A Guide to Community of Practices

A Guide to Community of Practices

?? This guide is a starting point for further conversations and learning opportunities.

Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly.

-?Etienne and Beverly Wenger-Trayner

I'm a huge fan of Communities of Practices, I've spent most of my community career focused on building them. Most of what I've learned has been through people, conversations, ideas and content that people share—and within communities.

I love and believe in them so much that I feel they can and should be part of any learning, personal development and career plan.?There are many ways to learn, communities of practices can be so powerful from that perspective.

They don't replace qualifications, they support ongoing learning and the ability to understand how others are doing things 'today' and in 'practice'. Importantly, employees should be able to sign up to paid offerings or spend their work time learning from community of practices as part of their allocated training and work budgets.

What kind of communities of practices exist?

The few types of communities of practices that I tend to see in the world at the moment:

  • open or membership based communities of practices: these tackle a specific niche and can be free or paid, or a mixture of both. Rosieland, Ministry of Testing and DevTo are examples of this. On a smaller scale, and often how many communities start are local meetups or smaller scale chat/Slack communities.
  • internal communities of practices:?typically set up within companies to explore more social learning and knowledge exchange. These often tap into the learning and knowledge that is shared in open communities of practices.
  • product communities of practice: this is perhaps a somewhat newer category where product-based companies invest in a community to support the personal growth of their customer base. Figma and Notion are examples of these and I suspect we'll only see more of these over the coming years.
  • local communities: gathering over a cause (e.g climate change) or a skill (e.g. jujitsu) are also great examples of communities of practices, sometimes these can turn into bigger online communities, other times they are just best off serving a core group of local people.

Would you add anything else to the list? Let me know!

What are the pros and cons of Communities of Practices?

Let's start with the positives:

  • topics and themes tend to be relevant and trending
  • reap the benefits of peer to peer learning
  • challenges people have can be solved together
  • often opportunities arise to collaborate or partner on projects that are meaningful to support the practice
  • relationships are built that can last a lifetime
  • members often benefit from the network knowledge and opportunities

What about the cons?

  • it can be a thankless task where the value is often not appreciated
  • as with all community things, getting involvement from people can be hard
  • organisers can burn out easily, especially if it's added on as one of many things they do
  • the community ops and keeping information and communicating all the things can become a task within itself
  • the results and benefits are often not credited to the Community of Practice

Would you add anything else to the list? Let me know!

Looking to the future

As with all things community, I feel this is so much room for improvement and innovation:

  • every niche should have at least one independent community of practice to represent them
  • collaboration between internal communities of practices and external and open ones should be encouraged
  • curation and?knowledge management?is something I don't feel has been tapped into enough
  • you know me and tools, we need better tools to manage communities of practices well. Is there room for a tool just for communities of practices? Quite possibly.
  • we could do much better to understand the diversity within humans and how we learn, everyone I speak to has different preferences, how can we get better at creating Communities of Practices that cater for them?

Could we start some conversations around Communities of Practice?

Do you have an interest in Communities of Practices? I'd love to encourage you to start and share conversations.

  • Do you run a Community of Practice and what can you tell us about it?
  • What is the tech you use to run them?
  • What challenges do you face building it?
  • What have been some great and not so great outcomes of leading a community of practice?
  • Would you like to host an AMA on your community of practice?
  • Would you like to take and share notes on any of the curated resources below?

?? Drop into The Village and start a post tagged with?community-practice.

?? Curated Community of Practice Resources

Curation is a pathway to help communities find and explore topics of interest, below are some resources to get you going with your learning journey. I hope along the way you would consider sharing any insights or experiences in?The Village.

Articles

Research

Podcasts

???Grab the Spotify playlist.

Videos

Books

Examples

Jane Machyo

PMP?, John C. Maxwell Coach, Teacher, Trainer and Speaker.

1 年

Thank you Rosie, i really needed to learn how to have an effective community of practice,

William Cook

Litigation Technology Paralegal @ Slater + Gordon | Project Manager (Generative AI) & Student Experience Officer | Law & Cyber Security Student @ Deakin University

1 年

Looking forward to reading it!

回复
Mark Otter

Founder and CEO | Participate, Inc.

1 年

This is an amazing resource, Rosie - thanks for compiling and sharing!

Max Pete

Community at Square | Maximizing ROI through strategic community building. | Writer, speaker, husband, brother, dog dad, and sometimes a DJ

1 年

Such great insights here!

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