right?  Well at the time that was a sizable investment.  But I had a passion on a subject and it was fun to learn these skills to accomplish that task.  Actually to punctuate that it was vital and I would not be where I am without those initial  how to books.

The Evolution

  • After I built my site from those books, built a site that I wanted,  eventually I evolved into making money with AdSense.  I bought a PDF for like $99 that drastically improved the amount of revenue I was making.
  • Then I got into SEO and bought a $99 e-book called SEOBOOK by Aaron Wall.
  • After that I got into affiliate marketing and purchased a product that was in the $500 range which really got my brain thinking.
  • Then I got more into the psychology of making money online and invested in books like Influence and read every book that Seth Godin has written.

Again all made a difference in my income.  After the first year or so I made a commitment to spend 10% of my profit per month to purchase books, products, and sometimes conferences.

But again its all relative.  If one of these products makes a 1% difference in my company ongoing that is HUGE.

What makes me sick is when people who don’t have a website should not invest in a $2,000 program about making money with websites.  Makes sense right?  But people do…

Recently I shared with my readers an excellent program called the Amazing Selling Machine which is all about selling products on Amazon.   It is a truly remarkable and I have not promoted anything in that price range since 2009-ish.  Reason being everything I have seen is such bullshit and saturated that while it might work for the person that is promoting it that person probably has a passion for it but more importantly they have many years experience doing exactly what they are selling.

This product is somewhat like the free wordpress platform but for people  who have no interest in blogging, programing, or even having their own website.

One of the biggest reasons I love it is people don’t have to have a website…  want to write a blog…  or whatever.  And the products you can sell on Amazon…  Well its infinite.  No matter what your into or passionate about I doubt there is not a market for it.  They also do walk you through the process.  What you should sell, how to sell it, where to buy products at wholesale, how much to sell them for… and also some ninja software to make sure the stuff your selling lists at the top.

So I say its remarkable in that its something completely NEW and TOTALLY unsaturated.  And the best part is with a little research you basically have next to no financial risk.  Also with my personal experience in buying wholesale computers and reselling them on eBay I know how big this can get.  And Amazon is 100x bigger.   Also there is a local company here…  All they do is buy and sell books on Amazon.  Its a hundred+ million dollar company.  So ya…  I like this product a lot.

I purchased it cause I can totally see me doing it as a hobby to start and perhaps it evolves into a full company.  

So again buying products to “teach you how to make money online” can be a very smart investment.  It just has to be within reason.  If your unemployed and making it paycheck to paycheck I strongly do not advise you invest in a thousand dollar “make money overnight” system.

And ALWAYS research the person behind the product.

Now I know a lot of people reading this right now already have an excuse as to why they can’t get started.

  • I don’t know how to program.
  • I don’t have enough time.
  • I don’t know how to make a website.
  • I don’t have any passions.
  • I don’t own a computer (This sounds funny but I have people contact me from a library computer).

If you are saying any of those things to yourself then I recommend not investing in any info product.

Maybe your reading this site because you just find me funny,  or you were that hot chick in high school that regrets not giving me a piece because I was fat (sorry),  or..  you enjoy my weird sense of humor.

Here is the deal.  This shit is crazy.  Right now I am building a long term stable company and that took a sizable investment.  Thank god we are past the dip and doing very well now.

Our in house CPA looks at me funny sometimes when that company is operating on slim margins as its growing and I rip off a 100k or so out of the blue on something that I stumbled on in my free time.

Those spikes of revenue are awesome when your underwear in your basement.  Not fun when you have a lot of overhead.  So its something that literally is a hobby of mine I do in my spare time.  Yea its fun as shit to be a cowboy but I have a wife and 2 daughters now and people that rely on me so I can’t go on 2 hours a sleep jacked up on redbull.

But maybe you can?  

I know I am all over the board here.  Thats what happens when you spend 2 hours writing a blog post in 5 minute increments when you have spare time for your “hobby”.

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